Back in April of last year, I published my second local history book titled “Forgotten Times: A Walk Through History”, a compendium of short histories complete with old and new photos of 60 or so businesses, schools and churches, many, if not most, are no longer with us. One of those, the Braden Theatre, at that time of publication, had been closed for a number of years. Little did I know that shortly after the release of my book in April of 2007 that the theatre would be purchased, renovated and new life blown into a much-needed movie hall here in our bustling and hustling little berg of Presque Isle. It would also serve as a new spark which would help ignite new life into the so-called Downtown Revitalization Project being promoted by Main St. merchants .Finally, after many, many months--- through the summer of ’07 and much of the winter of ’08--- the tearing down and building up came to an end. On the first day of March, the theatre doors opened and the magic of movies rolled into Presque Isle once again. Despite the lousy weather, the Braden filled with excited moviegoers, deprived of that cinematic fascination since Hoyts Aroostook Cinema close a few years ago.
Last week I promised a little Braden Theatre history. I began to scurry around looking for that history in amongst the tons of historical stuff I’ve gathered through the years. Then, it occurred to me that I had already condensed---in fine form, if I must say---the Braden history in “Forgotten Times: A Walk Through History”. So, let me simply lift, if you will, my own history from my own book and reprint it here. After all, I don’t need permission, right? Here it is, a little Braden history all the way from the early 1920s to March 1, 2008………
No doubt, few theaters, if any, across the country have been named for a horse. The Braden Theatre is such a theater named for John R Braden, a locally famous racer who beat just about everything on a track around the area. Braden was also known as “The Little Iron Horse from Tennessee.” It raced around the county, southern Maine and Canada for eight years and established new time records, holding those records for many years.
Braden’s driver, John Willard, was born in the Oxbow in 1857. After Willard moved to Presque Isle, he went to work for Presque Isle’s own, Thomas Phair, also known as the “Starch King of Aroostook”. Phair established several lumber and starch businesses around the Presque Isle area which provided lots of jobs for lots of local men. Along the way, Phair made lots of money, too. He also had training stables on the east side of south main St. about where the Rec. Center is. After 30 years of Phair’s employment at the stables, Willard struck out on his own and opened stables of his own.
In 1921 the Mooseleuk Club, then located above Marston’s and comprised of many of Presque Isle’s pillars of society, purchased Braden for $5,000 (lots and lots of bucks back then) and hired Willard to drive him. During the eight years of Braden’s racing and Willards’ driving, Braden won 200 of his 372 heats, was second in 78 and third 33 times. Over those years, Braden won a total of $48,000 for the Club, a grand sum of money during the 1920s. His last appearance was in Woodstock, N.B. in September of 1929 winning that race against a horse named Dan Hedgewood. Willard retired from racing ten years later.
Now, according to John Hone (PIHS class of 1957) who has recently written and had printed a lovely book, “A Long Time Forgotten”, all about the history of the Presque Isle Opera House and the local movie theaters through the years: “The editorial of the Star-Herald of July 17, 1930 spoke in glowing terms of the fame of John R. Braden suggesting that if there were an Equine Hall of Fame, Maine ought to place a statue of the famous horse who “was known to more people than any other horse that ever turned a Maine track.” A committee was then selected to ensure that the remains of the horse were suitably honored. In 1930 Braden was laid to rest [in front of the grandstand] in a concrete vault with a large, handsome marble marker by F.B. Thompson (owner of the P.I. Marble Works on State St.). Thompson inscribed the stone:
JOHN R. BRADEN
2.02 ¾
J.N. WILLARD UP
Watts Aroostook Granite, By F.B. THOMPSON