Written by Nancy J. Farrier
Thousands of people have become proficient horse trainers
because of Jesse Beery and his entrepreneur outlook and gift with animals.
Jesse was born in Ohio in 1861. Jesse worked hard on his father’s farm. He came
from a family of eight, but his mother died when he was 7-years-old. At a very
young age, Jesse showed a propensity for training horses. That gift, in
addition to his ability to share his knowledge and discoveries with others,
made him world famous.

In 1905 Jesse returned to his home town. He had the idea to
begin a school for horse training. He’d developed different equipment,
including new types of bits, to use with his method. His ideas were
practical and easy to implement.
practical and easy to implement.
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Breaking kicking habit |
wrote a curriculum that would be mail order and thorough. His mail order course included eight manuals beginning with the basics of breaking a colt and going on to breaking bad habits, such as kicking or being difficult to shoe. The final book showed how to teach your horse tricks such as having the horse fire a gun or carry a handkerchief, to sit down stand erect, or imitate bad habits.
One of the tricks used to keep a horse from kicking involved
buying
several tin pans, drilling holes in the bottoms to run rope through
them, and attaching them together in a long line. The lines of pans were then
tied to the crupper, a piece of equipment used to keep saddles in place. The
pans would hang down beside the horse’s tail. Helpers would make noise or stand
behind the horse. When he kicked the noise of the pans would startle him and
the horse would learn not to kick.
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Breaking fear of noise using paper |
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Leading horse through paper |
Professor Beery’s course of study began with the admonition,
“ This course is to be studied, not
read.” The student was expected to read the
methods and then go back and study them until they knew how to work with the
horse. Beery expected the students to learn the disposition of the animal and
adapt the training method so that each individual horse would benefit.
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Teaching a horse to carry a basket |
Jesse Beery died in 1945, but his methods still garner
respect. He reached thousands of people, teaching them to help animals and
train horses that would have been difficult otherwise. He was a pioneer in his
field, an inventor, and mastered the field of horse training.
Have you ever heard of Jesse Beery, or the Professor Beery
Mail Course of Horse Training? When I was a preteen, I came across an ad for the
course. I sent off for information and wanted my parents to let me spend the
money to take this course. I didn’t get to purchase the materials, which were
costly. I've often thought of the training method and wondered how Jesse Beery
trained horses.
