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Peabody City Park : ウィキペディア英語版
Peabody City Park

Peabody City Park was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 2012, and the sixth NRHP listing in Peabody, Kansas, USA.〔(''Recent nominees for National Register of Historic Places''; The Wichita Eagle; December 6, 2011. )〕〔(NRHP Property Weekly List Changes; National Park Service (NPS); January 20, 2012. )〕 The park is approximately 3 blocks by 2 blocks in size and located in southwest Peabody.
==History==
In 1875, the first agricultural "county fair" was held at the current park location. It was held annually for many years by the Marion County Agricultural Society.〔(Poster from Seventh Annual Agriculture Fair At Peabody From September 28-30, 1881 )〕
In 1881, the Fair Floral Exhibition Hall was built, west of the football field at the top of the hill. The building is unique because of its octagon walls. It is the only remaining fair building and not open to the public.〔
In September 1885, the Kansas State Fair was held at Peabody during the first four days of the month. An outstanding feature of the state fair was "the First Monument to General Grant", who died shortly before the fair. The temporary monument was an obelisk about tall, and built from forty bushels of ears of corn. The fair had a grandstand, which could hold 2000 people, to view horse races. The race track was used for a variety of events, including horse walking teams in harness, trotting, running, pacing, mule racing, and daily chariot races. A dining hall was built that was capable of feeding 10,000 people each day.
Peabody was the home of famous race horses around the turn of the century. Three of the more famous horses were world champions. Joe Young (known as the "iron horse") sold for $10,000 by C.E. Westbrook, the first horse west of the Mississippi River to sell for such a high price. Joe Young sired Joe Patchen in 1889, who earned his owner $40,000 in race purses and then was sold for $44,000. Joe Patchen sired Dan Patch in 1896, a horse that sold in 1907 for $60,000. Other famous local racing horses included trotters McKinney, and Silver Sign. Silverthorne toured Austria where he competed for three years against the best race horses in Europe.〔(C.E. Westbrook - Bio )〕
In 1900, the Marion County Agricultural Society sold the fair grounds to the city of Peabody, which renamed it the Peabody City Park.〔''Peabody - The First 100 Years''; Peabody Gazette-Herald; June 1971.〕
In 1938, the Works Progress Administration (WPA) built the football stadium limestone bleachers, west and north walls, picnic tables, fire pits, and various items in the park.
In 1950 through 1960, the high school boys baseball (Class B) state tournaments were held at the baseball diamond.〔(Winners & Records Of All KSHSAA-Sponsored State Events )〕
In 1960s and 1970s, up to 30,000 or more people attended the Independence Day Celebration on July 4 at the park, including a Carnival of rides.〔(Peabody City Park History; lasr.net )〕
In November 1977, the high school boys football (Class 2A) state final was held at the park. Beloit took 1st place and Peabody took 2nd Place. It is also notable because the Peabody head coach was Dennis Franchione.〔〔(Fran-tic Climb; ''The Topeka Capital-Journal''; November 1, 2003. )〕〔(Wife helps Franchione balance life on, off the football field; ''AggieSports''; December 26, 2004. )〕
In July 2011, will mark the 90th year of fireworks at the park. The fireworks are infamous for the ending display named Battle of New Orleans, which explodes over 1 Million individual items.〔(July 4th Battle Of New Orleans on July 2010 - YouTube Video )〕〔(July 4th Regional TV Commercial - YouTube Video )〕〔(July 4th Celebration webpage; City of Peabody. )〕
In January 2012, the park was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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