Franklin Park (race track)

Franklin Park
Location Saugus, Massachusetts
Coordinates 42°26′26″N 71°0′19″W / 42.44056°N 71.00528°W / 42.44056; -71.00528Coordinates: 42°26′26″N 71°0′19″W / 42.44056°N 71.00528°W / 42.44056; -71.00528
Date opened 1859
Date closed 1905
Course type Harness

Franklin Park also known as the Franklin Trotting Park, Franklin Driving Park, Old Saugus Race Course, and the Old Saugus Race Track was an American Harness racing track located in Saugus, Massachusetts.

Early years

Franklin Park opened in 1859 on the Boyton Estate.[1][2][3] It consisted of a one-mile track, new stables, and a hotel.[1][4] It was constructed at an expense of $50,000.[3]

Reopening

After sitting idle for almost a decade, Franklin Park was reopened by a group from Lynn, Massachusetts in 1884.[3][5] That year a stable containing 100 15 by 12 box stalls, a judge's stand, and a new hotel were erected.[5] Three years later, the track was renovated and a grandstand and a number of new stalls were built.[6] The track was renovated again in 1889 when it was taken over O.S. Roberts.[7] Less than a year later, Franklin Park was purchased by eighteen of Roberts's creditors, who formed a syndicate called the Franklin Association of Lynn.[8] It was later purchased by the Brighton Beach Racing Association, owner of Brighton Beach Race Course. The BBRA leased out Franklin Park to local managers.[9]

Closure

Although the track attracted many affluent citizens, it also attracted some seedier elements. In 1898 the New England Society for the Suppression of Vice alleged that illegal gambling activities were taking place at Franklin Park.[10] In 1905, the race track closed after local citizens complained about the questionable patrons that the racetrack attracted.[4] Races that were to be held in Saugus in 1906 were moved to Albany, New York.[11]

Later use

Location of Franklin Park in 2013

After it closed, the race track was used to host fairs, field days, picnics, motorcycle races, bonfires, and circuses and the hotel became a private residence.[4][12][13] Due to its remote location, Franklin Park was frequently used as a dumping ground.[4][14]

In 1911 the property became an airfield and was used by pioneer aviators Harry Atwood,[15] Ruth Bancroft Law,[16] and Lincoln J. Beachey.[15]

In 1932 the track reopened as an auto racing facility. It closed the following year.[4]

After Massachusetts legalized pari-mutuel wagering in 1934, a group of area businessmen and government officials led by Henry A. B. Peckham, John J. Mullen, Charles Friend, Harold Dodge, Frederick Willis, William Landergan, and James E. McElroy attempted to bring horse racing back to the site.[17] Mullen even arranged a meeting with his friend Governor Joseph B. Ely in an attempt to get his assistance. Ely refused to express any opinion on the matter and stated that the matter was for the Racing Commission to decide.[18]

In 1940, property owner Godfrey Lowell Cabot offered the site to the United States Navy for use as the location of its main New England dirigible base.[19] In 1948 he donated the land to Northeastern University.[20] In 1950 a proposal was made to construct a $5 million gasoline storage plant on the site.[21]

In 1970 developer George W. Page and property owner Martin DeMatteo presented the Board of Selectmen with a plan to build a 60,000 seat stadium on the property.[22] The plan was opposed by conservationists who objected to building a stadium on Rumney Marsh. It was abandoned when the Boston Patriots chose Foxborough, Massachusetts as the location of their new stadium.[23]

Since 1990, the property has been owned by the Department of Conservation and Recreation (formerly the Metropolitan District Commission).[4]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "On-Dits in Sporting Circles". Spirit of the Times; A Chronicle of the Turf, Agriculture, Field Sports, Literature and the Stage (1835-1861) (New York: American Periodicals Series II) 29 (18). June 11, 1859.
  2. Hurd, Duane Hamilton, ed. (1888). "Saugus". History of Essex County, Massachusetts: With Biographical Sketches of Many of Its Pioneers and Prominent Men (J. W. Lewis & Company) 1: 397. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
  3. 1 2 3 "A First Class Investment". Boston Daily Globe. June 17, 1876.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 http://www.nmca.org/Nmca98-4.htm RUMNEY MARSH, PARK AVENUE RESTORATIONS PROJECT
  5. 1 2 "Franklin Trotting Park: Numerous Improvements in Progress and Many Flyers Already Out.". Boston Daily Globe. May 16, 1884.
  6. "Ready for the Track". Boston Daily Globe. May 15, 1887.
  7. "Speed at Saugus". Boston Daily Globe. May 23, 1889.
  8. "Trotting Syndicate". Boston Daily Globe. February 15, 1890.
  9. "Running Meeting is Off". Boston Daily Globe. July 27, 1891.
  10. New England Watch and Ward Society (1885). Seventh Annual Report of the N.E. Society for the Suppression of Vice. Boston: Deland & Barta. pp. 11–13.
  11. "Transferred to Albany". Boston Daily Globe. June 11, 1906.
  12. "End of the Hotel Business in Saugus.". Boston Daily Globe. December 6, 1908.
  13. "Motorcycles Race Fast at Saugus". Boston Daily Globe. May 31, 1914.
  14. "Race Track Turned Into Car Crematory". Boston Daily Globe. December 5, 1929.
  15. 1 2 Norman E. Down (1997). Images of America: Saugus. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7524-0469-5.
  16. Jean Adams, Margaret Kimball, Jeanette Eaton (1970). Heroines of the Sky. Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc.
  17. "Urge Old Saugus Race Track Revived". Boston Daily Globe. December 11, 1934.
  18. "Ely Hears Saugus Race Track Plea". Boston Daily Globe. December 12, 1934.
  19. "Rosendahl Views Dirigible Base Sites for N. E.: Saugus Tract Will Be Considered Among Others, Expert Says". Boston Daily Globe. November 22, 1940.
  20. "Dr. Cabot Presents N. U. 300 Acres in Revere, Saugus". Boston Daily Globe. September 5, 1948.
  21. "Hearing in Saugus on Gas Storage Plant Brings Heated Debate". The Boston Daily Globe. January 4, 1950.
  22. Ralby, Herb (April 3, 1970). "Saugus selectmen study stadium plan". Boston Globe.
  23. Kaese, Harold (September 13, 1970). "Do the Pats Have a New Stadium?". Boston Globe.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 18, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.