December 29, 2024

Gross, Gainesway stallion manager, dies

Last updated: 2/24/09 6:02 PM










Marion Gross was a fixture at Gainesway for more than four decades
(Courtesy of Trapp Communications)





Marion Gross, the long-time Stallion Manager at Gainesway Farm, died in Lexington,
Kentucky, on Monday following a brief illness. An institution in his own right,
Gross worked at Gainesway for 46 years, 41 of them as Stallion Manager.

“It is safe to say that very few working in the horse industry today have not
been affected in some way by the career and work of Marion Gross,” Gainesway
President Antony Beck said.

Gross first joined the Gainesway forces when the farm was in its original
location on Versailles Road, adjacent to Keeneland. At a party
commemorating Gross’s 40th year at the farm, in 2003, Gainesway founder John
Gaines recalled how he met Marion: “Showed up at our front door on Versailles
Road looking for a job.”  Gaines took a chance on “the kid from the
mountains,” and he recalled it as one of the best business decisions he ever
made. Gross became the Stallion Manager in 1968.

Gainesway stood only four stallions when Gross arrived in 1963, but
oversaw the expansion of the stallion ranks to a roster of 50 horses in the
early 1980’s.



Gross’s knowledge of his stallions, and their owners, was encyclopedic, with
him clearly recalling the smallest detail of all his charges. *Vaguely
Noble may have been his sentimental favorite, but Lyphard, Mt. Livermore, and
Cozzene also merited special mention as he recounted the stallion careers in
which he took the most pride.

A funeral service will be held Friday at 12:30 p.m. (EST) at the Kerr
Brothers Funeral Home on Harrodsburg Road in Lexington, with burial to follow in
Blue Grass Memorial Gardens. A visitation will be at the funeral home Thursday
evening from 5-8 p.m.