Difference between revisions of "Three-lap track at the Midwinter Fair"

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[[THE SPEEDY CYCLERS. - Coast Records Sure to Be Lowered. - Eastern Cracks Now on the Road. - San Francisco Chronicle, 21 Apr 1894]]
[[THE SPEEDY CYCLERS. - Coast Records Sure to Be Lowered. - Eastern Cracks Now on the Road. - San Francisco Chronicle, 21 Apr 1894]]


<blockquote>
Fairly good dressing rooms have been fitted up for the wheelmen in the bottom of the grand stand out at the [[Three-lap track at the Midwinter Fair|Fair track]], and Peter McIntyre, an old athlete, who has charge of the track, looks after them.
...
A number of local flyers are doing some training on the Midwinter Fair track, but find the rough surface a great drawback. A coating of clay or a little dirt and cement would put a good surface on the track.
Otto Ziegler is in town to-day trying the new track. He will go to Stockton to train after Saturday with the Rambler team.
</blockquote>
[[CYCLING UP TO DATE. - The San Francisco Examiner, 22 Apr 1894]]


[[Category:tracks]]
[[Category:tracks]]
[[Category:San Francisco]]
[[Category:San Francisco]]

Revision as of 16:30, 7 January 2022

Place

San Francisco, CA


The executive committee of the fair have given to the athletic auxiliary funds sufficient to build splendid athletic grounds just south of the south drive in the park - the grounds at the present time used for recreation purposes. It is the intention to put in a three-lap running track and a two or two and a half-lap bicycle track. The grounds will be used during the existence of the fair by the fair promoters, and to them will accrue the revenue which may be derived therefrom. After the fair is over the grounds will be thrown open to the public as a general recreation grounds for the city, and will undoubtedly be of lasting benefit to the community.

Elwell & Rice, the engineers employed by the Bay City Wheelmen in the construction of the track in Central Park, have been instructed to prepare preliminary drawings for the bicycle track. It is the intention to build it with a banking of about six feet on the two ends, with stretches of about thirty-five feet in width. This will give to San Francisco a track that will be equaled by very few, if any, tracks in the world. It is the intention to offer such prizes as will induce the attendance during the months of April, May and June, 1894, of the very cream of the racing talent of the United States, and, in fact, of the world.

THE CYCLING MEN. - A SUPERB TRACK IS TO BE CONSTRUCTED. - San Francisco Chronicle, 25 Nov 1893

PLAN OF THE ATHLETIC PARK AT THE MIDWINTER FAIR.
PLAN OF THE ATHLETIC PARK AT THE MIDWINTER FAIR.
Georeferenced with OpenStreetMap and Golden Gate Park, 1903, Britton & Rey

The accompanying plan of the new athletic grounds was made from the original plan in the possession of Messrs. Elwell & Rice, the engineers. The track for pedestrians will be three and a half laps to the mile. It will have a cinder surface and the three-lap bicycle track will have a surface of concrete. The bicycle track will be banked both at the curves and in the straight.

The running track will be fifteen feet wide on the backstretch and twenty feet six inches in the homestretch. This latter will include a 120-yard straightaway.

The athletic park will contain a grand stand capable of holding 5,000 persons. It will be possible, however, for Fair visitors to watch the progress of the games from outside the Park, as the whole will be inclosed by a breast-high picket fence.

In the matter of competitors from a distance it is already an understood thing that the premier bicyclists of the East are going to attend. Among these will be Zimmerman and Sanger, the men who have done so much in the record-breaking line lately.

Alameda is the only proper place hereabout for a bicycle track and the grounds there are perfectly located for convenience, speed and utility. There is always too much wind in San Francisco, and when the wind does not bother the fog does. The Midwinter Fair track is only an experiment or make-shift, that will at the most be available for only scrub tryouts after the Fair is over, and Oakland has no probability of a track, so that Alameda has everything in its favor.

The Midwinter Fair bicycle track has been completed some time, and still it is no more fit for use than it was weeks ago. Somebody is to blame for this state of things.

ECHOES OF THE RELAY RACE. - The Victorious Garden Citys and Their Speedy Men. - MIDWINTER FAIR TRACK. - San Francisco Examiner, 14 Apr 1894

As the 28th of April approaches the interest in the opening of the Midwinter Exposition bicycle track grows stronger, and the outlook for a most brilliant series of tournaments is all that could be desired. The track is improving every day.

That San Francisco should be the fortunate possessor of a three-lap bicycle track, scientifically constructed on the most modern ideas, is something which would appear to the old-timers as almost too good to be true, yet it is a fact that the track in the Midwinter Fair grounds is, without question, the fastest and best track in California. Situated as it is in a small valley, and protected by the immense grand stands and the Festival Hall, so that the wind during the daytime is very slight, it has every advantage to induce record breaking. That the meets in April and May will witness the shattering of the coast records is a foregone conclusion.

THE SPEEDY CYCLERS. - Coast Records Sure to Be Lowered. - Eastern Cracks Now on the Road. - San Francisco Chronicle, 21 Apr 1894

Fairly good dressing rooms have been fitted up for the wheelmen in the bottom of the grand stand out at the Fair track, and Peter McIntyre, an old athlete, who has charge of the track, looks after them.

...

A number of local flyers are doing some training on the Midwinter Fair track, but find the rough surface a great drawback. A coating of clay or a little dirt and cement would put a good surface on the track.

Otto Ziegler is in town to-day trying the new track. He will go to Stockton to train after Saturday with the Rambler team.

CYCLING UP TO DATE. - The San Francisco Examiner, 22 Apr 1894