| History:
ABOUT
US
The
Virginia Gold Cup Association has grown
since 1922’s inaugural event hosting two
premium steeplechase meets, Virginia Gold
Cup Race on the first Saturday in May and
the International Gold Cup, on the third
Saturday in October. Our mission it to
promote steeplechase racing, the horse
industry and to benefit the Great
Meadow Foundation.
VIRGINIA
GOLD CUP RACE HISTORY
The
legendary annual Virginia Gold Cup
steeplechasing classic, now run before a
sellout crowd of 50,000 people, comes from
much simpler beginnings.
Steeplechasing
in Virginia has been a way of life since
early Colonial times when the horse was
the primary way of transportation, farming
and war. George Washington and
Thomas Jefferson met in sporting
competition over fences. Organized
steeplechase races have run in Fauquier
County since 1844 originally at White
Sulphur Springs then a fashionable spa
near Warrenton.
On April 3,
1922, eight sportsmen met at the Fauquier
Club in Warrenton and decided to organize
a four-mile race between flags over the
natural walls and fences of the nearby
hunting countryside. Pledging $1,000
to purchase a trophy for the winning
owner, they ruled that it be kept
permanently by the first owner to win the
race three times, not necessarily in
consecutive years nor with the same
horse. Just 34 days later, they held
the first Virginia Gold Cup race.
From its beginning, the race was intended
to be a national event drawing “the best
hunters in America.” Unlike
today’s seven-race card, that first
Virginia Gold Cup was a single-race event,
riders to be “gentlemen wearing racing
colors or officers of the U.S. Army in
uniform.” Nine horses competed
that May at Oakwood, the great estate on
Waterloo Road near Warrenton overlooking
the Blue Ridge Mountains and once owned by
President Lincoln’s personal physician,
Dr. Robert King Stone.
In 1924 the
race moved to a new course, Broadview Farm
near Warrenton, and was run for the first
time under national steeplechasing
rules. It has run each year since
with only few interruptions during World
War II.
It was not
unusual in the early years for horses to
be entered in both of America’s most
challenging timber races, the Maryland
Hunt Cup and the Virginia Gold Cup in the
same year--the ultimate steeplechase
challenge. These two demanding races
over four miles of 4 to 5 foot solid rail
fences are scheduled only one week apart;
and only one horse, Howard Bruce’s
remarkable Billy Barton ridden by Albert
Ober, has ever won both races in the same
year (1926).
With the
resumption of racing after the Second
World War in 1946, a new era began for the
Gold Cup. Among the new crop of
young riders were D. M. “Mikey”
Smithwick and his brother A. P.
“Paddy” Smithwick. Mikey won the
1946 race on Christopher Greer’s
Houseman, and would later retire the
fourth Gold Cup challenge trophy for Greer
in 1953. The Hall of Fame brothers
eventually rode five Gold Cup winners
between them—and trained many more.
Over the
years Gold Cup fans have witnessed many
memorable events. But until 1967 no single
horse had ever won the race three times
and only three horses had won it
twice. Leeds Don accomplished the
triple in consecutive years. Owned
by David “Zeke” Ferguson of Hume,
Virginia, the big gray had been bred,
raised, and trained on local turf by
Ridgely White, son of Arthur White, jockey
of the first Gold Cup winner. It was
a cold, rainy day and only four horses
took on the slippery course. Leeds
Don had trouble with his first jumps, even
going to his knees at the seventh, but
veteran jockey Joe Aitcheson kept him on
his feet and pressed him to victory.
Aitcheson not only won that key race, but
also won five out of the six races on the
card that day. The Hall of Famer
would eventually win eight Virginia Gold
Cups on eight different horses—a record
that will be difficult to match.
After Leeds Don retired the fifth
challenge trophy, the most exciting
rivalry in the history of the Gold Cup
developed. The contestants were
three Virginia gentlemen of the
turf—Paul Mellon, Senator John Warner,
and Dr. Joe Rogers. All of them had
good horses at the same time, and the Cup
alternated back and forth among
them. Senator Warner fondly
remembers those neighborly rivalries,
including the case of champagne he won in
a bet with his then father-in-law Paul
Mellon when his Annual Meeting beat
Mellon’s Chapel Street.
