Class | Defunct stakes |
---|---|
Location | Sheepshead Bay Race Track, Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, New York, United States |
Inaugurated | 1880 |
Race type | Thoroughbred - Flat racing |
Race information | |
Distance | 6 furlongs |
Surface | Dirt |
Track | left-handed |
Qualification | Two-year-olds |
The Autumn Stakes was an American Thoroughbred horse race held annually for thirty years at Sheepshead Bay Race Track in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, New York. Inaugurated the year the track opened in 1880, it was an important event run on dirt that was open to two-year-old horses of either sex. Initially contested at a distance of six furlongs, from 1890 through 1899 it was raced over the track's Futurity Course at 5.75 furlongs before returning to the original distance. [1]
In its September 10, 1880 reporting on the inaugural Autumn Stakes that resulted in a dead heat between Brambaletta and Bonnie Lizzie, the New York Times called it "one of the most magnificent finishes ever seen." [2]
Dinna Ken, from the Harry P. Whitney stable, finished first in the 1906 running of the Autumn Stakes but was disqualified for a crossing interference at the start of the race that gave runner-up Arcite the win. [3]
In the twenty-three runnings of the Autumn Stakes from 1887 thru 1909 there are six winners that would earn National Champion two-year-old recognition. Emperor of Norfolk (1887), Hamburg (1897), and Mesmerist (1899) were named American Champion Two-Year-Old Colt. The winners in each of three consecutive years, Sallie McClelland (1890), Yorkville Belle (1891), and Lady Violet (1892), would be named American Champion Two-Year-Old Filly. [4]
Firenze won the 1886 edition of the Autumn Stakes under the race management of trainer James Murphy for owner James B. A. Haggin. A filly, Firenze would go on to earn National Championship recognition as the American Champion Three-Year-Old Filly of 1887. Then, in each of the ensuing three years she was chosen the American Champion Older Female Horse. In 1975 Firenze would be recognized with Thoroughbred racing's highest honor when she was inducted into the United States Racing Hall of Fame. [5]
Emperor of Norfolk won the eighth edition of the Autumn Stakes in 1887. Owned by the prominent California businessman Lucky Baldwin, Emperor of Norfolk would be recognized as that year's American Champion Two-Year-Old Colt. He would go on to earn American Champion Three-Year-Old Colt honors and in 1988 would be inducted into the Racing Hall of Fame. [5]
Hamburg, the 1897 Autumn Stakes winner, continued to have success in racing which would see him recognized as the 1898 American Horse of the Year. As a stallion at stud, he would be 1905's Leading sire in North America and in 1986 would be inducted into the Racing Hall of Fame. [5] When racing, Hamburg was owned by John E. Madden who remains to this day the only person to be inducted into both the Harness racing and Thoroughbred racing Hall of Fame. [6] Madden named his breeding farm in Lexington, Kentucky Hamburg Place in honor of the horse whose race earnings and selling price made the farm's acquisition possible. [7]
In 1908, the administration of Governor Charles Evans Hughes signed into law the Hart–Agnew bill that effectively banned all racetrack betting in the state of New York. The legislation allowed for fines and up to a year in prison which was strictly enforced. [8]
Racetrack operators had no choice but to drastically reduce the purse money being paid out which resulted in the Autumn Stakes offering a purse in 1909 that was less than five percent of what it had been at its peak in earlier years. These small purses made horse racing unprofitable and impossible for even the most successful horse owners to continue in business. As such, for the 1910 racing season management of the Sheepshead Bay facility dropped some of its minor stakes races and used the purse money to bolster its most important events. [9] Compounding matters for the Sheepshead Bay track was intense competition. In a summary of 1909 racing, the Daily Racing Form reported that "Sheepshead Bay, which for years led the country in daily average distribution, yielded first place in 1909 to Belmont Park, which August Belmont and his associates are ambitious to make the "turf headquarters of America". [10]
