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Broadway Gillham. Ethnic. Irish and Irish-American community, culture, history, and heritage in the greater Kansas City area and region. Kansas City Museum. Northeast. Multiple. History, natural history, art. Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art. Southmoreland.
Hodge Park. Kansas City Zoo, 10th largest zoo in the United States, located in Swope Park. Lakeside Nature Center, large, city-operated wildlife rescue and nature center with exhibits and woodland trails in Swope Park. Loose Park, the third largest park in Kansas City, includes Rose Garden and Civil War markers from the Battle of Westport.
United States' Racing Hall of Fame (1965) Significant horses. Kayak II, Hasty Road, Shannon, J.O. Tobin, Jumping Hill, New Policy. John H. Adams (September 1, 1914 – August 19, 1995) was an American National Champion Thoroughbred racing jockey who was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1965.
Fair Grounds Racing Hall of Fame. (1971) Lexington (March 17, 1850 – July 1, 1875) was a United States Thoroughbred race horse who won six of his seven race starts. Perhaps his greatest fame, however, came as the most successful sire of the second half of the nineteenth century; he was the leading sire in North America 16 times, and broodmare ...
American Royal. The American Royal is a livestock show, horse show, rodeo, and barbecue competition held each year in September – November at various sites in the Kansas City Metropolitan Area. The Future Farmers of America (now the National FFA Organization) was founded during the annual Royal. The Kansas City Royals professional baseball ...
Woolford Farm raised thoroughbred race horses in eastern Kansas, in what is now the city of Prairie Village, a suburb of Kansas City. The 200-acre (0.81 km 2) was owned by Herbert M. Woolf. Trainer Ben A. Jones worked there before going to Calumet Farm in Lexington, Kentucky. [1] Woolf had hired Ben Jones after he had established a reputation ...
Keeneland originated as a nonprofit racing–auction entity on 147 acres (0.59 km 2) of farmland west of Lexington, which had been owned by the son of James R. Keene, Jack Keene, a driving force behind the building of the facility. [6] It has used proceeds from races and its auctions to further the thoroughbred industry as well as to contribute ...
The Jockey Club is the registry for all Thoroughbred horses in the United States and Canada, and maintains offices in New York City and Lexington, Kentucky. The Registry maintained by The Jockey Club, called the American Stud Book, dates back to the club's founding and contains the descendants of those horses listed, as well as horses imported ...
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