F 3. Patsy D. Anderson, born in 1831; married Colonel Richard Ten Broeck, in 1857, in Liverpool, England. He is a lawyer by profession, and a citizen of New York; and she was a citizen of Kentucky. He is the owner of fine stock, and is the representative of the American turf in England, and has won many valuable prizes with his horses.
We copy the following sketch from Bell's Life, London, viz. :
TEN BROECK'S WINNINGS IN ENGLAND.
We present herewith copious tables setting forth the result of the late racing campaign in England in a pecuniary point of view. Among the winners for the year, we find the name of Mr. Ten Broeck prominent. He
stands credited with $15,745, of which $6,475 was won by Prioress, $2,200 by Babylon and $1,000 by Woodburn. The balance was won by his English purchases, Eclipse, Barbarity, Miwosa and Orlanda. The above sums include Mr. Ten Broeck's winnings in "stakes" alone. What he may have pocketed in the way of bets, of which official record is never made, is left to conjecture, but that it was beyond his winnings in "stakes," those who know his shrewdness in everything that pertains to the turf, and have watched his success in the different matches in which his horses have been engaged, will not, we are certain, for a moment doubt. The heaviest winner during the season was Sir Joseph Hanley, who fobbed, in stakes alone, $61,000. Mr. Merry stands next, with some $58,000, and several others with $30,000, each, follow.