The following four storyboards with a sampling of images presents the Maine communities that once had a trotting park or have an active trotting park. Key: A = Active Park -- L = Lost Trotting Park -- Candidate identifies a town that may have had a trotting park.
This list is not intended to be a comprehensive list. It is pretty much the universe, yet there may be other communities that had trotting parks. The intention of this work is to identify all Maine communities that had trotting parks and attempt to create a short visual and written history of each park.
This list is not intended to be a comprehensive list. It is pretty much the universe, yet there may be other communities that had trotting parks. The intention of this work is to identify all Maine communities that had trotting parks and attempt to create a short visual and written history of each park.
NOTE: I am updating the Parks by County by Town Storyboards. Waldo County and five towns were not included.
You help is needed in order to complete this work. If you are from one of these communities or a neighboring community and you have information regarding Maine's lost trotting parks and the history of trotting in Maine, I encourage you to contact me with your information.
The Maine history of the age of "When the Horse was King" has passed us by. Often I am interviewing the elderly grandchildren and relatives of the horseman, the horse breeders, and people who lived during this age. Many of the stories are lost. However, I believe we should do the work now that will capture that which remains.
Stephen Thompson
lifework50@gmail.com
207-242-7774
You help is needed in order to complete this work. If you are from one of these communities or a neighboring community and you have information regarding Maine's lost trotting parks and the history of trotting in Maine, I encourage you to contact me with your information.
The Maine history of the age of "When the Horse was King" has passed us by. Often I am interviewing the elderly grandchildren and relatives of the horseman, the horse breeders, and people who lived during this age. Many of the stories are lost. However, I believe we should do the work now that will capture that which remains.
Stephen Thompson
lifework50@gmail.com
207-242-7774
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