Tag: Grandstand


  • CSI Challenge: How Many People  Attended the 1904 Vanderbilt Cup Race?
    Aug 14 2012

    CSI Challenge: How Many People Attended the 1904 Vanderbilt Cup Race?

    The CSI (Cup Scene Investigation) Team of VanderbiltCupRaces.com has been asked to estimate the number of people who actually attended the six Vanderbilt Cup Races held on Long Island. First up, the 1904 Vanderbilt Cup Race held on a 30.24-mile triangular course in Nassau County and Queens.

  • Hold the Date 10/3/2012: Public Hearing on Rezoning the Site of the Levittown Grandstand & Press Box
    Aug 08 2012

    Hold the Date 10/3/2012: Public Hearing on Rezoning the Site of the Levittown Grandstand & Press Box

    On Wednesday, October 3, 2012, Crocus Lane Estates, LLC and Josato, Inc will be petitioning the Hempstead Town Board to rezone the Levittown property on the former location of the Long Island Motor Parkway and Vanderbilt Cup Race grandstand and press box.

  • From the Noel Gish Collection: Postcards of the Vanderbilt Cup Races & Long Island Motor Parkway
    Oct 22 2011

    From the Noel Gish Collection: Postcards of the Vanderbilt Cup Races & Long Island Motor Parkway

    Noel Gish has a collection of Long Island postcards which he used to help teach Long Island history to his classes at Hauppauge High School. Noel, now President of the Board of Trustees of the Suffolk County Vanderbilt Museum, has forwarded some of his favorite Vanderbilt Cup Races and Long Island Motor Parkway postcards:

  • The Spinney Hill Grandstand for the 1906 Vanderbilt Cup Race
    Nov 03 2010

    The Spinney Hill Grandstand for the 1906 Vanderbilt Cup Race

    The primary grandstand for the 1906 Vanderbilt Cup Race was at the Start/Finish Line on Jericho Turnpike in Westbury. A second grandstand with a capacity of 500 spectators was built near Spinney Hill in Manhasset.

  • Never Before Published  Vanderbilt Cup Race Photos from a 1904 A.L.A.M. Scrapbook
    Mar 23 2010

    Never Before Published Vanderbilt Cup Race Photos from a 1904 A.L.A.M. Scrapbook

    On Friday, October 7, 1904, the day before the first Vanderbilt Cup Race, superintendents and engineers of the Association of Licensed Automobile Manufacturers (A.L.A.M.) gathered for a 65-mile "meet" covering Manhattan, Bronx and Westchester. At 10:00 AM, 17 cars lined up in front of the Locomobile headquarters, at 76 Street and Broadway in Manhattan. One A.L.A.M. member documented the meet and the 1904 Vanderbilt Cup Race by taking 65 photographs. These eight, previously unpublished, images…

  • The 1906 Westbury Grandstand & the Current Battle over the Hitchcock Property
    Jan 09 2010

    The 1906 Westbury Grandstand & the Current Battle over the Hitchcock Property

    Last Sunday, the locations of the grandstand and officials' stand/press box for the 1904 Vanderbilt Cup Race were documented between Powells Lane and Hitchcock lane on Jericho Turnpike. After moving to Mineola in 1905, the Start/Finish Line returned to its original Westbury location with a larger grandstand and press boxfor the 1906 race.

  • Another  View of the Westbury 1904 Vanderbilt Cup Race Grandstand
    Jan 06 2010

    Another View of the Westbury 1904 Vanderbilt Cup Race Grandstand

    The location of the Westbury grandstand on Jericho Turnpike for the 1904 Vanderbilt Cup Race was documented last Sunday..

  • The Location of the 1904 Vanderbilt Cup Race Grandstand in Westbury
    Jan 02 2010

    The Location of the 1904 Vanderbilt Cup Race Grandstand in Westbury

    Tony, thanks for the question. Both the 1904 and 1906 grandstands and press boxes were in similar locations on Jericho Turnpike between Hitchcock Lane and Powells Lane. These 1904 race photos will document the location of the grandstand on the south side of Jericho Turnpike (in Westbury) and the press box on the north side (in Old Westbury).

  • Film “The Levittown Vanderbilt Cup Race Grandstand”
    Jun 27 2009

    Film “The Levittown Vanderbilt Cup Race Grandstand”

    Mush, I have several hundred photos of the races that went throught the heart of the Hempstead Plains, now Levittown, from 1908 to 1910. I will be more than happy to send you copies of some of my favorites.



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