League Park

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League Park
League Park
Location Lexington Ave & E 66th St, Cleveland, Ohio
Global Coordinates 41°30′40.68″N, 81°38′38.99″W
Broke ground 1891
Opened May 1, 1891
Renovated April 21, 1910
Closed September 21, 1946
Demolished 1951
Owner
Surface Grass
Architect Osborn Engineering (1910)
Former names
Dunn Field (1916-1927)
Tenants
Cleveland Indians (AL) (1901-1946)
Cleveland Spiders (NL) (1891-1899)
Cleveland Buckeyes (NAL) (1943-1948)
Cleveland Rams (NFL) (1937), (1942), (1944-1945)
Seats
9,000 (1891)
21,414 (1910)
Dimensions
Left Field - 375 ft (114.3 m)
Left-Center - 415 ft (126.5 m)
Center Field - 420 ft (128 m)
Right-Center - 317 ft (96.6 m)
Right Field - 290 ft (88.4 m)
For the defunct baseball venue in Cincinnati, see League Park (Cincinnati).
For the defunct baseball venue in St. Louis a.k.a. League Park, see Robison Field.

League Park was a baseball stadium located in Cleveland, Ohio. It was home to the National League Cleveland Spiders, the American League Cleveland Indians and the Cleveland Buckeyes of the Negro American League. It was located at the northeast corner of Lexington Avenue and E. 66th Street.

League Park was opened on May 1, 1891, and sat 9,000 on wooden seats at the time. The Spiders played there until going out of business after a disastrous 20–134 season in 1899 due to having their best players stripped from their roster by an unscrupulous owner. They were replaced the very next year by an entry in the new American League, which was initially a minor league and became a major league a year later. The stadium was rebuilt for the 1910 season, with concrete and steel grandstands, now seating 21,414. The owner renamed the park after himself, so for a while it was called "Dunn Field". After ownership changed hands, the name reverted to the more prosaic "League Park" (there were a number of professional teams' parks called by the generic "League Park" at one time, but in this case the name stuck). The Indians began playing night, holiday and weekend games at the far larger Cleveland Stadium in 1932, although in some years following they played exclusively at League Park. They split games between the two stadiums off and on until the end of the 1946 season. Lights were never installed at League Park, and it was thus impossible to play night games there. For 1947, under the ownership of Bill Veeck, the Indians moved to Cleveland Stadium full-time.

Because of a need to squeeze the ballfield into the Cleveland street grid, the stadium was rather oddly shaped by modern standards. It was only 290 feet down the right field line—though batters still had to surmount a 60-foot fence to hit a home run (by comparison, the Green Monster at Fenway Park is only 37 feet high). The fence in left field was only five feet tall, but batters had to hit the ball 375 feet down the line to hit a home run, and it was fully 460 feet to the scoreboard in the deepest part of center field. The diamond, situated in the northwest corner of the block, was slightly tilted counterclockwise, making right field not quite as easy a target as Baker Bowl's right field, for example.

After the demise of the Negro American League Cleveland Buckeyes following the 1950 season, League Park was no longer in use as a regular sports venue. The Cleveland Browns football team would continue to use the aging facility as a practice field until the late 1960s.

Today the site is a public park, which includes a baseball field in the approximate location of the original; a small section of the old first-base lower deck stands, including the exterior brick facade; and also the old ticket office behind what was the right field corner. The grandstand remnant was taken down ca. 2005 as part of a renovation process to the decaying playground.


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Preceded by
first ballpark
Home of the
Cleveland Indians
19011946
Succeeded by
Cleveland Municipal Stadium
19321993
Preceded by
first stadium
Home of the
Cleveland Rams
1937
Succeeded by
Shaw Stadium
1938
Preceded by
Cleveland Municipal Stadium
19391941
Home of the
Cleveland Rams
1942, 19441945
Succeeded by
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
19461979
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