Annual
Meeting was “an old raw-boned rascal
from the backwoods of Virginia,” recalls
the Senator, “he cost very
little—about $1,500 I think; but the
thing that wins the Gold Cup is heart, and
Annual Meeting had heart.” The
horse won two Gold Cup races for Warner
and then, seemingly on his way to a third
victory in 1974, he pulled up lame after
the final fence. The winner of that
race was Paul Mellon’s small gelding
Mongogo. It was Mr. Mellon’s first
Gold Cup success in almost four decades of
trying. Mongogo’s triumph was
duplicated the next year by his stablemate,
Chapel Street, a son of Nashua. So
both Mellon and Warner had two legs on the
trophy. Then Dr. Rogers won two Gold
Cups with Private Gary and King of Spades,
and in 1983 all three Virginians were only
one win shy of retiring the Cup.
Rogers
finally clinched it with a third win in
1984 when his Constantine swept the field,
and the doctor from Hamilton, Virginia,
took home the sixth Gold Cup to be retired
and D. M. “Speedy” Smithwick, Jr.,
joined his father as a winning Gold Cup
rider. The Smithwicks were the second
father-son team to win the race. The
Bonsals of Maryland, both named Frank, had
been the first.
The 1984 race was the last to be run at
Broadview. For some years there had
been questions about the future of the
Warrenton course. As development
encroached on the site, crowds and traffic
were becoming a problem and issues
concerning renewing the lease on the
increasingly valuable land could not be
resolved. In 1982, news executive
and philanthropist Arthur W. (Nick)
Arundel found a 500-acre site on an
abandoned farm about 10 miles north of the
old Broadview course near The
Plains. Arundel purchased the
property, then scheduled by its owner to
become a huge housing development, for a
new racecourse and to preserve the land in
open space. Mr. Arundel rallied a
new generation of friends and steeplechase
supporters to give the Gold Cup a
permanent home.
In 1985
after several test gallops the Gold Cup
moved after fifty years at Broadview to
the new racecourse for its 60th running.
Thus a new era of the Gold Cup classic
began. Great Meadow is quite different
from the old Broadview course. At
the old course, cattle grazed on the
course eleven months a year as was typical
of that era’s race meetings. The new
Great Meadow course provides ideal
conditions for horses and spectators
alike, and its fences are higher than
those of the old Broadview course.
“We simply brought them up to where they
used to be in the 1930’s,” Arundel
said.
The move to
the new course has meant changes in the
style of racing and in the type of horse
that it best suits. Three-time Gold Cup
winner Charlie Fenwick suggests that the
Broadview course required a “very
consistent horse that could take
repetition and maintain his jumps.
“Great Meadow,” he said, “demands a
horse with the ability to take bigger
fences yet still go the long
distances.” Some trainers and
riders, like Don Yovanovich who won the
1978 Gold Cup, believe a horse that did
not have speed could still win at
Broadview. A horse that wins at
Great Meadow,” he acknowledges, “is
probably better than one that won at
Broadview. A Gold Cup winner at
Great Meadow must be a very talented
animal.” The bar to retire the Gold Cup
trophy was raised to five times by the
same owner.
In 1988, a
remarkable horse named Von Csadek won the
Gold Cup by 110 lengths—25 seconds ahead
of the rest of the field. His rider,
Patrick Worrall, a 16-year-old high school
sophomore at the time, became the youngest
rider ever to win the race. Von
Csadek and Patrick returned to win it in
1990.
The event
received international recognition in 1993
when The British Jockey Club determined
that winners of the race would
automatically qualify as starters in the
famed Grand National at Aintree, an honor
previously granted only to the annual
winner of The Pardubice in Czechoslovakia
and the Maryland Hunt Cup.
The Virginia Gold Cup has over the past
century made steeplechasing one of the
most prestigious sports in America.
