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How This St. Louis Tradition Started
The Great Forest Park Balloon Race was founded by renowned
balloonists Nikki Caplan and John O'Toole in 1973, and
taken over by four, young, enthusiastic balloonists: John
Marlow, John Schaumburg, Dan Schettler and Ted Staley
in 1977. What started with four newly certified balloonists
and a whimsical group dubbed the Mississippi River Balloon
Transit Company, today hails as the organization of the
most well-attended, single-day balloon race in the country.
"When we started 40 years ago, only one of us had ever
seen a hot-air balloon,"says Marlow, the group's president
and president of the Great Forest Park Balloon Race, Inc.
"We didn't know we needed a license or insurance. We bought
an old, used balloon much worse than buying an old, used
car, and thought we'd just jump in and fly away."
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The "Fab Four"
(l-r) John Marlow, John Schaumburg, Ted Staley, Dan
Schettler
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And fly away they did. Not only do the "fab four" continue
to coordinate, organize and run this colossal event, but
three of the four boast at least one Great Forest Park
Balloon Race victory. "John Schaumburg missed winning
by just two feet in 1983," reminisces Schettler. "And
we never let him forget it," Staley adds.
The race, celebrating its 40th anniversary this year,
is unique in that it originates from the middle of a major
city, St. Louis. Attendance is free to more than 130,000
spectators who come out to watch 70 world-class balloon
pilots compete in a race that is almost as exciting from
the ground as it is in the air.
In 2012, the Race will be held on Central Field, near
the Jewel Box, in Forest Park.
Induction into the Library of Congress
The Great Forest Park Balloon Race was inducted into the permanent collection of the Library of Congress
on May 23, 2000. This induction was part of the celebration of the bicentennial of our nation's library.
The Great Forest Park Balloon Race was honored as a Local Legacy -- a local event that has grown to be of
great significance in the community. The honor came by selection of Congressman Richard Gephardt who chose
The Great Forest Park Balloon Race to represent St. Louis and the state of Missouri.
Now the race will be immortalized, complete with photos, programs, posters, videos, pins, and pilot gifts, that will be in the library and digitalized for posterity.
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