Over the weekend, the 86th annual Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration concluded in Shelbyville, Tennessee, and we are determined that this be the last Celebration with abused walking horses on display. A rule finalized earlier this year by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and slated to take full effect in February 2025 gives us reason to hope our decades of work to end this practice will come to fruition. However, there are last-ditch efforts to block this essential rule through lawsuits and political pressure, which is why we must continue to press the issue. Members of the Humane Society of the United States’ Equine Protection team traveled to Tennessee to evaluate the condition of the horses at the show, and here, Keith Dane, senior director of Equine Protection, gives an account of what they saw. 


I have just returned from the Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration in Shelbyville, Tennessee, with several colleagues. We have attended this event for over a decade to bear witness to the abuse that drives us in our campaign to end horse “soring.” What we saw confirmed our long-held position that this event that labels itself a “Tennessee tradition” is nothing more than a celebration of cruelty.  

As in previous years, we witnessed the “Big Lick” stacked, chained horses straining, crouching on their hind ends, some clearly lame, with eyes bulging and ears pinned back throughout their competition, which are all indications of discomfort and pain. Horses in the pleasure classes (those shod with normal horseshoes and performing the natural walking horse gait) moved freely and displayed no such signs of distress; showcasing such natural beauty is surely the way forward for future Celebrations. 

Prior to the show, we learned that Rep. John Rose, R-Tenn., and a handful of other Tennessee and Kentucky congressmen acting on behalf of the Big Lick faction of this industry had sent a letter to Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack complaining about two of the U.S. Department of Agriculture Veterinary Medical Officers’ diligent identification and citation of Horse Protection Act violations at previous shows this year. They even requested that the officers be removed from the team assigned to inspect horses at the Celebration.