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  #1  
Old 08-02-2009, 09:15 AM
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Sightseek Sightseek is offline
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Default Happy Birthday Saratoga Racecourse!

Opened August 2, 1864 with the highlight race of course being the Travers.

Small article on the history:

Like much of history, the early days of the founding of Saratoga are somewhat foggy. John "Old Smoke" Morrissey, a former bare-knuckles boxing champion, bouncer, gambler and U.S. congressman, held a four-day experimental meeting at Horse Haven in Saratoga Springs in 1863. Morrissey was described as a "bully politician, head of a New York City gang called the Dead Rabbits, which -- with clubs and fists -- electioneered for Tammany Hall."

The meeting was so successful that it was decided to build a racetrack across the street from Horse Haven. Official history records that William R. Travers and John Hunter were the masterminds behind the building of Saratoga Race Course in 1864.

It is generally agreed that Morrissey, with his string of gambling houses, put up the money to build Saratoga, but discreetly withheld his name from all official documents. Travers and Hunter were men of prestige and position, and that was very important to getting racing accepted at the time.

The inaugural meeting at Saratoga was short and sweet. The Travers Stakes was the highlight of the meeting, being named, of course, for one of the track's founders and its first president. That Travers and Hunter co-owned the first winner, a colt named Kentucky, of the race named for Travers is not as unusual as it might first seem. In the 1800s, the men who built racetracks were often the ones who bred and owned many of the best horses at these meetings. They built tracks to showcase their horses more than to make money.

http://horseracing.about.com/library/blhandt.htm
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  #2  
Old 08-02-2009, 09:21 AM
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fpsoxfan fpsoxfan is offline
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Interesting read!
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  #3  
Old 08-02-2009, 08:15 PM
SniperSB23 SniperSB23 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sightseek
Opened August 2, 1864 with the highlight race of course being the Travers.

Small article on the history:

Like much of history, the early days of the founding of Saratoga are somewhat foggy. John "Old Smoke" Morrissey, a former bare-knuckles boxing champion, bouncer, gambler and U.S. congressman, held a four-day experimental meeting at Horse Haven in Saratoga Springs in 1863. Morrissey was described as a "bully politician, head of a New York City gang called the Dead Rabbits, which -- with clubs and fists -- electioneered for Tammany Hall."

The meeting was so successful that it was decided to build a racetrack across the street from Horse Haven. Official history records that William R. Travers and John Hunter were the masterminds behind the building of Saratoga Race Course in 1864.

It is generally agreed that Morrissey, with his string of gambling houses, put up the money to build Saratoga, but discreetly withheld his name from all official documents. Travers and Hunter were men of prestige and position, and that was very important to getting racing accepted at the time.

The inaugural meeting at Saratoga was short and sweet. The Travers Stakes was the highlight of the meeting, being named, of course, for one of the track's founders and its first president. That Travers and Hunter co-owned the first winner, a colt named Kentucky, of the race named for Travers is not as unusual as it might first seem. In the 1800s, the men who built racetracks were often the ones who bred and owned many of the best horses at these meetings. They built tracks to showcase their horses more than to make money.

http://horseracing.about.com/library/blhandt.htm
If you haven't read this yet you should give it a try:

http://www.amazon.com/Saratoga-Stori...9262102&sr=8-1
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  #4  
Old 08-02-2009, 08:21 PM
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Sightseek Sightseek is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SniperSB23
If you haven't read this yet you should give it a try:

http://www.amazon.com/Saratoga-Stori...9262102&sr=8-1
Thanks, Exclusively Equine has it on sale for $9.95 too!
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  #5  
Old 08-02-2009, 08:26 PM
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Linny Linny is offline
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Kentucky was lucky to be at the races that day. About 2 months prior, a conferderate raiding party decended on the farm of one of his owners, a farm at which Kentucky had been stabled until only about a week prior. The raiders were looking for anything they could steal to keep the confederacy alive though the next months, including food, wagons and horses. Any horse that could stand was considered "war materiel" and could be confiscated at will by confederate officers. Once the Yankees got well into the south there was barely a horse or mule standing that was not in service to the military of one side or the other.
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