America 'albino' horses are
actually not true albinos but instead they are what the American Albino Horse
Club (now known as the White Horse Club) calls Dominant White. A Dominant White
can be any horse, Quarter, Arabian, Standardbred, etc., that has a white coat
with pink skin and dark eyes - black, brown, or blue. A true albino would, of
course, have pink eyes, meaning the Dominant White actually carries off-color
genes. Given the White Horse Club's immaculate records, breeding for this
particular horse has become an almost exact science. Even still, the
qualification of dark eyes requires parents who carry genes for off-color
coats, thereby creating a 5 percent chance that the off-spring will carry some
off-color.
The main physical
characteristic of the American Albino is a white coat, white tail and mane,
pink skin, and black, brown, or dark blue eyes. Outside of coloration, the
American Albino is separated into a stock type horse, saddle horse type, and
Arabian type, with separate categories for ponies. The stock and saddle type
stand around 15.2 hands high, with the Arabian type being slightly shorter.
Because the American Albino is actually a color breed, it can carry the
characteristics of its sires, whether Quarter horse, Arabian, Morgan, or
Thoroughbred. For the most part they are known to be smart, tractable, and even
tempered.
American Albino horses, based
around coloration rather than conformation or pure-blooded breeding, actually
follows the origins of whatever horse is being bred. The American Albino Horse
Club was formed in 1937 on the White Horse Ranch near Naper, Nebraska. Old King,
a white stallion with pink skin and brown eyes, is said to be the foundation
horse for the American Albino. Although his background goes untraced, he is
believed to be predominantly of Arabian stock with some Morgan. Old King's
off-spring tended to follow his color pattern when crossed with Morgans of any
color. Since its foundation, the AAHC has made strict breeding standards in an
effort to keep a pure white horse. In 1970, the AAHC became the White Horse
Club and, at the same time, split to form another classification, the American
Cream, for those horses with touches of color.