Today’s Kentucky Derby is a multimillion-dollar spectacle involving corporate sponsorship, worldwide media coverage, and an annual citywide festival in Louisville. Over its nearly century-and-a-half history, the Kentucky Derby has grown to be one of the biggest sporting events of the year, attracting 150,000 spectators at the track and nearly 15 million television viewers on the first Saturday each May.
But 1875, the year of the first Derby, was a different time. The Louisville Jockey Club track, which would one day bear the name “Churchill Downs,” was a small structure that might, on its best day, provide seating and standing room for 12,000 spectators. The grandstand was plain and functional and included a section reserved for bookmakers, whose trade was legal and who operated in the open. Perhaps most significantly, the majority of jockeys in the race were Black, in stark contrast to the present-day Derby, where participation by African-American jockeys is rare.
In The First Kentucky Derby, racing historian Mark Shrager examines the events leading up to the first “Run for the Roses,” the unsuccessful effort that the winning owner might have made to rig the race for his preferred horse, and the prominent role played by African Americans in Gilded Age racing culture—a holdover from pre-emancipation days, when slaves were trained from birth to ride for their wealthy owners and grew up surrounded by the horses that would be their life’s work.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Produkt-Hinweis
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Dicke: 22 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-4930-9030-3 (9781493090303)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Prologue: A Word to the Reader
Preface: 1875 Was a Long Time Ago
Introduction: The Derby or the Bunbury?
Chapter 1: A Blessed Event in the Bluegrass
Chapter 2: Colonel Clark and the Birth of the Derby
Chapter 3: Three Black Jockeys, Seven Kentucky Derby Wins
Chapter 4: Inauspicious but Promising
Chapter 5: A Winner at Last
Chapter 6: The Rise and Fall of the Black Jockey in America
Chapter 7: Williamson and Lewis
Chapter 8: Aristides Versus Ten Broeck
Chapter 9: The Path to Derby Day
Chapter 10: “Go on with Him, Oliver!”
Chapter 11: Did McGrath Really Lose? A Possible Alternative
Chapter 12: A Pawn In McGrath’s Game? Part 1
Chapter 13: The Battle of the United States Hotel
Chapter 14: A Pawn in McGrath’s Game? Part 2
Chapter 15: “Keeping the Books”
Chapter 16: A Lost Season
Chapter 17: Catastrophe
Chapter 18: A Plaque in the Hall of Fame? The Case for Aristides
Chapter 19: Epilogue
Afterword: It Could Have Been Different
Acknowledgments
Chapter Notes
Bibliography
Index