The very meadow that hosts nearly 600,000 people every summer for the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival was renamed today to honor the concert’s founder, San Francisco resident and financier Warren Hellman. Effective immediately, Speedway Meadow is now known as “Hellman Hollow”.
SFGate reports that the Rec & Park Commission unanimously approved the name change after hearing testimony from a bevy of supporters, including “musicians, educators, union representatives, business leaders, park neighbors, movers-and-shakers in high society and community activists”.
The article didn’t mention if anyone spoke in opposition to the name change, which displaces the historic “Speedway Meadow” name. The meadow is the former location of Speed Road, a track built in 1888 for recreational horse racing.

Golden Gate Park’s Speed Road in 1898. Courtesy of SF City Guides
The track was financed by wealthy businessmen like Leland Stanford, Charles Crocker, James Donahue, Adolph Sutro, and Adolph Spreckels, who wanted a place to race their horses privately. SF City Guides has more on the track’s history:
The intent was to build it as an exclusive racing road, not for the people of San Francisco like the rest of the park features. William Hammond Hall, the first park superintendent, wanted the park to be bucolic and was against this road. A battle ensued as those for and against the track lobbied politicians and newspaper editors. At the time, the speed in the park for horses and buggies was strictly enforced at 10 miles per hour. Park Commissioners finally relented, but required the horsemen to raise $35,000, the estimated cost, and to take responsibility for maintaining the track.
Eventually upkeep became too costly for private citizens, and the advent of bicycles and complaints from citizens who wanted equal access to the park led to the demise of the track.
After the 1906 earthquake, the meadow became “Camp Speedway” and housed refugees who were displaced by the disaster. The camp closed in October 1906 and Speed Road was officially closed, and converted into the meadow we use in the park today.
Read more on the history of Speedway Meadow at outsidelands.org
While it’s nice to honor Mr. Hellman – who has been very generous to the park and the city – with this naming, it is sad to see a piece of the park’s history be wiped away with the name change.
Let’s hope that in another act of generosity, Mr. Hellman will erect a nice info piece at the site that pays homage to the original name of the meadow, so the next generation will know what used to be.
Sarah B.
1:59 pm | Posted under
Golden Gate Park,
History |
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