词条 | Hilltop Park |
释义 |
| stadium_name = Hilltop Park | nickname = Hilltop Park | image = | location = Broadway between 165th and 168th St New York City | coordinates = {{coord|40|50|26|N|73|56|32|W|region:US_type:landmark|display=it}} | broke_ground = | opened = April 30, 1903 | renovated = | expanded = | closed = October 5, 1912 | demolished = 1914 | owner = Frank J. Farrell | operator = | surface = Grass | construction_cost = US$200,000 * * mostly from rock blasting and excavations (${{formatprice|{{Inflation|US|200000|1903}}}} in {{Inflation-year|US}} dollars{{inflation-fn|US}}) | architect = | former_names = American League Park (official) | tenants = New York Highlanders (MLB) (1903–1912) Columbia Lions football (1904–1905) New York Giants (MLB) (1911) | seating_capacity = 16,000 seated with 10,000 standing | dimensions = Left Field – 365 ft (111 m) Left-Center – 378 ft (115 m) Center Field – 420 ft (128 m) Right-Center – 424 ft (129 m) Right Field – 385 ft (117 m) Backstop – 91 ft (27 m) }} Hilltop Park was the nickname of a baseball park that stood in the Washington Heights neighborhood of New York City. It was the home of the New York Yankees of Major League Baseball from 1903 to 1912, when they were known as the "Highlanders". It was also the temporary home of the New York Giants during a two-month period in 1911 while the Polo Grounds was being rebuilt after a fire. The ballpark's formal name, as painted on its exterior walls, was American League Park. Because the park was located on top of a ridge of Manhattan Island, it came to be known as Hilltop Park, and its team was most often called the New York Highlanders (as well as the Americans and the Yankees). This "Highland" connection contrasted with their intra-city rivals, the Giants, whose Polo Grounds was just a few blocks away, in the bottomland under Coogan's Bluff. Hilltop Park sat on the block bounded by Broadway, 165th Street, Fort Washington Avenue, and 168th Street. The structure consisted of a covered grandstand stretching from first base to third base and uncovered bleacher sections down the right and left field lines. Originally built in just six weeks, the park sat 16,000, with standing room for an additional 10,000 or so. The bleachers were covered in 1911, and also bleachers to seat an additional 5,000 fans were built in 1911 (partially to accommodate Giants fans, who were temporary tenants after the Polo Grounds fire) in center field. The field was initially huge by modern standards — {{convert|365|ft|m|abbr=on}} to left field, {{convert|542|ft|m|abbr=on}} to center field and {{convert|400|ft|m|abbr=on}} to right field. An inner fence was soon constructed to create more realistic action.[1] Both the park and the nickname "Highlanders" were abandoned when the American Leaguers left, at the beginning of the 1913 season, to rent the Polo Grounds from the Giants. The Polo Grounds had a far larger seating capacity, and by that time was made of concrete due to the 1911 fire. Hilltop Park was demolished in 1914. HistoryAmerican League baseball came to New York City in 1903 when gambler Frank J. Farrell and former New York City Police Chief William S. Devery, bought the Baltimore Orioles franchise for $18,000, equal to ${{Inflation|US|18000|1903|fmt=c}} today. They established the team at Hilltop Park, a hastily constructed wooden park seating about 16,000 fans, on the west side of Broadway between 165th and 168th streets. It was catty-corner to the New York School for the Deaf, which at that time was located at 99 Fort Washington. The land was acquired via a ten-year lease, arranged by the New York Institution for the Blind.[New York Times, March 24, 1903, p.10] The block was effectively parkland, with many trees to be cut down and an artificial lake to be drained and filled in.[New York Tribune, March 14, 1903, p.5] In mid-April, the owners announced that the new ballpark was to be officially known as American League Park.[New York Tribune, April 16, 1903, p.6] The park retained that name in formal circumstances, but its geography led to the oft-used nickname Hilltop Park. Between that fact and the club president Joseph Gordon being fancifully linked by sportswriters to the Gordon Highlanders, the team nickname "Highlanders" followed logically. Opening Day came on April 30, 1903, when the New York Highlanders played the Washington Senators.[2] The ballpark site was quite large for its time (9.6 acres or nearly double the size of many ballpark sites of that era), and the south portion of the land plot was used for the parking of first carriages and later automobiles. The shape of the land plot was a large trapezoid with right angles at the site's northeast and southeast corners.[3] The left field foul line ran mostly North to South and was parallel to Fort Washington Road (the western boundary of the park). The left field foul line would, if extended about 20 additional feet, have intersected 168th Street at less than 90°. The right field foul line would, if extended, have intersected Broadway (the eastern boundary of the park) at more than 90°. The ballpark site was thus trapezoidal in shape and large for the Deadball Era. The seating capacity of 16,000 was also rather large for this time period. Capacity in the dead-ball Era was a flexible concept. In accordance with the practices of the day, overflow crowds were allowed to stand in the perimeter of the outfield. In addition, for "big" games, additional standees were allowed down the foul lines and between home plate and the backstop. Thus the effective overall capacity of the park was closer to 25,000, although even when stuffed to the gills, it fell well short of the normal capacity of the Polo Grounds. The original 1903 construction of Hilltop Park cost about $200,000, more than two-thirds of which was spent for rock blasting and excavations; and the groundskeeper of the Highlanders, Phil Schenck, laid out the playing field.