I admire you for asking them! Thank you.
Now you’ve got me wondering what my classmates would have said when I was your students’ age. Definitely not Secretariat – he didn’t come along 'til we were in our 20s.
A friend a few years older than me said Trigger.
My friends in England said Mr Ed, Shergar, and Black Beauty.
My interest in this started when I saw Breyer’s ad for their model of Secretariat, which says “Ask anyone to name the world’s most famous horse, and their answer will most likely be Secretariat.”
I was skeptical of that. But going by the posts here, and my friends’ responses, I concede that Breyer has a point.
So now I have another question, based on another Breyer ad, which I’ve just seen this morning.
To the best of your memory, what color is The Phantom in Misty of Chincoteague (book or movie)? In the book of the movie she was a chestnut, with flaxen mane and tail IIRC. I don’t remember what the novel itself said. According to Breyer, she is a piebald.
In the book, as in real life (the book is based on a real pony, with artistic license), Misty was a palomino pinto, by a chestnut pinto stallion, out of a smokey black pinto dam (Phantom).
I saw the real Misty as a child, and she was definitely a pinto.
Most high schoolers could not name a famous horse.
The very few answers I received:
-Spirit
-Maximus from the movie Tangled
-The horse from the Never Ending Story
-Secretariat (this kid is an old soul and said their mom loves Secretariat)
The takeaway: we need more horsey celebrities for today’s generation!
Cool.
Thank you for the description of the real Phantom.
In the movie book I think The Pied Piper was a skewbald, so, yes, chestnut pinto. It’s been so many years since I read the original book that I’d forgotten what color the real Phantom was. I knew it was semi-biographical, like so many of Marguerite Henry’s books.
Or - horse sports need to be more present in the media!
ps - if I were a history teacher a fun assignment for me to grade (haha) would be a report on several famous horses, starting with, for instance, Bucephalus.