Nicollet Park
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nicollet Park is a former baseball ground located in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. The ground was home to the minor league Minneapolis Millers of the Western League and later American Association from 1896 to 1955. Nicollet Park was also the place that the cereal Wheaties was first advertised.
The ballpark was on a small block bounded by Nicollet Avenue, 31st Street, Blaisdell Avenue and Lake Street (or 30th Street). Home plate was in the southwest corner. Joe Hauser hit 69 homers for the Millers in 1933. Future Hall-of-Famer Ted Williams also made a bit of a splash here in 1938, on his way up to the major leagues, registering 43 round-trippers to lead the league. Another future Hall-of-Famer, Willie Mays, was enjoyed by the Minneapolis fans for only a month or so in 1951 before the parent club New York Giants rushed the young ballplayer to the big leagues.
Nicollet Park went out with a bang, as the Millers won the American Association championship tournament, and then went on to vie for the Junior World Series championship, facing the Rochester Red Wings of the International League. The series went the distance of 7 games, and the finale was a close-fought win for the Millers in what was also the final game at Nicollet Park.
In 1956 the Millers moved to Metropolitan Stadium in the suburb of Bloomington.
The park also held early National Football League games as the Minneapolis Marines and Minneapolis Red Jackets played some games there during the 1920s.
The ballpark site's current occupants include a branch location of Wells Fargo Bank (formerly Norwest Bank). There is a plaque detailing the ballpark's history, near the drive-up window which is positioned near what was once the center field corner.
[edit] References
- Baseball in Minnesota: The Definitive History, Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2006, by Stew Thornley.
- Before the Dome, Nodin Press, 1993, edited by David Anderson.
- On to Nicollet: The Glory and Fame of the Minneapolis Millers, Nodin Press, 1988, by Stew Thornley.
- Ballparks of North America, McFarland & Company, 1989, by Michael Benson.
- Green Cathedrals, SABR, 1986, and Addison-Wesley, 1992, by Phil Lowry.