Tuesday 10 November 2015

The History Of The Pimlico Race Course

Pimlico Race Course is home to the Preakness, the second race of horse racing's Triple Crown.


Baltimore's Pimlico Race Course is the second-oldest horse track in America. It has been a steady home to the Preakness Stakes, the second race in the Triple Crown, since 1909.


Early Ideas


In 1868, Maryland Governor-elect Oden Bowie, while attending a dinner party, suggested that guests get together once a year to race their year-old horses. While other tracks bid on the suggested race (Saratoga Race Course among them), Bowie promised to build a "model track" in Baltimore for the race and won support for the idea.


The Building Process


The Maryland Jockey Club purchased 70 acres of land in 1868 and then began construction on the $25,000 stadium. It was named Pimlico after the area's name given by English settlers in the Colonial era.


Throughout the Years


Pimlico emerged in the early 1900s as one of the top tracks in the nation and helped spark interest in horse racing in Maryland. It weathered the 1910 anti-gambling movement, the Great Depression, and several fires. The modern-day track plays host to nearly 100,000 people for the Preakness each year.


Special Appearances


Because the Preakness Stakes is held at Pimlico, some of the most important horses in racing history have run the course. War Admiral, Sea Biscuit, Man O' War and Secretariat are some of the biggest names to race and win at Pimlico.

Tags: Race Course, Pimlico Race, Pimlico Race Course, home Preakness, horse racing, Preakness Stakes, second race