Rowe Memorial Handicap

Rowe Memorial Handicap
Discontinued stakes race race
LocationBowie Race Track, Bowie, Maryland,
United States
Inaugurated1930
Race typeThoroughbred - Flat racing
Race information
Distance6 furlongs
SurfaceDirt
Trackleft-handed
QualificationThree-year-olds & up
Purse$10,000

The Rowe Memorial Handicap was an American Thoroughbred horse race run between 1930 and 1954 at Bowie Race Track in Bowie, Maryland. A six furlong sprint run on dirt, the event was open to horses age three and older.

First run on April 5, 1930, the race was originally named to honor James Rowe, a widely respected trainer and future U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee who had died in 1929.[1] However, his son James Jr., who had successfully followed in his father's footsteps, died from a heart attack in 1931 at age forty-two and the race name would be shortened to the "Rowe Memorial" to honor both men.

  1. ^ "James Rowe Memorial Handicap". Daily Racing Form at University of Kentucky Archives. 1930-04-05. Retrieved 2021-07-16.