Huntington Avenue Grounds
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Huntington Avenue Grounds | |
Location | Boston, Massachusetts |
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Coordinates | 42°20′20.3″N 71°5′20.3″W / 42.338972°N 71.088972°W |
Owner | Boston Red Sox |
Capacity | 11,500 |
Field size | Left Field – 350 ft Left-Center – 440 ft Center Field – 530 ft (1901), 635 ft (1908) Right Field – 280 ft (1901), 320 ft (1908) Backstop – 60 ft |
Construction | |
Broke ground | March 9, 1901 |
Opened | May 8, 1901 |
Closed | After 1911 season |
Demolished | 1912 |
Tenants | |
Boston Red Sox (MLB) 1901–1911 |
Huntington Avenue American League Baseball Grounds is the full name of the baseball stadium that formerly stood in Boston, Massachusetts, and was the first home field for the Boston Red Sox, known informally as the "Boston Americans" before 1908, from 1901 to 1911. The stadium, built for $35,000 (equivalent to $1.28 million in 2023), was located on what is now Northeastern University, at the time across the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad tracks from the South End Grounds, home of the Boston Braves.
The stadium was the site of the first World Series game between the modern American and National Leagues in 1903, and also saw the first perfect game in the modern era, thrown by Cy Young on May 5, 1904. The playing field was built on a former circus lot and was extremely large by modern standards - 530 feet (160 m) to center field, later expanded to 635 feet (194 m) in 1908. It had many quirks not seen in modern baseball stadiums, including patches of sand in the outfield where grass would not grow, and a tool shed in deep center field that was in play.
The park was built on a large plot of land bounded by Huntington Avenue (northwest, left field); Rogers (now Forsyth) Street (southwest, third base); railroad tracks (southeast, first base); and various buildings to the east (right field).
The Huntington Avenue Grounds was demolished after the Red Sox left at the beginning of the 1912 season to play at Fenway Park. The Cabot Center, an indoor athletic venue belonging to Northeastern University, has stood on the Huntington Grounds' footprint since 1954. A plaque and a statue of Cy Young were erected in 1993 where the pitchers mound used to be, commemorating the history of this ballpark in what is now called World Series Way. Meanwhile, a plaque on the side of the Cabot Center (1956) marks the former location of the left field foul pole.
The Cabot facility itself is barely over a quarter mile away to the southwest from another, still-standing Boston area sports facility of that era, Matthews Arena (built in 1910), the original home of the NHL's Boston Bruins when they started play in 1924.
Gallery
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An early diagram of the grounds
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Plan of the grounds
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Huntington Avenue Grounds (left), August 5, 1911. Michael T. "Nuf Ced" McGreevy Collection, Boston Public Library
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Huntington Avenue Grounds (right), August 5, 1911. Michael T. "Nuf Ced" McGreevy Collection, Boston Public Library
References
[edit]External links
[edit]- Ballpark Digest Article on Huntington Avenue Baseball Grounds
- Huntington Avenue Baseball Grounds at Baseball Almanac
- Info at Ballparks.com
- https://www.loc.gov/resource/gmdatlases.map45000032/?sp=36&st=image Map showing the Grounds, 1908]
See also
[edit]- Baseball venues in Boston
- Defunct baseball venues in Massachusetts
- Defunct sports venues in Boston
- Defunct college football venues
- Boston College Eagles football venues
- Boston Red Sox stadiums
- Defunct Major League Baseball venues
- Demolished sports venues in Massachusetts
- Northeastern University
- 1901 establishments in Massachusetts
- Sports venues destroyed in 1912
- 1912 disestablishments in Massachusetts