Kentucky Derby
Churchill Downs, Louisville, KYKentucky Derby Private Jet Charter Service
Do you plan to charter a private jet to the “The Most Exciting Two Minutes in Sports?” The Kentucky Derby is scheduled for May 4, 2024, at the historic Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky. If you plan to arrive in style in a private jet please keep these tips in mind.
- Book early as slots and parking are limited and heavily regulated.
- Consider alternate airports such as Jeffersonville (JVY): 10 min drive from downtown Louisville hotels, 18 min drive from Churchill downs or Fort Knox (FTK): 29 miles or Bardstown (35 miles) for:
- Lower event fees (JVY is half the event fees, hangarage, landing, ramp, hangarage than SDF)
- Less airplane traffic for more desirable arrival/departure times
- Consider spending an extra day or 2 prior/after the event in order arrive/depart at your leisure
- Be patient: last year one of our clients had a delay of 2:5 hours in the plane waiting in line for take-off right after the race.
Please also find the event fees at JVY airport (which are half of the ones at SDF as per all the operators we have spoken to).
About the Kentucky Derby Race
The 20 horses that compete in the Kentucky Derby on the first Saturday in May every year have to make a long, tough trot to get there.
First, they have to travel to 35 tracks all over the United States and, hopefully, be one of the top four finishers in each race because those are the only horses who garner points.
Then, points are tallied and the 20 horses with the highest scores are awarded slots in the Derby’s starting gate – and the chance to win the $2 million purse.
We Can Get You There
Paramount Business Jets has been providing private jet rental services to the Kentucky Derby spectators and sponsors since 2005. We are experts in arranging safe and enjoyable private jet charter flights to and from the Kentucky Derby.
Louisville, KY is a popular destination for our clients, particularly during the Kentucky Derby. Here are the airports within driving distance of the Kentucky Derby.
- Standford International Airport, KSDF, SDF, Louisville, United States (3 miles)
- Bowman Field Airport, KLOU, LOU, Louisville, United States (6 miles)
- Clark County Airport, KJVY, JVY, Jeffersonville, United States (12 miles)
- Cedar Farm Airport, 28II, 28II, Laconia, United States (22 miles)
- Godman AAF Airport, KFTK, FTK, Fort Knox, United States (23 miles)
- Samuels Field Airport, KBRY, BRY, Bardstown, United States (30 miles)
- Addington Field Airport, KEKX, EKX, Elizabethtown, United States (37 miles)
- Breckinridge County Airport, KI93, I93, Hardinsburg, United States (47 miles)
- Capital City, KY Airport, KFFT, FFT, Frankfort, United States (47 miles)
- Orleans Airport, K7I4, 7I4, Orleans, United States (48 miles)
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Kentucky Derby Historical Highlights
When most people think of the Derby, they think of large crowds packing the infield, big-hatted women singing “My Old Kentucky Home,” mint juleps in hand.
But the 1.25-mile race that has been run continuously since 1875 is more than one big drinking party. Even the Great Depression and two world wars failed to interrupt the running of what has been called “the most exciting two minutes in sports.”
The race was the brainchild of Meriwether Lewis Clark, grandson of William Clark, half of the Lewis and Clark explorer team.
It was after an 1872 visit to Europe – during which he attended the Epsom Derby in Surrey, United Kingdom – that the younger Clark got the idea of starting such a prestigious race in the United States.
His uncles, John and Henry Churchill (no relation to Winston), gave him the piece of Louisville property on which he built the track. Hence, the name “Churchill Downs.”
The first Kentucky Derby was run by 15 thoroughbred horses on a 1.5-mile track on May 17, 1875. Some 10,000 spectators watched.
Today, the field of horses has increased to 20 and the length of the race decreased to 1.25 miles. More than 155,000 horse enthusiasts and partiers come to watch the Kentucky Derby, the first of three races in the Triple Crown. It is followed by the Preakness Stakes, held the third Saturday in May in Baltimore, Md., and the Belmont Stakes in June in Elmont, N.Y.
Kentucky Derby in 2014. Picture Source.
Here are a couple of interesting Q&As about the famous horse race:
What’s the maximum weight of a jockey?
Colts and geldings can care a 126-pound rider; fillies, 121 pounds.
Where did the term "Run for the Roses" come from?
It was coined by New York Evening Journal sports columnist in 1925, coincidentally, the first year the race was broadcast on network radio. The rose had been associated with the race since 1896 when winner Ben Brush was given white and pink ones. In 1904, the red rose became the official flower of the race. The rose garland that exists today – more than 400 red roses sewn onto green satin – was first awarded in 1932. In the middle of the blanket is a “crown,” a single rose surrounded by fern and ribbon is sewn that symbolizes the heart necessary to win.
Whatever happened to Meriwether Lewis Clark?
“Lutie,” as he was called, committed suicide in 1899. Fearing a life of poverty after losing a fortune in the stock market crash of 1893, he shot himself in the head in a Louisville hotel. He was 53. Coincidentally, although conspiracy theorists argue its accuracy, his famous explorer grandfather’s death was also a suicide. He was 68 when he shot himself in the chest and in the head in 1809. Both men were reported to have bouts of manic-depression.
What famous writer, in 1970, called the Kentucky Derby “decadent and depraved” in Scanlan’s Monthly magazine?
Louisville native son Hunter S. Thompson catapulted to fame as a “gonzo journalist” with his rambling essay, writing such things as “every half-mad dingbat who ever had any pretensions to anything within 500 miles of Louisville will show up there to get strutting drunk and slap a lot of backs” in the short-lived muckraking magazine. Admittedly, Thompson was as drunk as the people he wrote about.