In this show program for the 1972 Columbian Park Horse Show,
National Appaloosa Ponies!
Information about them is difficult to come by, and I only know about them because of the Columbian Park Horse Show. Having said that, I did find this snippet recently in an online forum:
There was also the short-lived National Appaloosa Pony Incorporated (NAPI), in Indiana, which was in business the same time as the POA, Inc. An advertisement in the 9-1966 Western Horseman magazine, the NAPI stated that they registered “the most popular riding size pony… the Appaloosa Pony 40 inches up to 14 hands.” In the book America’s Horses and Ponies, the registry is called National Appaloosa Pony Association [NAPA] with height requirements from 40 inches up to 55 inches. The NAPI mantra is that the registry is “preserving the Appaloosa Pony” as found, as opposed to the POA which is “creating a new breed”.The Giltners' influence on the local horse community was enough that the NAPIs got their own classes at the Columbian Park Horse Show. No other breed got that privilege.
So, what happened to the National Appaloosa Pony Registry? To the ponies that were bred, sold, and shown? I don't know. My sister Leslie also draws a blank when it comes to the Giltners and their ponies. It's as though they and their NAPIs just quietly disappeared.
Just as the breed did.

