Former NSA President George Strawbridge
calls the Gold Cup’s Great Meadow
racecourse, “The crown jewel of American
steeplechasing.” Nick Arundel says
simply “what this generation and The
Virginia Gold Cup is doing at Great Meadow
is driven by harmony with its community,
its traditions and its
environment.”
A rich
history of international involvement
characterizes the International Gold Cup
Races, the highlight of the fall
steeplechase season. The International
Gold Cup itself, Great Meadow in The
Plains, Virginia, has had a long and
interesting journey en route to its
present home.
The first
International Gold Cup was held in 1930 at
Grasslands Downs in Tennessee over a 4¼
mile brush course, similar to the English
Grand National course at Aintree. That
year, the King of Spain, Alfonso XIII,
then one of the world’s most gallant
riders and sportmen, placed the
spectacularly beautiful gold trophy in
competition which is still awarded
annually to the winner. After the
Tennessee race meet ended end 1932, the
event was moved to the Rolling Rock Hunt
Meet course in Pennsylvania, a course
built by General Richard King Mellon, who
had won the 1931 race in Tennessee. Race
was again relocated after the 1983 running
to the Great Meadow racecourse after the
Rolling Rock Hunt Meet’s racecourse feel
victim to the land development.
On October
20, 1984, before a crowd of 8,500 with
some 80 horses on a seven-race card the
International Gold Cup started a new
chapter. In keeping with Virginia’s
tradition of being the nation’s leader
of timber racing, the International Gold
Cup became a timber race. In 1989, the
International Gold Cup race was awarded
stakes designation by the National
Steeplechase Association.
Today, the
International Gold Cup presented by
Porsche (http://www.porsche.com/)
attracts 35,000 spectators and features
the Fegentri (http://www.fegentri.com/)
World Cup of Nation’s where the top
international amateur jockeys vying for
the series title.
The undisputed greatest horse in the long
history of the Virginia Gold and
International Cup has been Mr. & Mrs.
Henry Stern’s big bay gelding, Saluter.
His race record includes six wins of the
Virginia Gold Cup and two wins of the
International Gold Cup.
Saluter’s
win record also includes the Virginia Gold
Cup race’s fastest time at 8:27 over the
4 mile course in 1995 and the honor of
retiring the seventh Gold Cup trophy after
his five consecutive Gold Cup win. Then
returned shocking the crows in 1999 at 11
years old, Saluter returned to win his
sixth straight Virginia Gold Cup, making
Jack Fisher the all time top winning rider
with nine wins of the Virginia Gold Cup.
Along the
way Saluter swept the 1997 first running
of the World Timber Championship by
winning both the Virginia Gold Cup and
Marlborough Cup in England. Saluter’s
course record for the Gold Cup stood for
11 years until 2006 when Kinross Farm’s
Miles Ahead’s time of 8:19 shaved 8
minutes off of his previous record time.
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FAQ'S
You become a member of the association
by purchasing a ticket to one of our
races. At the time of ticket purchase, you
are also placed on our mailing list. There
are no annual dues for members."
A
parking pass serves as your
"ticket" to the races. There are
many different parking pass packages. You
may purchase tickets online when they
become available. Space renewal
invitations for the spring will be mailed
the first part of February 2007. Tickets
will be available at our outlets on April
15th."
The
deadline for payment to renew your tent
space from last year is February 15, 2007.
The deadline for payment to renew you
reserve space from last year is March 1,
2007. At that time, all unpaid-for spaces
will be released for purchase on a first
come, first served basis, and immediately
assigned to those new guests that are on
the "paid waitlist"."
The
spring race and the fall race are
considered separate. Those guests that
purchased a reserved parking space last
spring are given the opportunity to
purchase that same space the next spring.
Guests that purchased a space for the fall
race may renew that space next fall by the
deadline."
All
tickets may be purchased here through our
web site beginning December 15, 2006 for
Tent reservations and January 15, 2007 for
reserve spaces. General admission passes
and Members Hill badges may be purchased
at many outlet locations April 15th 2007.
