Yes, they called him "Shorty". The first time he saw me come in the barn with my friend who worked for (Secretariat's trainer) Lucien Lauren's son, trainer Roger Laurin, he said to me "son, you walk like an old farmer". I was 17 at the time.
From the NY Times...
Scanlan fares better with Edward (Shorty) Sweat, Secretariats devoted groom, a flashy dresser who liked vodka, danced the boogaloo and fathered four children by three different women. Powerfully built, with massive forearms, Sweat joined the exodus of Southern black men who hired on as grooms because the job paid a halfway-decent wage and beat picking cotton. The son of a poor sharecropper, he was working steadily with horses at 14 and eventually landed at Laurins Holly Hill Farm, the ticket that led him to the big time in New York.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/03/books/review/Barich-t.html
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Edward Eddie Sweat
Birth: Aug. 29, 1939
Holly Hill
Orangeburg County
South Carolina, USA
Death: Apr. 17, 1998
Elmont
Nassau County
New York, USA
Born in Holly Hill, South Carolina, Eddie Sweat was one of nine children of an African American sharecropper. Mary Sweat was his morther. Holly Hill was where future U.S. Racing Hall of Fame trainer Lucien Laurin maintained a Thoroughbred horse farm and he offered Sweat a job after he saw the wide-eyed teen frequently peeking at the horses through a fence to the property as well as sometimes skipping school just to watch the horses. In 1957, the then eighteen-year-old Sweat accepted the offer of full-time work as groom for the Laurin stable of racehorses with a small fixed salary plus 1% of the horses earnings.
There, on April 24, a group primarily of relatives no one from Secretariats inner circle was present gathered at Rock Hill A.M.E. Church in Vance, S.C., to bid farewell to Edward Shorty Sweat.
A son of tenant farmers who picked cotton as a boy, Sweat dedicated his life to horses. He cared for Secretariat, who 25 years ago delivered one of the greatest performances in the history of sport. Completing a sweep of the Triple Crown, Secretariat won the Belmont Stakes by a staggering 31 lengths.
Yet Sweat, perhaps the most essential member of the Secretariat team, died a paupers death.
Im surprised Bill didnt do a story for Sports Illustrated called The Case of the Forgotten Groom, said Jim Gaffney, one of Secretariats exercise riders.
Bill is William Nack, a writer for Sports Illustrated and author of Secretariat: The Making of a Champion. He didnt write about Sweats death, but several years ago he wrote a story for Sports Illustrated about grooms. It was titled, Nobody Knows Their Names.
He highlighted this from Sweat:
Only way that horses win is if you sit there and spend time with em. Show em that youre tryin to help em. Love em. Talk to em. Get to know em. Thats what you gotta do. You love em and theyll love you, too.
People might call me crazy, but thats the way it is. I been on the racetrack 34 years, and I aint never gonna give up. I think theyll take me to my grave with a pitchfork in my hand and a rub rag in my back pocket.
Coming up empty
Sweat died April 17 of leukemia in a hospital not far from Belmont Park, where Real Quiet will attempt Saturday to become the 12th Triple Crown winner and third since Secretariat.
Sweat had endured numerous ailments, including a heart attack, open-heart surgery, asthma, leukemia and cancer of the stomach. Health insurance through his wife, Linda, a kindergarten teacher, paid his medical bills. But Sweat, on his own, possessed little.
He lost most of his cherished Secretariat memorabilia in a 1991 fire that gutted the Sweats home in Queens. How he died virtually penniless is not clear. Friends, relatives and the two trainers for whom Sweat worked, Lucien and Roger Laurin, offered varying ideas.
It really doesnt matter what happened to his money, said Danny Vogt, a longtime friend. Whatever happened, Eddie came up empty.
Burial:
Gerizim United Methodist Church Cemetery
Vance
Orangeburg County
South Carolina, USA
Created by: SPRICENanc...
Record added: Jul 29, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 74160719
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=74160719