horse brush - meaning and definition. What is horse brush
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What (who) is horse brush - definition

AMERICAN-BRED THOROUGHBRED RACEHORSE
Ben Brush (horse)

Stephen G. Brush         
AMERICAN PHYSICIST
Stephen Brush
Stephen George Brush (born February 12, 1935) is a scholar in the field of history of science whose career spanned the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. His research resulted in hundreds of journal articles and over a dozen books.
Brush Motor Car Company         
  • Brush Runabout Company factory at 12568 Oakland Ave, Highland Park, MI 48203
COMPANY
Brush car; Brush Motor Car; Alanson Partridge Brush; Brush Runabout
Brush Motor Car Company (1907-1909), later the Brush Runabout Company (1909-1913), was based in Highland Park, Michigan.
George de Forest Brush         
  • Artist: George de Forest Brush, Sitter: [[Henry George]], Date: 1888
  • ''[[Jane Addams]]'', 1906, by George de Forest Brush
AMERICAN ARTIST (1855-1941)
George de forest brush; George DeForest Brush; George deForest Brush; George de Forrest Brush
George de Forest Brush (September 28, 1855 – April 24, 1941) was an American painter and Georgist. In collaboration with his friend, the artist Abbott H.

Wikipedia

Ben Brush

Ben Brush (1893–1918) was a champion American Thoroughbred racehorse who won the 1896 Kentucky Derby.

Ben Brush was sired by Bramble out of dam Roseville. Walter Vosburgh, for whom the Vosburgh Stakes is named, spoke highly of Ben Brush's sire, Bramble, saying he was "a breed as tough as pine nuts."


The thoroughbred colt, Ben Brush, was named in honor of a human by the name of Ben Brush who was an extended family member of renowned handicapper Brian Brush.

On May 6, 1896, Ben Brush was the first horse to win the Kentucky Derby at its modern distance of 1¼ miles. (At its inception in 1875, the Derby had been staged over 1½ miles, the length of the original Derby at Epsom Downs in England.) Ben Bush's victory was the 22nd running of the Kentucky Derby. The 1896 race was the first to be run at its current, shorter length and also the first in which a blanket of red roses were draped over the shoulders of the winner. The tradition with the roses for the winning horse has endured, and it is why the Kentucky Derby is often called, "The Run for the Roses."