Family Coe's first marriage was to Jane Hutchinson Falligant in 1893, the daughter of Judge Robert Falligant of Savannah, Georgia. She died approximately five years later without having children. She was the former wife of E. Dick Slaughter, a daughter of Alexander Hutchinson Graham and Cornelia Ligon Graham, and a granddaughter of Alabama lieutenant-governor
Robert Fulwood Ligon.
Thoroughbred horse racing and breeding Coe liked horses and was a
thoroughbred horse racing enthusiast. He built a riding stable on his "Planting Fields" estate and put together a racing stable based at the
Saratoga Race Course in
Saratoga Springs, New York. Coe's
filly Black Maria won the
Kentucky Oaks in 1926, the
Metropolitan Handicap in 1927, and the first running of the
Whitney Handicap in 1928. Black Maria was voted the
U.S. Champion Older Female Horse for 1927 and 1928. Among his stables' other notable horses were
Cleopatra, the 1920
U.S. Champion 3-year-old Filly, and
Ladysman, which won the 1932
Hopeful Stakes and was the
American Champion Two-Year-Old Colt. Six of Coe's horses competed in the
Kentucky Derby. His best finish came in 1937, when
Pompoon finished second to
War Admiral. Coe established Shoshone Stud, and in 1923, he paid $110,000 for
The Finn, a then record price for a
sire. The Finn died two years later. Coe's colt
Pompey won the 1926
Wood Memorial Stakes and was a successful sire; appears four generations back in the pedigree of
Secretariat.
American West Coe was a fan of the
American West; in 1910, he purchased Colonel
William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody's hunting camp, Irma Lake Lodge, in Cody, Wyoming. For 45 years, he collected
Americana memorabilia, gathering original diaries, manuscripts, letters and photographs depicting the struggles of the pioneer settlers. In 1948, the William Robertson Coe Collection was presented to
Yale University. ==American Studies Philanthropy==