You may also purchase tickets via faxed
order form. Please fax orders to
540-349-1829. Please contact the VGCA
office at 540-347-2612 to be placed on the
VGCA mailing list. TICKETS MAY NOT BE
PHOTOCOPIED OR DUPLICATED."
Children
12 and under are admitted free of charge
when accompanied by an adult."
Check
the members list and guest map located in
the race day program. Programs will be
available for purchase on race day."
The
Great Meadow racecourse is divided into
three sections (when facing the race
course): North Rail area, (left hand side)
Members Hill area, (the center of the
course) and the South Rail (right hand
side). Historically, the North Rail has a
younger, Washingtonian crowd and a party
atmosphere. The South Rail is more
family-oriented. Members Hill has the best
views of the course, and is centered
directly on the finish line and next to
the saddling paddock. Admission to Members
Hill requires a special badge. The types
of tickets can be broken down into three
groups. General Subscriber - unreserved
parking on either the North or South
parking areas, reserved parking -
available for all three sections of the
racecourse, and tent purchases - also
available for all sections."
Gates
open to the public at 10am - curfew on
race day is 7pm. Exhibitions begin at
11am."
The
first race on the card is scheduled for
1:30pm."
The
races are held rain or shine in any type
of weather. There are absolutely NO
REFUNDS."
Parking
is not available outside the gates - and
would be considered a traffic hazard. The
Virginia State police strictly enforce a
towing policy."
Food
vendors are located in both the North and
South vendor galleries. Members Hill
guests have access to the Members Hill
Tavern Tent - A large tent open to all
guests on Members Hill complete with range
of food and beverages for sale."
Grand
Cuisine is the official event caterer for
Members Hill. Additional caterers
permitted at the Gold Cup races are
located on the website under party
planning. Please note that a fee of $85
will be charged to each railside party
using an approved caterer other than Grand
Cuisine."
All
tables and chairs must be ordered through
the Virginia Gold Cup equipment provider,
Capital Party Rentals, at (703)
661-8290."
While
free public sanitary facilities will be
available onsite, private portable
restrooms may be ordered for tents and
some reserved spaces."
Beer,
wine, other beverages and ice will be
available at "Tavern Tents" on
the North, South and Members Hill areas.
Check the race day program map for
locations. We sincerely appreciate your
use of litter containers and trash bags.
Because of injuries to horses and children
involving broken glass, a strict ban will
be enforced with a $500 fine for use of
beer or other glass bottles."
Virginia
Gold Cup: Afternoon dress is suggested for
this event. Women guests on Members Hill
customarily wear summer/spring dresses and
hats. Flat heels are suggested. Men wear
lightweight sport coats and ties. Shorts
are not appropriate for Members Hill.
Attire on the rails is marginally more
relaxed - we recommend a sportswear look
for women and khakis with collared shirts
for men. Jeans are rarely seen at Gold
Cup.
Afternoon dress is suggested for this
event. Women guests on Members Hill
customarily wear tweed jackets, long
skirts or dress pants, and hats. Flat
heels or boots are suggested. Men wear
tweed sport coats and ties. Shorts are not
appropriate for Members Hill. Attire on
the rails is marginally more relaxed - we
recommend a sportswear look for women and
khakis for men. Jeans are rarely seen at
Gold Cup."
NO
PETS ALLOWED Absolutely NO Pets will be
allowed at the Great Meadow Event Center!
Sorry, but due to past circumstances, it
has become necessary to enforce our
"No Pet" policy at the Virginia
Gold Cup Races. If you bring a pet to the
race, you will not be admitted to the
grounds. You will have to take your pet
home or you will be directed to Happy Time
Kennels, 8387 The Mountain Road,
Warrenton, VA 20186 to drop off your pet
for the day. Leaving pets in the vehicles
will no be permitted! Thank you for your
cooperation."
For
information regarding Great Meadow Event
Center in the Plains, VA please visit:
www.greatmeadow.org"
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