By the time Judith had become Lady Wentworth and taken over the Stud, Crabbet Park had been leased. The Stud retained eight horse boxes, some cowsheds and a few weedy pastures. The horses had been neglected, some had starved to death, and others took years to recover. and on settling in England had decided to turn their home at
Hanstead Park into an Arabian stud farm. A long relationship of buying and leasing horses followed; sometimes the studs were adversaries and sometimes partners. A third stud, Courtlands, was also held up to be of the same level, and the three competed against each other at annual shows such as the one at the
Roehampton Club. In 1926, the
Kellogg Arabian Ranch in California, owned by breakfast cereal magnate
W. K. Kellogg, spent over $80,000 to purchase a number of Crabbet horses, providing much needed money to the Stud.
Skowronek Lady Wentworth rejected Wilfred's "desert conditions" theory as well as a prevailing conviction that Arabians were naturally the size of large ponies (that is, under ). She first proved that Arabians could produce taller horses from the progeny of Rijm, a grandson of Rodania, who reached . Her great contribution to Arabian breeding, however, was her
outcross of the Blunt bloodstock to
Skowronek. Lady Wentworth knew that she needed additional horses to
outcross on descendants of her parents' original bloodstock. She added the
chestnut stallion Dargee, and her most famous purchase, the
gray stallion
Skowronek. The English painter
Walter Winans bought Skowronek from
Count Josef Potocki's Antoniny Stud in
Poland, where he had been foaled in 1909. Winans rode the stallion and used him as a model for several bronzes, then sold him to Webb Wares, who used him as a
hack, and eventually sold him to H. V. Musgrave Clark, where he was shown and used at stud for the first time, and seen by Lady Wentworth. She bought Skowronek in confusing circumstances. Clark believed he was selling the horse to an American exporter, but at the last minute, the export was cancelled and Lady Wentworth became the owner of Skowronek. Clark was a rival Arabian breeder, so deception may have been used to ensure that Crabbet could buy the horse from him. Clark was not happy about the result of the sale. The gray became a spectacular stallion and was named "Horse of the Century". Lady Wentworth later turned down an offer of $250,000 from the
Tersk Stud, and bragged that she once received a cable "from the Antipodes" addressed to "Skowronek, England." The outcross of the Crabbet stock with Skowronek was extremely successful, and the resulting animals sold throughout England and were exported to Argentina, Australia, Canada, Chile, Denmark, Egypt, France, Germany, Israel, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Pakistan, Poland, South Africa, Spain, Russia and the USA.
The Skowronek controversy Lady Wentworth was satisfied that Skowronek was a purebred (or
asil) Arabian, tracing his pedigree and strain to several reliable desert sources. For these reasons, some people argued that his dam was not
asil. Research of Jaskoulka's pedigree shows that her sire Rymnik and her dam Epopeja (also spelled Epopeia or Epopya) both traced to Abbas Pasha horses. Nonetheless, due to this controversy, some private breeders' organizations, such as
Al Khamsa, exclude descendants of Skowronek.
The Depression, World War II, and the postwar years Crabbet's peak year was 1929, when over 30 mares were bred. But as the
Great Depression deepened, it affected Crabbet Park, with Lady Wentworth only breeding 8 foals in 1932, and 2 foals in 1933. To reduce the size of the herd, she made major sales in 1936 to the Tersk Stud of the
Soviet Union, selling 25 horses, including the beautiful Skowronek son Naseem. The stud's financial picture also improved by selling 3 more horses to the Kellogg Ranch. In this period, Lady Wentworth also sold horses to Australia, Brazil, Holland and Portugal. Nonetheless, the Depression years resulted in the birth of many fine horses, including Sharima, Indian Gold, Indian Crown, and Sharfina. During
World War II, Lady Wentworth's aunt, Mary Lovelace, died, leaving a large fortune. This inheritance meant the end of the financial problems for Lady Wentworth and the Crabbet Stud. In the war years, Lady Wentworth cut back her herd due to shortages and the necessity for the Stud to be completely self-supporting in horse feedstuffs. Despite this, horses such as Grey Royal, Silver Gilt, Indian Magic, Silfina, and Serafina were produced. Crabbet was bombed during the war, with over 32
incendiaries dropped, but all landed on farmland and no humans or horses were injured. A Canadian Army Supply Unit took over part of the stud, with soldiers billeted in the house and even in some of the horse boxes. After the war, Lady Wentworth purchased the stallions Raktha and Oran, and produced other significant breeding stock including Sharima, Silver Fire, Indian Gold, and Nisreen. By the time of her death in 1957 at the age of 84, she owned 75 horses, noted for their height, excellent movement and regal carriage. == Crabbet under Cecil Covey ==