Steinwedell was born Frances Blunt in 1933 and grew up in Chicago, one of three daughters to Carleton Blunt, an attorney and property developer. She first became involved in horse sport in the Midwest, competing alongside her sister Carlene Blunt, a champion equestrian. In 1946, she produced one of the first all-junior horse shows in the United States. For her efforts, she received a certificate of honor from the
Chicago Sun. As a rider, she won amateur
hunter and
jumper classes and championships. In the 1950s, her family moved to Florida, where her father established the
Village of Golf near
Boynton Beach. Steinwedell married and later moved to California, where she worked to further develop
equestrianism on the West Coast. There, she initiated the Grand Prix of Flintridge, which was one of the first
FEI World Cup Qualifiers to be held in the western United States. She continued her riding career through the 1970s in California, competing as an Amateur-Owner in both hunt seat and show jumping. In 1976, she won the
USEF Hunter Seat Medal Finals. Steinwedell first met a four year old Anne Kursinksi when she came to take lessons At the Flintridge Riding Club. Kursinksi would later became best friends with Steinwedell's daughter Francie.
USET Support Steinwedell was a long time supporter of the
United States Equestrian Team's Gold Medal Club, an initiative to advance American showjumping on the international stage. She was particularly notable for her syndicate ownership of three world class mounts for Olympian Anne Kursinski, Eros, Livius and Starman. Starman would place fourth individually in show jumping at the
1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, and win a
team silver medal. Starman retired at age 15 and later went on to be a successful breeding stallion. Eros and Kursinksi would compete at the
1996 Summer Olympic Games where they were a part of the silver medal-winning United States show jumping team. They would also go on to compete at the FEI World Equestrian Games, FEI World Cup Finals and Mexico's $450,000 Pulsar Grand Prix, the world's richest event at the time. In 2016, Steinwedell was inducted into the United States Show Jumping Hall of Fame for her contributions to the sport. In 2019, the United States Equestrian Team honored her with a special award for 40 years of contributions to the Gold Medal Club. Steinwedell died at age 89 on April 8, 2024. == References ==