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Washington Park

By Wikipedia

Washington Park was the name given to three different major league baseball parks in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, located at 3rd St. and 4th Ave. The two ballparks were cater-corner from each other at that intersection.

At a glance...
WASHINGTON PARK
Facility statistics
Location Brooklyn, New York
Broke ground 1883
Opened I: May 12, 1883
II: May 30, 1889
III: April 30, 1898
Closed I: May 19, 1889 (fire)
II: October 3, 1890
III: September 30, 1915
Last Dodgers Game October 5, 1912
Demolished May 29, 1926
Replaced by Ebbet's Field
Owner Dodgers
Surface Grass
Construction cost 'nearly' $100,000 (in 1898)
Tenants
(Interstate League, 1883)
Bridegrooms (AA, 1884-1890)
Superbas (NL, 1898-1912)
Brook-Feds (FL, 1914-1915)
Seating capacity
18,800 (1914)
Dimensions
1898:
Left Field - 335 ft
Left-Center - 500 ft
Center Field - 445 ft
Right-Center - 300 ft
Right Field - 215 ft (unconfirmed)
Backstop - 90 ft

1908:
Left Field - 375.95 ft
Left-Center - 443.5 ft
Center Field - 424.7 ft
Right-Center - 300 ft
Right Field - 295 ft
Backstop - 18 ft

The first Washington Park was bounded by 3rd and 5th Streets, and 4th and 5th Avenues. The property contained an old building then called the Gowanus House, which still stands, albeit largely reconstructed. It was used as quarters by General George Washington during the Battle of Long Island, and that fact inspired the ballpark's name... despite the reality that the battle itself was a defeat for the Americans. To borrow Jonathan Goldman's somewhat catty remark in The Empire State Building Book, "George Washington schlepped here!"

Fly to the site of Washington Park!
If you have Google Earth installed, click here to be "flown" to the site of the later Washington Park. Of course the stadium is no longer there, but you can see the old neighborhood. (If you do not have it installed, get it from Google. It allows you to view virtually anywhere on Earth in 3D using satellite imagery.)

The ballpark was the home of the Brooklyn baseball club from 1883 (when it was in the minor Inter-State league) to May of 1889. Brooklyn's club won the Inter-State league championship and then joined the then-major American Association in 1884. A fire destroyed the grandstand on May 19, 1889 while the Bridegrooms (as they were then known) were on a road trip. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle of May 21 reported:

"In the account of the fire at the Washington Park base ball grounds, publication was given to the rumor that the club would not be able to play there on Wednesday, May 29. Mr. Ebbets writes that this is erroneous, for an army of workmen now employed on the grounds will have everything in readiness by the time the Bridegrooms return."

What is now considered to be the "second" Washington Park was constructed over the next nine days - in time for Brooklyn's next home games against St. Louis. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle of May 28 reported:

"The new grand stand is being rapidly pushed forward at Washington Park. Secretary Ebbets expects the structure to be in readiness on Thursday morning. It will be much larger than the old one. It will be much larger than the old one. The workmen began to put the roof on today, and by noon had half the frame up. It is a truss roof and there will be no pillars in the center of the stand to obstruct the view. There is no intention of using the view. There is no intention of using the chairs from the Polo Grounds in New York, much less then stand, as has been announced was to be done. The new stand is built in the strangest manner, and bolted so that it can be easily moved or carried away if necessary. It will be furnished with benches next Thursday. The work has been delayed considerably by the stormy weather, but the workmen will be kept going night and day until the stand is read for the opening game on Thursday morning. They will probably work by electric light tonight and tomorrow night."

Brooklyn then joined the National League in 1890. Trolley tracks ran near the ballpark, inspiring one of the team's many nicknames, the one that ultimately stuck: Trolley Dodgers.

In 1891 the team left Washington Park and set up shop at a newer facility called Eastern Park. The park had been home to the Brooklyn Wonders of the Player's League and part of the consolidation deal that brought an end to that team was that the National League team would play at Eastern Park. That might have seemed like a good idea - or at least expedient - at the time, but the park was a little too "eastern" for the fans' convenience, and was abandoned after six poorly-attended seasons. A letter to the editor of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle by Charles Merritt on November 12, 1897 summed up the feeling:

"Now that the baseball season is over I hope the management of the Brooklyn Club will do something in the way of securing new grounds. This has been promised to the patrons of the game for the last two or three years, but it seems to fall flat just a few weeks before the new season. Next year, from all accounts, we are to have a pretty strong team, and there is no reason why we should not have one. I think it a shame to have to journey to Eastern Park. If their grounds were somewhere in the neighborhood of old Washington Park, Brooklyn would be one of the leading baseball cities in the Union."

