Mark's Stadium
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Mark's Stadium | |
---|---|
Full name | Mark's Stadium |
Location | North Tiverton, Rhode Island United States |
Opened | 1922 |
Closed | 19xx |
Owner | Sam Mark |
Tenants | Fall River Marksmen (1922-1931) Fall River F.C. (1931-19xx) Ponta Delgada S.C. (19xx-19xx) |
Capacity | 15,000 |
Mark's Stadium is a former soccer stadium located in North Tiverton, Rhode Island. During the 1920s and early 1930s it was the home of Fall River Marksmen, one of the era’s most successful soccer teams. It is one of the earliest examples of a soccer-specific stadium in the United States.[1] After the demise of the Marksmen, the stadium was used as a home ground by other local teams, most notably Fall River F.C. and Ponta Delgada S.C..
[edit] History
In 1922 Sam Mark took over Fall River United of the American Soccer League and renamed them Fall River Marksmen. Mark was willing to invest in the club and one of his first moves was to build the team its own stadium. He located it in North Tiverton, Rhode Island, just over the Massachusetts border from Fall River. This enabled the Marksmen to circumvent the Massachusetts Blue Laws and play on a Sunday.[2] Although used primarily for soccer, Mark’s also operated a semi-professional baseball team and the stadium’s design was decidedly baseball-friendly. This included an L-shaped stand which was placed behind one of the corner-flags.[3]
In 1925 the National Challenge Cup final and the first Lewis Cup final were both held at the stadium. Although a crowd of only 1,000 turned up to see Shawsheen Indians defeat Canadian Club of Chicago 3-0 in the Challenge Cup on April 19, a capacity crowd of 15,000 saw Boston Wonder Workers defeat Fall River Marksmen 2-1 in the Lewis Cup.[4][5] In subsequent seasons the stadium regularly hosted prestige friendlies between the Marksmen and visiting teams such as Rangers, an Italian League XI and Kilmarnock.[6][7] [8][9] [10]
In 1931, after Sam Mark relocated Fall River Marksmen to New York and renamed them the New York Yankees, he made the stadium available to anybody willing to place a team there. A group of Fall River businessmen, led by an ex-Marksmen player Harold Brittan, bought Providence Gold Bugs and moved them to Mark's Stadium where they played as Fall River F.C.. During their brief stay the new tenants beat both Velez Sarsfield and Celtic in prestige friendlies.[11][12][13] In the 1940s and 1950s Ponta Delgada S.C. also played some home games at the stadium. [14].
[edit] Notable Games
April 19 1925 |
Shawsheen Indians | 3–0 | Canadian Club, Chicago | 1925 National Challenge Cup Attendance: 1,000 |
Eddie Smith Alex Carrie Peter Purden |
(Report) |
1925 |
Fall River Marksmen | 1–2 | Boston Wonder Workers | Lewis Cup final Attendance: 15,000 |
(Report) |
June 3 1928 |
Fall River Marksmen | 0–0 | Rangers F.C. | Friendly Attendance: 15,000 |
(Report) |
August 26 1928 |
Fall River Marksmen | 4–2 | Italian League XI | Friendly |
(Report) |
June 3 1928 |
Fall River Marksmen | 3–0 | Kilmarnock | Friendly Attendance: 5,000 |
Archie Stark Alex McNab Bob McAuley |
(Report) |
February 22 1931 |
Fall River F.C. | 5–2 | Velez Sarsfield | Friendly |
(Report) |
May 31 1931 |
Fall River F.C. | 1–0 | Celtic | Friendly Attendance: 7,000 |
Billy Watson | (Report) |
July 7 1946 |
Ponta Delgada S.C. | 1–0 | Chicago Vikings | National Challenge Cup final Attendance: 6,000 |
Ed Souza or John Souza ? | (Report) | McDermott |
[edit] References
- ^ Soccer in a Football World - The Story of America’s Forgotten Game (2006) : David Wangerin [1]
- ^ The Year in American Soccer - 1922
- ^ Soccer in a Football World - The Story of America’s Forgotten Game (2006) : David Wangerin [2]
- ^ The Year in American Soccer - 1925
- ^ Soccer in a Football World - The Story of America’s Forgotten Game (2006) : David Wangerin [3]
- ^ Rangers tours
- ^ Rangers tours
- ^ The Year in American Soccer - 1928
- ^ Kilmarnock tours
- ^ The Year in American Soccer - 1930
- ^ The Year in American Soccer - 1931
- ^ Soccer in a Football World - The Story of America’s Forgotten Game (2006) : David Wangerin [4]
- ^ Celtic tour 1931
- ^ A History of Soccer in New England