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The anvil of God’s word

November 4, 2018

“Last eve I paused beside the blacksmith’s door,

And heard the anvil ring the vesper chime;
Then looking in, I saw upon the floor,
Old hammers, worn with beating years of time.

“‘How many anvils have you had,’ said I,
‘To wear and batter all these hammers so?’
‘Just one,’ said he, and then with twinkling eye,
‘The anvil wears the hammers out, you know.’

“And so, I thought, the Anvil of God’s Word
For ages skeptic blows have beat upon;
Yet, though the noise of falling blows was heard,
The Anvil is unharmed, the hammers gone.”


But the word of the Lord endureth for ever... 1 Peter 1:25

I will worship toward thy holy temple, and praise thy name for thy lovingkindness and for thy truth: for thou hast magnified thy word above all thy name. Psalm 138:2

Saying Good-bye to Johnny

November 4, 2018

On November 3, 2018, friends and loved ones gathered in Belton, Missouri to say good-bye to Johnny. He was sent home in a pine wood charnel that was built by his loving nephew Peter. Six rosebuds accompanied him home and he left this world with the befitting tune,  "my way".  Johnny, if you can hear us, we have and alway will love you. Response in Peace, my dearest brother.

From his loving sister Bianca Santoro-Wall

October 29, 2018

LIVE,LAUGH AMD SING "ITS GOING TO BE ALL RIGHT". HE IS NOW SHOEING THE HORES FOR GODS LEGENDS OF ANGELS. [ WITH A SIDE BET ON THE SIDE]WE LOVE YOU AND WILL SEE YOU AGAN IN ETERNITY.

JOHN FRANKLIN SANTORO  HIS LOVE OF HIS DOGS AND HOW THEY LOVED HIM WAS THAT HE TRULEY COMMUNICATED  WITH THEM. AND THEY WERE HIS FAMILY. ANY ONE WANTING TO DO ANY DONATIONS IN HIS NAME ,CONSIDER DONATING TO AGENCIES AGAINST ANIMAL CRUELTY.  ESPECIALLY DOGS AND  RACE HORSES. 

If this scale could speak

October 29, 2018

If this scale could speak, it would tell a tale of times past that many would not understand. It would tell you a story of his maternal grandfather, Vincenzo Palumbo, who came all the way from Agrigento Sicily, in the late 1800's and settled in Brooklyn among the thousands of immigrants and show you the Roma bakery in Ridgewood, Brooklyn where Rosalia Palumbo, our mother made bread at the side of her father. It would tell you how Rosalia continued working in the family bakery business after her father passed away when she was 17. 

Oh, if this scale could speak! Johnny was just a little boy when he learned to make bread at the side of his mother, father, Amerigo Santoro and paternal grandfather, Giovanni Santoro. And give you snapshots of how Johnny taught his nephews, Peter, Randy and Anthony how to make to only brick oven bread on Long Island at La Roma Bakery. It would show you how Johnny's life changed when he decided at the age of 18, to stop "scaling"  the dough, piece by piece and master the noble craft of farrier. In everything Johnny did, he gave it his all. He share each and every victory with the horses he shod--and there were many.  

If this scale could speak, it would not judge Johnny for all his faults and mishaps, because they were outweighed by his good and generous deeds.  It would tell you he lived a full life and never missed the opportunity to celebrate and share his life and all that he owned with his family and friends. 

The Unsung Hero of Roosevelt Raceway

October 29, 2018


Santini was the happiest in his "shop".

John Santoro, aka Santini on the track, was considered as one of the top blacksmiths on Roosevelt Raceway in the late 1970's and until the day the harness racetrack closed in '88--when --John's reputation followed him to Meadowlands and Yonkers.

Santoro developed a reputation as one of the leading practitioners of his craft. He was sought after by national and international trainers, drivers and owners. Santoro's leathered and calloused hands crafted and molded the horseshoes that enabled champion horses and their drivers and trainers such as Jimmy Cruise Sr., Jimmy Cruise Jr., John Chapman Sr., John Chapman Jr; John Paterson Jr.; John Paterson Sr., Buddy Gilmore and Herve Filion,, [just to name a few] to break harness racing records.

Dr. Bernard Brennan, Roosevelt's Veterinarian called upon Santoro to work on difficult cases. Today's blacksmith, or farrier, has access to technology and standards that were established throughout the 1960s to the 1990's. In the 70's and 80's Santoro relied on his ingenuity and his ability to see things that others did not. Santoro experimented with developing patches for the horses that had problems such as quarter-crack and could not be shod. As Santoro still says today " a horse in the barn does not make money".

Patches had already been around in the 70's and 80's; but there was a lot of room for improvement.

Santoro explains that the patches did not stick, or stay in place and worst of all-- they did not let the horses foot heal. Santoro's drive to identify a solution led him to experimenting with proxies for the patch and soaking solutions.

Santoro finally found the right mix and developed a soaking solution and patch that saved many horses and races.

Over the years, Santoro's work in Roosevelt, Yonkers and Meadowlands, was never overlooked. Owners, trainers and drivers brought their horses to him because they knew that an improperly shod horse caused an awkward stride, back strain, muscle pulls or worse conditions...besides risking the race.

As Jimmy Cruise Jr. says to this day, "Johnny was the best--there was no other like Johnny that could shoe horses like he did". Santoro worked 8 to 12 horses a day for various trainers. Today, blacksmiths are typically assisted by grooms, who hold the animal. I recall walking into Santoro's Black Smith shop while he was under the horse, pulling off the old shoe, smoothing the bottom of the hoof with an emery board, holding the new shoe over the hoof, then securing it by driving nails through the hoof wall--all by himself. I remember how backbreaking it was for him to work with animals that were prone to fight and flight."

Santoro has not forgotten the man who taught him his craft, David Spence, a giant in the world of blacksmiths in harness racing . Santoro forged lifetime friends while crafting his custom made horseshoes. Jimmy Cruise Sr. and John Chapman Sr. served as a mentors for him and Cruise Jr. well as Chapman Jr. were and continue to be more like brothers than just friends.

Santoro was a blacksmith for more than 20 years. His determination, self-reliance and self-deprecating humor have helped him through life's challenges--including a terminal illness.

Today, he tells his stories of the famous horses he shod and describes their quirky personalities. He savors memories and victories of a place where Santoro--or "Santini"-- worked in the background, in late morning or early afternoon, after training hours had stopped, and before the races began--a place, that while shaping his horse shoes one by one--he contributed to shaping the history of harness racing--a place where he should never be forgotten--Roosevelt Raceway.

by Maria V. Santoro-Delgado, Ph.D., Santoro's sister.

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