Sports History On This Day: September 7

September 7, 1896 – The first automobile race was held on a closed-circuit track. The course was at the Narragansett Trotting Park in Cranston, Rhode Island. The race competition itself was won by a driver named A. H. Whiting interestingly enough in an electric car built by the Riker Electric Vehicle Company.

That company was founded by a man named Andrew Riker who created the Company in Brooklyn in 1888. In 1894 he built his first four-wheel car by putting a pair of Remington bicycles together powered by an electric motor.

That year he also began building an electric racer that competed against gasoline cars and proved that the electric car could defeat a combustion engine in a short-span race. The economy of fueling it and the longevity of how long it would run before recharging were issues that engineers 125 years later are still coping with. 

To find more great daily sports history make sure to check out the Sports Jersey Dispatch and Pigskin Dispatch.

Andrew L. Riker setting a world speed record in La Vie au Grand Air du 5 Jan 1902
The photo is courtesy of Wikimedia Commons of Andrew L. Riker setting a world speed record in La Vie au Grand Air du 5 Jan 1902, p.11 Special thanks to the resources of Newspapers.com, Wikipedia.com and OnThisDay.com for the information obtained.

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