Poet Helen Hay was a poet and an author of books for children. A number of her poems were published in ''
Harper's Magazine. One of her poems, Love of the Rose'', was used in
Leon Ardin's opera,
Antony and Cleopatra (Act 2, no. 15).
Herbs And Apples (1910) is a collection of poems that she published using what she had given for
The Metropolitan Magazine and ''
Collier's Weekly''. "Songs and Sonnets," "Gypsy Verses" are also some of her works produced in such a manner. Several of her works have been republished in the 21st century. Her horses won the
American Grand National steeplechase in 1926, 1927, 1928, and 1937. In flat racing, her horses
Twenty Grand and
Shut Out won the
Kentucky Derby and
Belmont Stakes in 1931 and 1942, respectively. Twenty Grand, named
American Horse of the Year in 1931, inspired a cigarette brand put out by
Axton-Fisher Tobacco Co., which led to a 1936 trademark infringement case it won. The trademark battled over by was the name "Twenty Grand"/"20 Grand" and a depiction of a horse's head. Shut Out was bested for the
American Horse of the Year in 1942 by 1941 Triple Crown winner
Whirlaway, when Whirlaway repeated after winning the title in 1941. In 2019, Helen Hay Whitney was posthumously given the industry's highest honor with induction into the
National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame as one of its
Pillars of the Turf.
Philanthropy The beneficiary of a large fortune on the death of her husband, Helen Whitney provided substantial funding to various causes and institutions including the
Payne Whitney Gymnasium at
Yale University. In 1943, an ailing Helen Whitney and her daughter Joan created the
Helen Hay Whitney Foundation which supports early
postdoctoral research training in all basic
biomedical sciences. ==Personal life==