A 1910 amendment to the Hart–Agnew legislation added further restrictions that made the owners and directors of a racetrack personally liable for any betting done on their premises, with or without their consent. Such an onerous liability was intolerable and meant that by 1911 all racetracks in the state ceased operations. [11] Although a February 21, 1913 ruling by the New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division paved the way for racing to resume that year, by then it was too late for horse racing at the Sheepshead Bay Race Track and it was ultimately sold to the Sheepshead Bay Speedway Corporation who used it for automobile racing. [12]
In December of 1919, the Sheepshead Bay facility, a business that the Daily Racing Form called one of the most famous racetracks in the history of the American turf, was purchased for real estate development. The infrastructure was torn down and the land subdivided into building lots. [13]
Speed record:
Most wins by a jockey:
Most wins by a trainer:
Most wins by an owner:
Year | Winner | Age | Jockey | Trainer | Owner | Dist. (Furlongs) | Time | Win $ | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1909 | Cherryola | 2 | Eddie Dugan | John T. Ireland | John T. Ireland | 6 F | 1:13.60 | $390 | |
1908 | Trance | 2 | Dave R. McDaniel | George M. Odom | George M. Odom | 6 F | 1:12.40 | $3,405 | |
1907 | Royal Tourist | 2 | Dave R. McDaniel | John W. Rogers | Harry Payne Whitney | 6 F | 1:11.00 | $4,085 | |
1906 | Arcite | 2 | Roscoe Troxler | Peter W. Coyne | George J. Long | 6 F | 1:12.00 | $3,955 | |
1905 | Juggler | 2 | Gene Hildebrand | John W. Rogers | Harry Payne Whitney | 6 F | 1:13.60 | $4,610 | |
1904 | Waterside | 2 | Frank O'Neill | John E. Madden | John E. Madden | 6 F | 1:12.60 | $2,935 | |
1903 | Knight Errant | 2 | Willie Gannon | James G. Rowe Sr. | James R. & Foxhall P. Keene | 6 F | 1:13.00 | $3,900 | |
1902 | Fire Eater | 2 | John Bullman | John J. Hyland | August Belmont Sr. | 6 F | 1:13.80 | $2,450 | |
1901 | Leonid | 2 | Winfield O'Connor | John J. Hyland | August Belmont Sr. | 6 F | 1:16.00 | $2,450 | |
1900 | Longshoreman | 2 | Tod Sloan | Frank L. Gardner | Frank L. Gardner | 6 F | 1:14.40 | $2,450 | |
1899 | Mesmerist | 2 | Winfield O'Connor | Julius Bauer | Bromley & Co. (Joseph E. Bromley & Arthur Featherstone) | 5.75 F | 1:09.20 | $2,425 | |
1898 | Scannel | 2 | Tod Sloan | Charles Hill | Frank V. Alexander | 5.75 F | 1:11.80 | $2,425 | |
1897 | Hamburg | 2 | Fred Taral | John E. Madden | John E. Madden | 5.75 F | 1:11.00 | $2,425 | |
1896 | Savarin | 2 | Alonzo Clayton | John W. Rogers | John W. Rogers | 5.75 F | 1:10.20 | $2,425 | |
1895 | Crescendo | 2 | Fred Taral | John G. Givens | Pueblo Stable (J. Naglee Burk) | 5.75 F | 1:10.20 | $2,450 | |
1894 | Applause | 2 | Samuel Doggett | William C. Smith | George E. Smith | 5.75 F | 1:12.00 | $3,525 | |
1893 | Dobbins | 2 | Fred Taral | Hardy Campbell Jr. | Richard Croker | 5.75 F | 1:11.20 | $4,225 | |
1892 | Lady Violet | 2 | Edward Garrison | A. Jack Joyner | Blemton Stable | 5.75 F | 1:11.60 | $3,850 | |
1891 | Yorkville Belle | 2 | Samuel Doggett | Matthew M. Allen | Fred C. McLewee | 5.75 F | 1:09.60 | $4,600 | |
1890 | Sallie McClelland | 2 | Monk Overton | Byron McClelland | Byron McClelland | 5.75 F | 1:10.00 | $4,200 | |
1889 | Magnate | 2 | George Anderson | James G. Rowe Sr. | August Belmont Sr. | 6 F | 1:14.80 | $5,200 | |
1888 | Fresno | 2 | Edward Garrison | Matthew Byrnes | James B. A. Haggin | 6 F | 1:15.00 | $6,000 | |
1887 | Emperor of Norfolk | 2 | Isaac Burns Murphy | John W. McClelland | Lucky Baldwin | 6 F | 1:16.00 | $6,800 | |
1886 | Firenze | 2 | Fred Littlefield | James Murphy | James B. A. Haggin | 6 F | 1:15.00 | $6,175 | |
1885 | Preciosa | 2 | Mr. Stevens | William R. Claypool | James B. A. Haggin | 6 F | 1:17.75 | $4,400 | |
1884 | Natalie | 2 | George Church | James E. Kelly | 6 F | 1:21.00 | $4,000 | ||
1883 | Sister | 2 | J. Fisher | Anthony Taylor | James E. Kelly | 6 F | 1:17.00 | ||
1882 | Barnes | 2 | Jim McLaughlin | James G. Rowe Sr. | Dwyer Brothers Stable | 6 F | 1:19.50 | $3,175 | |
1881 | Memento | 2 | Tom Costello | R. Wyndham Walden | George L. Lorillard | 6 F | 1:17.25 | $3,175 | |
1880 | Bonnie Lizzie | 2 | J. Fisher | John J. Hyland | Mr. J. G. Nelson | 6 F | 1:22.00 | $1,137 | Dead heat |
Brambaletta | 2 | Erskine Henderson | Harvey Welch | Asahel Burnham | |||||