November 25, 2024

Hall of Fame trainer Elliott Burch dies

Last updated: 1/30/11 4:47 PM








Elliott Burch was a third-generation Hall of Famer
(Courtesy of NYRA)





Hall of Famer J. Elliott Burch, who trained Belmont S. winners Sword
Dancer, Quadrangle, and Arts and Letters, died Saturday at Newport
Hospital in Rhode Island of complications from pneumonia. He was 86.

Burch, the son of Hall of Fame trainer Preston Burch and grandson of
Hall of Fame trainer William Burch, began his 30-year training career on
The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) circuit in 1955 and went on
to saddle more than 60 stakes winners and six champions.

In addition to Horses of the Year Sword Dancer (1959), Arts and
Letters (1969) and Fort Marcy (co-champion in 1970), Burch also trained
top thoroughbreds Quadrangle, who won the Belmont in 1964; Bowl of
Flowers, the top two-year-old and three-year-old filly of 1960 and 1961,
and Key to the Mint, who won the 1972 Travers, Woodward, and Brooklyn H.
on the way to becoming that year’s three-year-old champion.

“Elliott Burch was inducted into the Hall of Fame the same year that
I became a racing fan,” NYRA President and CEO Charles Hayward said. “I
had the good fortune to meet Mr. Burch as I was friends with all of his
children. We all know that he was a brilliant trainer and a great
horseman. He was also a devoted father who cared deeply for his family.
He was an avid reader and I enjoyed hearing him speak about his favorite
books. Elliott Burch will be missed and we should all thank him for the
many contributions that he made to Thoroughbred racing.”

Born on March 3, 1924, in Washington, D.C., Burch served in the Army Signal
Corps during World War II before going to work for Daily Racing Form as a
writer. He then began working for his father at Isabel Dodge Sloane’s Brookmeade
Stable, taking over as head trainer in 1957. Two years later, he saddled
Brookmeade’s three-year-old Sword Dancer to win not only the Belmont but the
Travers, Metropolitan H., Woodward and Jockey Club Gold Cup en route to a host
of year-end honors.

In 1964, Burch began training for Paul Mellon’s Rokeby Stables, for whom he
trained Quadrangle, Fort Marcy, Key to the Mint and Arts and Letters as well as
Run the Gantlet, 1971’s champion turf horse, and Summer Guest, winner of the
1972 Coaching Club American Oaks.

Burch, formerly of Garden City, New York, was inducted into Racing’s Hall of
Fame in 1980 and retired in 1985, moving to Rhode Island in 1988.

Predeceased by his wife, Phyllis Hammond Burch, Burch was the father of one
daughter, Jehanne Burch, of Middletown, Rhode Island, and three sons: Daniel and
his wife Patricia of Manhasset, New York, Richard and his wife Margaret of
Charlotte, North Carolina, and the late William E. Burch. He had four
grandchildren, Kathryn, Mackenzie, Charlotte and Olivia.

Friends and family are invited to calling hours on Thursday  from 5 to 7
p.m. (EST) at the O’Neill-Hayes Funeral Home, 465 Spring Street, Newport, Rhode
Island. 

A memorial service will be held at the United Congregational Church, 524
Valley Road, Middletown, Rhode Island, on February 12 at 11:30 a.m.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Newport Hospital or the National
Museum of Racing in Saratoga Springs, New York, at
www.racingmuseum.org.