[4] The ballpark consisted of a covered grandstand of three sections, although it was not actually roofed until June 1 that season. Two sections of the grandstand were parallel to the foul lines and the third section was a short intermediate diagonal, which formed the backstop. The grandstand extended a short way past both first and third bases, and a clubhouse was located behind the center field fence. Single-deck bleachers that extended down both foul lines reached from the grandstand almost to the fences. The third base bleachers were not finished until June 1903. These first and third base bleachers angled towards the foul lines reducing the foul area at the fences to about 15 feet. A modest-sized scoreboard was in fair territory down the left field foul line. The main entrance to the park was on Broadway and a ramp led up to the top of the first base grandstand. Unlike many of the other contemporary wooden ballparks-this one never burned. Hilltop Park was not in good condition when it opened. There was a swamp in right field that had yet to be filled with rock, the outfield had no grass, the grandstand had not been completed, and players had to dress at their hotel rooms because the clubhouse was not completed. When Hilltop Park was finally completed, a single tier wooden covered grandstand extended from the third base dugout to homeplate, and around to the first base dugout. Uncovered grandstands extended to both foul poles. From behind homeplate, fans could see scenic views of the Hudson River and New Jersey Palisades. After the Polo Grounds burnt down in 1911, the Highlanders/Yankees offered to share their facility with the New York Giants, and the grateful National Leaguers took up temporary residence in Hilltop Park. The Highlanders added a bleacher section in deep center field, painted black to serve as a batter's eye screen. After two more seasons, the lease expired and the American Leaguers moved a few blocks east and south into the rebuilt Polo Grounds to sub-lease from the Giants. At that point the nickname Highlanders was dropped as the team was now strictly "the Yankees". The last big league game played at Hilltop Park was on October 5, 1912. The park was demolished in 1913. Although the Yankees were done at the Hilltop, other events were staged there in the fall of 1912, including high school football and Auto polo.[Brooklyn Daily Eagle, November 24, 1912, p.14] 1904The Highlanders / Yankees were not particularly successful during their stay at the Hilltop. There was no hint that the club would eventually became baseball's greatest dynasty. Their best season was 1904, when they were in a tight race with Boston all summer. The season ended on October 10, with the Hilltop hosting a doubleheader against Boston, who led by 1 1/2 games. A sweep by the home team would have won the league championship for New York. However, Boston won the first game by scoring a tie-breaking run in the top of the ninth inning. With a Boston runner on third, New York pitcher Jack Chesbro threw a spitball that got away and sailed over the catcher's head. The runner on third easily came across the plate with what proved to be the pennant-clinching run.[Boston Globe, October 11, 1904, p.11] The Globe giddily called the game "The greatest victory ever won in outdoor sport." Although the Highlanders failed to win the league title, their unexpected presence in the pennant race ultimately led to the stabilization of the modern World Series. The Giants were on their way to winning the National League flag, and they announced ahead of time that they had no intention of playing against their cross-town rivals in a post-season World Series. Although Boston prevailed in the American League race, the Giants stuck with their plan, and no Series was played. The resulting public outcry spurred the Giants' owner to organize a committee and establish rules for how future Series were to be conducted. Cy Young and Walter JohnsonTwo Hall of Fame pitchers had good outings at Hilltop Park in 1908.
Ty CobbDetroit outfielder Ty Cobb, "The Georgia Peach", made many a mark on the game of baseball, some famous and some infamous. At least one of each happened at the Hilltop:
Hilltop Park site nowThe site where Hilltop Park once stood remained vacant until the land was purchased by Edward S. Harkness for the express purpose of building the world's first academic medical center. Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center opened in 1928 and is now called NewYork-Presbyterian / Columbia University Irving Medical Center. Some of the buildings visible in the background of ballpark photos still stand. They include a trio of six-story buildings at the northwest corner of Broadway and 168th (behind center field); and the Fort Washington Avenue Armory (behind left field), which was built in 1911. The site of the hearing-impaired institution to the southwest is now a parking lot for the Medical Center. Most of the other buildings visible in ballpark photos are gone, including the five-story Public School 169, behind right-center field. On September 30, 1993 a plaque was placed on the hospital grounds to mark the former location of home plate in Hilltop Park.[5] The plaque was donated to the hospital by the New York Yankees to commemorate the exact location of where home plate rested in Hilltop Park. The plaque is bronze and is the same size and shape as a regulation home plate. The text on the plaque reads, "Dedicated to Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center and the community of Washington Heights by the New York Yankees to mark the exact location of home plate in Hilltop Park, home of the New York Highlanders, from 1903 to 1912, later renamed the New York Yankees." References1. ^Baseball Almanac," Hilltop Park Historical Analysis 2. ^{{Cite news |title=Baseball's Big Crowd |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9903E6DD1339E333A25752C0A9639C946297D6CF |newspaper=New York Times |date=May 1, 1903 |page=7 |accessdate=October 23, 2009}} 3. ^"Highland Park", The New York Times, April 6, 1903, p. 6. 4. ^Joe Vila. "The old ballpark", The New York Sun, March 6, 1923, p. 20. 5. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.cumc.columbia.edu/psjournal/archive/summer-2003/mcg.html |title=When the Yankees Were on the Top (of the Hill) |accessdate=2013-12-25}} External links
| title = Home of the New York Highlanders | years = 1903 – 1912 | before = Oriole Park | after = Polo Grounds }}{{succession box | title = Home of the New York Giants | years = 1911 | before = Polo Grounds | after = Polo Grounds }}{{end}}{{New York Yankees}}{{San Francisco Giants}}{{NewYorksportsvenues}}{{Wooden baseball parks}} }} 14 : Defunct buildings and structures in Manhattan|Former sports venues in New York City|Columbia Lions football|New York Yankees stadiums|New York Giants (NL) stadiums|Defunct sports venues in Manhattan|Defunct Major League Baseball venues|1903 establishments in New York (state)|1912 disestablishments in New York (state)|American football venues in New York City|Baseball venues in New York City|Sports venues completed in 1903|Sports venues demolished in 1914|Demolished sports venues in New York (state) |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。