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River Cities Speedway

2300 Gateway Dr
701-780-0999

History

The sport of racing is as old as human history.  The competitive spirit has driven men and women to determine the fastest challenger for thousands of years, whether it be on foot, water, snow, horseback, bicycles or with motorized vehicles.  Grand Forks Herald founder, George Winship wrote that Grand Forks owes its existence to a flatboat race down the Red River in the late fall of 1870, in which the team of Alexander Griggs came up short to the Winship crew.  The result was that Griggs spent the 1870-1871 winter at Grand Forks and subsequently founded the city of Grand Forks.

In 1882 Grand Forks’ first formal racing organization was formed, when the “established set” created the Grand Forks Racing Association to “promote good sportsmanship on the turf.” Their race track was located at Eshleman Park west of town on the present site of UND’s Memorial Stadium.  Soon the track was shared by the Polo Club, the Driving Club, and the Trotting Association.  The races were a popular diversion for local townspeople during the summer months.  UND President Webster Merrifield had reservations about the appropriateness of allowing racing in such close proximity to the university campus, however.  He feared that students would be negatively influenced by gambling which often accompanied the horse races.

Eshleman Park hosted the first fair in Grand Forks which took place in September of 1886, utilizing the inner oval of the half mile race track for exhibit buildings, food vendors and gaming. Over 11,000 people attended the fair.  In 1887 and 1888, Grand Forks hosted the official Territorial Fairs and later hosted the early North Dakota State Fairs as well.  The association of state and county fairs with racing continues to this day.  

The present Grand Forks County Fairgrounds opened in 1903 on land purchased from the D.A. Dinnie Farm.  Among the many attractions offered by the 1903 Red River Valley Exposition, were horse races and a two mile automobile race.  The magnificent Exhibit Building, designed by Joseph Bell DeRemer, was dedicated on July 20th 1909. The occasion was distinguished by the appearance of the greatest trotters of the day, Dan Patch and Minor Heir.  Dan Patch and Minor Heir put on an exhibition race in which Minor Heir nosed out the victory on the last stride of the race.  Their popularity was so enormous that four national guardsmen were assigned to guard the famous horses.  

In time automobiles and motorcycles replaced horses on the half mile race track.  In 1925 a fatal crash killed two spectators and injured five others, though the driver was unhurt.  The result of this accident was the revocation of the North Dakota State Fair Association’s charter.  In November of 1925 the Grand Forks State Fair Association was formed which governed the races in Grand Forks for the next twenty seven years.