The bloodlines of Belle Meade Plantation, primarily due to the success of "Bonnie Scotland, a Belle Meade foundation stud, include famous descendants such as Secretariat, Funny Cide, Seabiscuit, Giacamo, Mine That Bird, Smarty Jones, and Barbaro, Since the 1990s, every horse that has run the Kentucky Derby is a blood descendent of Belle Meade Plantation foundations.
(It later was used in a number of films, including Laurel and Hardy's Bonnie Scotland).
Scotland | Scotland Yard | Bonnie Raitt | Church of Scotland | Scotland national football team | BBC Scotland | Perth, Scotland | Scotland national rugby union team | Peerage of Scotland | BBC Radio Scotland | Kingdom of Scotland | Bonnie Tyler | Secretary of State for Scotland | James V of Scotland | David I of Scotland | Privy Council of Scotland | Historic Scotland | Free Church of Scotland | Secretary of State, Scotland | Parliament of Scotland | James IV of Scotland | Bonnie and Clyde | Society of Antiquaries of Scotland | Fort William, Scotland | First Minister of Scotland | Transport Scotland | The Last King of Scotland | Scone, Scotland | Jura, Scotland | Bonnie Pink |
She soon graduated to leading roles, most notably in Bonnie Scotland (with Laurel and Hardy, 1935), in The Road to Glory (with Fredric March, Warner Baxter and Lionel Barrymore—written in part by William Faulkner—1936), and in Wee Willie Winkie (directed by John Ford, with Shirley Temple, Cesar Romero, and Victor McLaglen, 1937).