To its participant nations, the requirements of the First World War brought hitherto unknown sacrifice and change to all aspects of daily life. However, through the curfews and censorship, the bereavement and hunger emerged a culture of improvisation, industry and ingenuity. The world of horse racing was part of this. From 1914 to 1918, racecourses across the world were put to new and unintended uses as part of the war effort, from airfields to military hospitals to encampments. They were large open spaces and the barns could house both humans and animals. One of the most famous racing venues drafted into the war effort was Britain's world famous Epsom Downs. There was a military encampment on the Downs, while both grandstands were used as hospitals. Most memorably, on 22 January 1915, on a snow-covered Epsom Downs in blizzard conditions, Lord Kitchener held an inspection of 20,000 volunteers from the 2nd London Division, before they marched off to the Western Front.
Last December, we presented the story of the Ruhleben Trabrennbahn racecourse outside, which was converted into a massive internment camp for the duration (LINK). Here some additional examples of other functions I've discovered since.
Hospital at Hippodrome des Bruyères, Rouen, France
The war brought an urgent need for hospitals. Alongside large residential houses, church halls and schools, several racecourses took on new roles as military hospitals, among them Cheltenham, Epsom Downs, Saint-Cloud, and Rouen.
| Patients at the No. 12 General Hospital at Rouen's Racecourse |
That at Rouen was among the most strategically important. The city was the nucleus of the British plan of evacuation. A large proportion of those wounded in the Somme were taken there. Casualties arrived by ambulance train and barge from the front line to its 15 or so hospitals, several of which were housed at the Hippodrome des Bruyères on the outskirts of the city.
One of these, No. 12 General Hospital, was among the earliest British hospitals to be established in France. It comprised 1,350 beds, housed almost entirely in a forest of tents, two huts accommodating about 30 wounded each, and a further ward of ten beds adjoining the operating theatre providing the only patient accommodation not under canvas. The racecourse buildings themselves were used for administrative and staff purposes—the Post de Police became the laboratory, loose boxes substituted for larder and kitchen, the jockeys’ room housed nurses, as did the paddock, in which wooden huts were erected.
Training Camp at Royal Randwick, Sydney, Australia
In Sydney, the Australian Jockey Club (AJC) threw itself wholeheartedly in the war effort. Its chairman promptly placed Randwick "at the disposal of the Defence Department in connection with the organisation of expeditionary forces" (AJC Committee Minutes, 19 August 1914).
| Troops on Parade at Randwick |
Come the outbreak of war, Australia did not possess a fully trained and equipped military organization and, immediately, makeshift training camps were set up in and around all the major cities. Alongside Rosebery Park Racecourse and the Royal Showgrounds, Randwick was transformed into Sydney’s third instructional camp.
The new recruits of the Australian Imperial Force 1st Brigade began arriving at their temporary home in August 1914. Facilities were basic. Initially, not even tents were provided. Sleeping amenities were recorded as: one army blanket and one bed, being a six-feet portion of one of the concrete steps of the grandstand.
Although the AJC turned all its buildings over to the Defence Department, the racecourse continued operation during the war. So-called "patriotic" race meetings were staged in Sydney to fund-raise for the war effort, and, from 1915 onward, the AJC subscribed all its profits to various patriotic funds, including the British Red Cross, French Australian League of Help, Polish Relief Fund and the Salvation Army. As the conflict finally drew to a close, the AJC decided to continue its support for the war effort by financing a convalescent hospital for returned servicemen.
Balloon School Santa Anita, Arcadia, California (Original Site)
| These Two Training Balloons at Ross Field Were Nicknamed "The Elephants" for Some Reason |
The current location of the famous racing site is its third. The original track opened in 1907. In 1909 the state of California—in a reform-minded mood—outlawed horse racing, and the grandstand burned down in 1912. So, there was a nice open space available when the U.S. joined the war. A total of 184 acres of land were donated to the government to construct the Army's Ross Field Balloon School for training Army observation balloon crews. Buildings that once housed racehorses were converted into enlisted barracks, and new bachelor officer's quarters were built. Deflated balloons were stored at first under the grandstands of Baldwin's racetrack. Its postwar history is a little cloudy. Apparently, Ross Field evolved into a combination dirigible and fixed-wing flying field and eventually closed in the early 1930s. However, it may have been put back to military use in the Second World War.
Source: Thoroughbred Racing Commentary, 12 February 2016; Arcadia Historical Society