The Sport of Kings and the Kings of Crime

Horse Racing, Politics, and Organized Crime in New York, 1865-1913

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Pub Date Jun 03 2011 | Archive Date Sep 01 2012

Description

Thoroughbred racing was one of the first major sports in early America. Horse racing thrived because it was a high-status sport that attracted the interest of both old and new money. It grew because spectators enjoyed the pageantry, the exciting races, and, most of all, the gambling. As the sport became a national industry, the New York metropolitan area, along with the resort towns of Saratoga Springs (New York) and Long Branch (New Jersey), remained at the center of horse racing with the most outstanding race courses, the largest purses, and the finest thoroughbreds.

Riess narrates the history of horse racing, detailing how and why New York became the national capital of the sport from the mid-1860s until the early twentieth century. The sport's survival depended upon the racetrack being the nexus between politicians and organized crime. The powerful alliance between urban machine politics and track owners enabled racing in New York to flourish. Gambling, the heart of racing's appeal, made the sport morally suspect. Yet democratic politicians protected the sport, helping to establish the State Racing Commission, the first state agency to regulate sport in the United States. At the same time, racetracks became a key connection between the underworld and Tammany Hall, enabling illegal poolrooms and off-course bookies to operate. Organized crime worked in close cooperation with machine politicians and local police officers to protect these illegal operations. In The Sport of Kings and the Kings of Crime, Riess fills a long-neglected gap in sports history, offering a richly detailed and fascinating chronicle of thoroughbred racing's heyday.

Thoroughbred racing was one of the first major sports in early America. Horse racing thrived because it was a high-status sport that attracted the interest of both old and new money. It grew because...


Advance Praise

"Riess has broken new ground with his richly-textured study of the dynamicrelationship between horse racing, politics, and gambling as they built NewYork's thoroughbred industry a century ago."-Field Horne, author of The Saratoga Reader: Writingabout an American Village, 1749-1900

In "The Sport of Kings and the Kings of Crime" Steven Riessmeticulously traces the links in the chain that binds horseracing andgangsters. If it raises disturbing questions about the history ofhorseracing, it conjures fascinating questions about the history of sports inAmerica. The research is through and the implications important.- RandyRoberts, Distinguished Professor of History at Purdue University and author of Joe Louis: Hard Times Man

"Riess has broken new ground with his richly-textured study of the dynamicrelationship between horse racing, politics, and gambling as they built NewYork's thoroughbred industry a century ago."-Field...


Available Editions

EDITION Hardcover
ISBN 9780815609858
PRICE 45.00
PAGES 432