词条 | Robert James Speers |
释义 |
| name = R. James Speers | image = | imagesize = | caption = | birth_date = September 3, 1882 | birth_place = Elmbank, Ontario, Canada | death_date = July 19, 1955 | death_place = Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada | death_cause = Heart attack | resting_place = Elmwood Cemetery, Winnipeg | resting_place_coordinates = | residence = | education = | occupation = Businessman, Racehorse owner/breeder, Racetrack owner | known_for = | party = | spouse = Annie Ella Troughton[1] | children = Anna Meldred Speers[1] Fern Speers[3] | parents = James Speers Frances Gardhouse[2] | relations = | boards = | religion = | awards = Canadian Breeder of the Year (1946-1951) | honors = {{unbulleted list | Canada's Sports Hall of Fame (1966) | Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame (1976) | Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame and Museum (1983) | R. James Speers Memorial Handicap at Assiniboia Downs }} }} Robert James "Jim" Speers (September 3, 1882 – July 19, 1955) was a Canadian businessman and Canada's Sports Hall of Fame inductee who made a major contribution to the growth of Thoroughbred horse racing in Western Canada.[3]Born in Elmbank, Ontario, James Speers moved to Winnipeg in 1900. In 1920 he headed a partnership that leased and operated the River Park race track. Two years later he built Whittier Park Racetrack in St. Boniface, Manitoba and then in 1923, the Polo Park Racetrack in Winnipeg and Chinook Park in Calgary, Alberta Whittier Park Stock FarmIn 1925, James Speers founded the Prairie Thoroughbred Breeders' Association and began breeding Thoroughbreds that would earn him six consecutive Canadian Breeder of the Year Awards between 1946 and 1951. His Whittier Park Stock Farm not only won races at his own track but at the hub of Canadian racing in Toronto where his colt Lord Fairmond notably won a division of the 1948 Plate Trial Stakes and the Prince of Wales Stakes. Speers stud bred Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame Youville as well as Loyalist, the winner of the 1955 Canadian Derby. James Speers was inducted in Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1966, was part of the 1976 inaugural class of inductees in the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame,[4] and was inducted in the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame and Museum in 1983.[5] Following the devastation of the 1950 Red River Flood, James Speers donated the entire profits from his 1950 racing meetings to the Flood Relief Fund.[6] James Speers died of a heart attack at age 72 in 1955 [7] and was buried in Winnipeg's Elmwood Cemetery. [8]References1. ^1 http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/people/speers_am.shtml 2. ^1 http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/people/speers_rj.shtml 3. ^Profile of R. James Speers at Canada's Sports Hall of Fame 4. ^R. James Speers at the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame 5. ^R. James Speers at the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame & Museum 6. ^R. James Speers and the 1950 Red River flood 7. ^[https://www.nytimes.com/1955/07/20/archives/robert-james-speers-horseman-dies-led-race-tracks-grain-firm-in.html July 20, 1955 New York Times report on the death of Robert James Speers] 8. ^Assiniboia Downs article with photograph of James Speers' gravestone
7 : 1882 births|1955 deaths|Businesspeople from Ontario|Businesspeople from Winnipeg|Canadian racehorse owners and breeders|Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame inductees|People from Mississauga |
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