Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Sagamore Farm is an American Thoroughbred horse breeding farm in Glyndon, Baltimore County, Maryland. Established in 1925, it was owned by Margaret Emerson Vanderbilt who gave it to her son Alfred G. Vanderbilt II for his twenty-first birthday. A a member of New York''s wealthy Vanderbilt family, Alfred would become the owner and president of Baltimore''s Pimlico Race Course. As well, he served at various times as head of the New York Racing Association and the United States Jockey Club. In 1941, Vanderbilt teamed up with Walter P. Chrysler, Jr. and other investors to acquire for breeding services the 1935 English Triple Crown winner Bahram from the Aga Khan III. Bahram stood at stud at Sagamore Farm then was sent to Chrysler''s North Wales Stud in Warrenton, Virginia. In 1966, Vanderbilt was part of another syndicate that bought Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner Kauai King who would also stand at stud at Sagamore Farm.