The third Washington Park was bounded by 1st and 3rd Streets, and 3rd and 4th Avenues (near but not on the old Washington Park grounds). The park sat 18,800. It consisted of a covered grandstand behind the infield and uncovered stand down the right field line. The Brooklyn National Leaguers, by then often called the Superbas as well as the "Dodgers", moved into this new ballpark in 1898, where they would play for the next 15 seasons. Meanwhile, owner Charlie Ebbets slowly invested in the individual lots on a larger piece of property in Flatbush, which would become the site of Ebbets Field once he had the entire block. So in 1913, the Dodgers, at that time most often called the "Robins" for their manager Wilbert Robinson, abandoned Washington Park.

But that was not quite the end of the story. The Brooklyn Tip Tops or "BrookFeds" of the Federal League, possibly the only major league team ever named for a loaf of bread, acquired the ballpark property in 1914, then rebuilt the second Washington Park in steel and concrete. They announced plans to install lights and start playing night baseball, but the league folded before it could.

Washington Park!

Brooklyn's predecessor to Ebbet's Field, Washington Park.

Photo courtesy of LCPC


The old park took on a modern appearance; in fact, it was nearly a dead-ringer for the initial version of another Federal League park in Chicago that would become Wrigley Field. However, with the Dodgers in a new and somewhat more spacious steel-and-concrete home already, there was no long-term need for Washington Park, so it was abandoned for the final time after the Federal League ended its two-year run.

Part of the wall of the last Washington Park, on 3rd Avenue in Brooklyn, can still be seen.

Washington Park was also the name of two different early-20th-century minor league ballparks in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Related Books on Ballparks
The Ballpark Book: A Journey Through the Fields of Baseball Magic by Ron Smith and Kevin Belford.
Ballpark: The Story of America's Baseball Fields by Lynn Curlee
Ballparks: A Panoramic History by Marc Sandalow and Jim Sutton.
Ballparks by Robert Von Goeben and Red Howard.
Ballparks: Then & Now by Eric Enders.
Baseball Vacations: Great Family Trips to Minor League and Classic Major League Ballbarks Across America by Bruce Adams and Margaret Engel.
Blue Skies, Green Fields: A Celebration of 50 Major League Baseball Stadiums by Ira Rosen.
Diamonds: The Evolution of the Ballpark by Michael Gershman.
Fields of Dreams: A Guide to Visiting and Enjoying All 30 Major League Ballparks by Jay Ahuja
Green Cathedrals: The Ultimate Celebration of All Major League and Negro League Ballparks by Philip J. Lowry.
Joe Mock's Ballpark Guide by Joe Mock.
Lost Ballparks: A Celebration of Baseball's Legendary Fields by Lawrence S. Ritter.
Roadside Baseball: A Guide to Baseball Shrines Across America by Chris Epting.
Take Me Out to the Ballpark: An Illustrated Tour of Baseball Parks Past and Present by Josh Leventhal and Jessica Macmurray.
The Ultimate Baseball Road-Trip: A Fan's Guide to Major League Stadiums by Joshua Pahigian and Kevin O'Connell.
Video: Story of America's Classic Ballparks
Video: Baseball: A Film by Ken Burns

Economics of Stadiums
:
City Baseball Magic: Plain Talk and Uncommon Sense about Cities and Baseball Parks by Philip Bess.
Field of Schemes: How the Great Stadium Swindle Turns Public Money into Private Profit by Joanna Cagan and Neil deMause.
Public Dollars, Private Stadiums: The Battle over Building Sports Stadiums by Kevin J. Delaney and Rick Eckstein.
Sports, Jobs, and Taxes: The Economic Impact of Sports Teams and Stadiums by Roger G. Noll and Andrew Zimbalist.

General Stadium Reference:
Sports Staff of USA Today. The Complete 4 Sport Stadium Guide. Fodor's, 1996.

Stadium Design and Financing References:
Philip Bess. City Baseball Magic: Plain Talk and Uncommon Sense about Cities and Baseball Parks. Knothole Press, 1999.
Joanna Cagan and Neil deMause. Field of Schemes: How the Great Stadium Swindle Turns Public Money into Private Profit. Common Courage Press, 1998.
Mark S. Rosentraub. Major League Losers: The Real Cost of Sports and Who's Paying for It. HarperCollins, 1997.
Kevin J. Delaney, Rick Eckstein. Public Dollars, Private Stadiums: The Battle over Building Sports Stadiums. Rutgers University Press, 2004.
Roger G. Noll and Andrew Zimbalist. Sports, Jobs, and Taxes: The Economic Impact of Sports Teams and Stadiums. Brookings Institution, 1997.
Dean V. Baim. The Sports Stadium as a Municipal Investment. Greenwood Publishing, 1994.
Stadia: A Design and Development Guide by Geraint John and Rod Sheard. Architectural Press, 2000.
Michelle Provoost, Matthjis Bouw and Camiel Van Winkel. The Stadium: Architecture of Mass Sport. NAI Publishers, 2000.


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WASHINGTON PARK

Photo courtesy of LCPC

Year by Year statistics: for Washington Park


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It uses material from this Wikipedia article, which is probably more up to date than ours (retrieved August 12, 2005).

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