Maywood Park

For the Oregon town, see Maywood Park, Oregon.
Maywood Park
Location Melrose Park, Illinois
Coordinates 41°54′23″N 87°50′15″W / 41.90635°N 87.83741°W / 41.90635; -87.83741Coordinates: 41°54′23″N 87°50′15″W / 41.90635°N 87.83741°W / 41.90635; -87.83741
Date opened 1946
Race type Standardbred
Notable races
  • Windy City Pace
  • Abe Lincoln
  • Maywood Filly Pace
  • Galt
Official website

Maywood Park was located in Melrose Park, Illinois, United States, 17 miles from downtown Chicago. It was used for harness racing. It had a capacity of 33,297 people and was built in 1946. The track was a half-mile oval. The track closed in 2015. [1]

History

Maywood Park was originally the home of Cook County Fairgrounds, where in 1932 and during Chicago's Century of Progress Exposition years of 1933 and 1934, non-wagering harness racing purse programs were held.

Maywood has conducted race meets with wagering since 1946, the longest in the state's standardbred history.

In June 1947 the first full harness race program to be televised anywhere in the country took place at Maywood Park, and the opening night of the 1957 spring meet was televised by NBC on The Tonight Show.

In 1979, boxing champion Muhammad Ali won a seven-furlong exhibition race, a fundraising event to benefit Provident Hospital of Chicago.

In 1984 Maywood Park became the first Chicago-area track to host a Breeders Crown race. The Two-Year-Old Filly Pace Final carried a $550,000 prize, the largest purse ever offered at a Chicago area Standardbred track.

Maywood Park has been the scene of numerous world records, including She's A Great Lady's 1:51.2 mile in 1995, a record that still stands for a three-year-old filly pacer on a half-mile track.

Physical attributes

The track had a half-mile dirt oval, and was capable of seating at least 33,297. There was stabling on the backstretch for 984 horses.

Racing

The following stakes were held at Maywood Park:

References

  1. Milbert, Neil (2015-10-02). "Maywood Park track ends harness racing, Balmoral next". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2016-01-09.
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