Meriwether Lewis Clark, Jr.

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Colonel Meriwether Lewis Clark, Jr. (January 27, 1846April 22, 1899), was the founder of the Louisville Jockey Club and the builder of Churchill Downs, where the Kentucky Derby is run.

He was the grandson of explorer and Missouri governor General William Clark of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. His mother was Abigail Prather Churchill, from one of the first families of Kentucky. The Churchills had moved to Louisville in 1787 plus bought 300 acres of land in a rural area south of the city.

When his mother died, Lutie (as Clark was called) went to live with his aunt and her sons John and Henry Churchill. They had inherited most of the original Churchill property, and they donated the land on which Churchill Downs was built.

Living with the Churchills, Lutie developed a taste for expensive things, including horse racing. He made two trips to Europe and married twice, both of his wives dying young.

He came home from abroad in 1873 with ideas about building a racetrack in Louisville. He planned to eliminate bookmaking by introducing the French system of parimutuel betting machines. The Churchill brothers were the entrepreneurs providing the financial backing, and Lutie was the acting president and on-site manager.

By all accounts, Clark was a mercurial and touchy personality. He is reported to have threatened prominent breeder T. G. Moore with a gun, ordering him off the premises after having knocked him down in a dispute over fees. Moore got a gun and shot Clark through a door, hitting him in the chest. Moore turned himself in to the police, but no charges were brought against him. Clark later rescinded his ban from the racetrack. He also threatened others with a gun over perceived insults. The Churchill brothers did not appreciate the negative publicity, and they left the track to their families. Clark received some other land, but by the time John Churchill died in 1897, Lutie was merely a steward at the track he had originated.

His contribution to American racing cannot be overlooked. In addition to building Churchill Downs and originating the Kentucky Derby, he wrote many racing rules that are still in force today. He worked for a uniform system of weights and pioneered the stakes system, creating the Great American Stallion Stakes, on which the present-day Breeders' Cup is modeled. He also spoke out against betting by officials and reporters.

Clark's father, Meriwether Lewis Clark, contributed to the architecture in St. Louis by designing the St. Vincent de Paul Roman Catholic Church in LaSalle Park built in 1844.

He lost heavily in the stock market crash of 1893, and he began traveling from city to city, working as a steward. Fearing a life of poverty, he committed suicide with a pistol on April 22, 1899. He is buried in Cave Hill Cemetery next to his uncle, John Churchill.

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