Pimlico Race Course
Corporate
Village at Preakness, where over
5,000 people representing many major corporations in the Mid-
Atlantic region gather in a 21st century version of yesteryear's
'garden party.' Over 60,000 revelers crowd additional areas of
the infield to celebrate Preakness Day.
Regrettably, though the famous moniker remains today, the
notable infield 'hill' was removed
in April 1938, ostensibly for obscuring track-level vision of
the racetrack backstretch, which appeared to pose a problem for
movie and television cameras in the infant days of
filming races.
Despite a brief hiatus from flat racing between 1889 and 1904 -
when the Preakness and Dixie were
run at other tracks, and 'outlaw' race meets sprung up around
Maryland Pimlico has conducted racing each year since its
revival in 1904. During this interim period, steeplechase
enthusiasts kept racing alive, and even became Maryland Jockey
Club members upon Pimlico's re-emergence. In 1904, racing at
Pimlico ignited unprecedented recognition and interest from the
public and newspapers alike. Race charts appeared, quite similar
to modern-day style, and for the first time Baltimore readers
found the news accounts more than mere social reports.

Pimlico today welcomes race goers arriving by car, limousine,
and even helicopter, as graciously as those who visited when
'Old Hilltop' was reached primarily by horse-drawn vehicle, over
130 years ago. During its rich history, the racetrack has
enjoyed being the only track in the United States to be honored
by the adjournment of the U.S. House of Representatives for the
first and only time in history in 1877 to watch a race between
Parole, Ten Broeck and Tom Ochiltree. The race became known as
'The Great Race,' and a reproduction of its finish is
immortalized as a Pimlico trademark, adorning the clubhouse as a
signal to all entering that Pimlico is a place where legends
will endure forever.
En route to becoming a true national treasure, Pimlico has
earned its patina of age, weathering small and major wars,
recessions, depressions - including the Great Depression of the
1930's - fires, storms . . . and the simple passage of time. Its
vitality has spanned many an era, representing a time and a
society now involving three centuries. More than 50 years ago,
the youthful president of the Maryland Jockey Club, Alfred G.
Vanderbilt, made a pertinent observation that remains today, as
Pimlico moves into another century: 'Pimlico is more than a dirt
track bounded by four streets. It is an accepted American
institution, devoted to the best interests of a great sport,
graced by time, respected for its honorable past.'
Racing in Pimlico even survived a 1910 anti-gambling movement
that swept the country, prohibiting the sport everywhere, except
in Maryland and Kentucky. Colonel Matt Winn of Churchill Downs
is alleged to have credited Pimlico's Billy Riggs as the savior
of eastern racing at this time. It was Riggs' use of the less
sinful 'French Pools,' or pari-mutuel machines, in 1913 as
opposed to the controversial bookmakers and their blackboards,
that preserved racing at Pimlico during this turbulent time in
racing. A new era was born at Pimlico, which later became the
first racetrack in the country to utilize an electric starting
gate.
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