Former harness racing driver/trainer Richard “Dick” Stillings has been selected as the 37th Little Brown Jug Wall of Fame honoree by the Delaware County Fair.
Stillings won the Little Brown Jug as a trainer in 1986 with Barberry Spur and came back the next year to capture the Jug as a reinsman with Jaguar Spur.
“Nothing could be binger in my heart than the Little Brown Jug,” said Stillings. “My family would attend every year. This is a great honor.”
Stillings, a native of Mount Vernon, Ohio, drove or trained some of the best Grand Circuit horses in the 1980s — Jaguar Spur ($1,806,473), Barberry Spur ($1,634,017), Kentucky Spur ($1,341,340), Pegasus Spur ($1,296,683), Esquire Spur ($336,250) and Gunslinger Spur ($317,562).
Stillings began his career as a groom for Hall of Fame trainer Dick Buxton. After a three-year stint in the U. S. Army, he took jobs with Jimmy Cruise, Sr. and fellow Wall of Famer, Howard Beissinger.
In 1968, Stillings moved to The Meadows in western Pennsylvania and soon established himself as a top trainer-driver. Stillings and his brother Charles “Buddy” soon joined up with owner Roy Davis and formed a tremendous partnership, sending out a string of successful horses, all with the “Spur” surname to honor the Tottenham Hotspur soccer club.
Stillings, 78, retired from driving and training in 2020 with 5,920 driving victories and $44 million in purse earnings.
The Delaware honor completes the Hall of Fame Triple Crown for Stillings, who was elected to the Harness Racing Hall of Fame in 2013 and the Ohio Hall of Fame in 2014.
Stillings will be presented the Wall of Fame jacket and plaque during the 2022 Little Brown Jug week (Sept. 18-22).
by Jay Wolf, for the Little Brown Jug