In 1805 racing moved to Shippingport Island, an abandoned island in the Ohio River. This course was known as Elm Tree Gardens. In 1809 a group of men including the statesman Henry Clay formed a group known as the Downs. It was renamed the Jockey Club the same year. In 1827 races were run on Main St in Louisville.
In 1858 the course was moved to Woodlawn which was closed in 1870. The trophy known as the Woodlawn vase has been presented to the winner of the Preakness Stakes since 1917.
In 1872-1873 a young M. Lewis Clark visited England and France and studied racing practices on the continent and came up with the idea for an American Jockey Club based on the European models. The French Jockey Club remains in existence today and is arguably one of the most exclusive clubs its membership being limited to the nobility and the very wealthy.
Mr. Clark returned to America and established a racetrack which would eventually become known as Churchill Downs. The name comes from the surname of the Churchill family who originally owned the property where the present track is located. In 1874 Mr. Clark and a group of prominent Louisville met and formed the Louisville Jockey Club and Driving Park association with the articles if incorporation being filed on June 20. 1874. Originally Clark designed 3 major races, the Kentucky Derby, the Kentucky Oaks and the Clark Handicap. These were patterned after three English races, the Epsom Derby, Epson Oaks, and the St. Leger Stakes.
The track formally opened on May 17. 1875 and featured four races including the first Kentucky Derby with a crowd of approximately 10.000 in attendance. The first winner of the Kentucky Derby was Aristides who had been trained and ridden by two African-Americans Ansel Williamson and Oliver Lewis respectively. Aristides was a three year old colt owned by H.P.McGrath.
Unfortunately despite the success of the first Derby the track was not a success financially. This led to the formation of the New Jockey Club in 1894 with Wm .Schulte as president and Clark retained as presiding judge of the track. In 1894-1895 a new grandstand was constructed with twin spires which have come to symbolize Churchill Downs and the Kentucky Derby. The reported cost of building the grandstands was 100,000. Nine Derby's were run before the track became referred to as Churchill Downs in the local Louisville newspaper.
The Kentucky Derby is limited to three year old thoroughbreds both fillies and colts. In 1896 the course was shortened from the original 1.5 miles to 1.25 miles, the reasoning being that the old course was too long for three year olds in the spring. In 1899 a real tragedy occurred, with the suicide by pistol of M Lewis Clark. This was the year that the 25th Derby was run.
During this period of time several other events were staged at Churchill Downs including the staged collision of two locomotives in 1902 at the first Kentucky State Fair before a crowd of 40,000-50,000 spectators. Auto races were also run in 1908, 1910, and1912 .In 1902 A Louisville tailor and other investors took over the track and spend 20,000 on renovations including the addition of a clubhouse.
This was successful because in 1903 Churchill Downs showed a profit for the first time. Ownership of the track went through several changes in ownership and management, including a 1960 attempt by the city of Louisville to purchase the track, but was turned down by city alderman. This was finally settled in 1969 when a group of Churchill board members successfully thwarted a hostile takeover by National Industries and the price of their stock increased significantly. In 1997, In 1997 Churchill Downs Inc. formed the Churchill Downs Investment Corp. to oversee the company's industrial investments. The corporation also owns several racetracks in many states.
In 1984 major renovations were made to the aging facility headed by a former counsel and acting president of Churchill Downs. These included 2.5 million for core renovations, 3.2 million for the Matt Winn Turf Course, and 2.5 million for paddock construction, 5 million for clubhouse improvements, 3.7 million for Skye terrace improvement, and 1.2 million for barn area improvements. In 1984 Meeker was named permanent president of Churchill Downs at age 40. Since then Churchill Downs Inc has continued renovations and aggressively pursued other racing interests including the acquisition and building of other tracks.
In 1996 the Kentucky Derby entered cyberspace launching a corporate site. The Kentucky Derby has kept up with technological advances over the years. We may now watch the Derby on television, web casts, pay per view, from anywhere on the globe but there is nothing equal to actually being there in person.
Anything can happen in the Kentucky Derby, and in the 113th running on May 2, 1987, anything almost did. Over 130,000 packed Churchill Downs on a glorious spring day with the track fast. The overwhelming 5-2 favorite for that day would be the Demons Begone and his jockey Pat Day, who had so far overwhelmed his competition that year. But does anyone remember the name Demons Begone now?
The Kentucky Derby field in 1987 would later prove to be of exceptional quality, with many of the horses going ton to impressive wins of impressive work in the breeding shed. The race not only included Alysheba, but Bet Twice, Lost Code, Cryptoclearance, Capote and Gulch.
With all of that competition and a fast track, the Kentucky Derby's usual two minutes of excitement got even more thrilling as the gate opened. And then the Kentucky Derby turned into the Indy 500. Bodies began colliding as soon as the gate sprung. Seventeen horses would begin the Kentucky Derby ? but only fifteen would finish.
Favorite Demons Begone began bleeding heavily on the backstretch and was pulled up by Pat Day before he reached the first turn. Capote suffered a cut in the initial collision after the starting gate and was pulled up only 70 yards into the Kentucky Derby.
Meanwhile Chris McCarron steadied the bright bay son of the mighty Alydar from a collision of horses on both sides and settled in to be twelfth at the half. He then wound to the trouble-free outside as soon as they hit the top of the stretch, chasing down Bet Twice. Craig Perret tried to keep the tiring Bet Twice from drifiting, but the colt had given his all and yet was still fighting.
However, he slammed into Alysheba three times. Aylsheba nearly went down, but somehow he picked his head back up, grabbed the bit between his teeth and surged past Bet Twice to win the Kentucky Derby.
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