|
"Alix," Queen of
the Trotters. |
The first
fair held in was at the old town of
Frankfort in 1859. Mrs. Ellen T. Lawrence relates that
she and John Harris were judges of the "pantry store"
which consisted of the butter and cheese made by Mr.
Whittler.
The fair
proper was enclosed with a rope supported on stakes.
Within this enclosure was a reaper, the first and only
in the county, and mower. The old Kentucky Harvester was
brought in wagons from St. Joe by J. H. Bean and A. P.
Whittier. John Bolt brought from the valley of the
Nodaway two brood mares, which took the premium and a
few head of cattle. E. F. Murray had a span of work
horses that took the premium. Mr. Whittier had six
thoroughbred Durham (Shorthorn) cattle that he had just
brought to . Samuel M. Smith of Milford
exhibited the only hogs at that fair.
The fair was
the first event that brought all of the people together.
When the was came, the minds of the people were diverted
to other channels, and a decade elapsed before another
attempt was made to organize a county fair. However, in
the fall of 1869 a fair quite similar to the first, but
more pretentious, was held in the public square.
Three years afterward the Southwestern Iowa Fair
Association was organized. H. N. Moore was the
principal promoter in this enterprise, H. W. Otis was
president, Richard Wadsworth, treasure, and E. Kretchmer,
secretary. In the fall of 1873 this society held a fair
on the open prairie north of the forty acre tract
subsequently used for fair grounds.
Another
decade passed without any substantial progress being
made in establishing a fair on a firm basis. But in July
1879 a few enterprising citizens of Red Oak met to
organize the Agricultural Society. They immediately
purchased forty acres of ground on which to hold the
exhibition (west of the city of the city of Red Oak at
the north side of Coolbaugh street.
In 1880, the
society was enrolled as a member of the "National
Trotting Association, " with the Red Oak branch
comprising most of the members. A jockey club was
known as the "Red Oak Driving Park Association." The
fair had its successes and failures, more of the latter
than the former, and it voluntarily went out of business
and the land, building and all other property sold, the
stockholders realizing about fifty per cent on their
original investment.
In 1893,
Morris Jones, president of the Standard Trotting Horse
Company, moved his breeding stables and trotters to Red
Oak from Kenosha, Wisconsin. Mr. Jones proceeded to
build up an institution devoted to raising and training
horses. A suitable place was selected and purchased
adjoining the city of Red Oak on the north and named
Pactolus Park in honor of a celebrated trotter owned by
Mr. Jones. A regulation mile track was made, a spacious
amphitheatre built and suitable barns and three hundred
box stalls made ready for occupancy.
Mr. Jones
invited attention to his park by offering premiums of
$20,000.00 divided into seventeen racing events. Entries
to these races were from eighteen different states --
including Texas, California, New York and Canada. The
first day, Marcus Daily Lady Wilton made the fastest
time, 2:15. There was assembled a greater
aggregation of these noble animals than had ever before
been known -- this was conceded by horsemen.
Here it was
that brave little mare, Queen Alix, the sweetest
dispositioned animal in the world was trained
before entering upon the campaign that crowned her
"Queen of the Turf," her racing time being 2:03 3/4.
Unfortunately
the climax of this venture came when on the day that the
most notable events were to be held and there was
present in Red Oak the largest number of people from
surrounding cities and states ever assembled here at one
time, a drenching ran came which threw a damper on
competitors and deprived the promoter of many thousands
of dollars that otherwise would have been gathered in.
This fact, associated with other financial misfortunes,
caused Mr. Jones to yield his park into other hands.
In 1901 a
county fair association was again created and continued
through 1905..
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"The County Fair"
Related by Dr. Dearborn
At fair season, countless "hacks" would arrive on the
unpaved streets of the Square, these being long
vehicles, horse drawn, and they would carry many
passengers. The fare was about ten cents each way and
much shouting was done to entice customers to the
various hacks.
There were running
races and trotting races and in the early days none but
the high wheeled sulkies were used. The brightly
polished spokes flashed in the sun as they whizzed
around the track. Ere long the sulkies appeared with the
bicycle wheels of the present time and soon the old
wooden wheel sulkies were completely discarded..
|