Lost Ballparks

Lost Ballparks

By Dennis Evanosky and Eric J Kos

Lost Ballparks takes the successful format of the Lost series and applies it to the cherished ballparks of the past, from Anaheim and Atlanta to Toronto and Washington.

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Book Information

Publisher: Pavilion Books
Publish Date: 04/01/2017
Pages: 144
ISBN-13: 9781911216490
ISBN-10: 191121649X
Language: English

Full Description

Lost Ballparks takes the successful format of the Lost series and applies it to the cherished ballparks of the past, from Anaheim and Atlanta to Toronto and Washington.

Baseball has a history like no other American sport. The Union Grounds in Brooklyn, New York, is considered to be the first ballpark ever built, when William Cammeyer decided to use the Union Skating Pond as a ground for baseball games in 1862. Professional teams followed in 1871 and enterprising owners began to invest in the creation of wooden palaces, such as the Grand Pavilion in Boston and Sportsman's Park in St Louis.

The first steel-and-concrete ballpark was Shibe Park in Philadelphia built in 1909 which housed a then-record 20,000 spectators and set the standard in ballpark design. The Brooklyn Dodgers matched that with Ebbet's Field in 1913 and the New York Yankees trumped them with a 58,000 capacity Yankee stadium to house the legion of babe Ruth fans.

Over the years the cathedrals of baseball have come, been copied and are now gone, with all but a few heavily-modernized exceptions. Lost Ballparks looks back at the most storied ballparks in baseball's rich history.

From the wooden bleachers of Boston's Huntington Avenue Grounds to the 'space age' Houston Astrodome, to the tidal harbor ballpark at Ketchikan Alaska, there is a huge variety of ballparks that have fallen

List of cities: Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Brooklyn, Chicago, Cincinnati, Clearwater, Cleveland, Dallas, Denver, DesMoines, Detroit, Emeryville (Ca), Fort Mill (SC), Houston, Indianapolis, Johnson City (NY), Kansas City, Ketchikan (Al), Los Angeles, Memphis, Miami, Milwaukee, Montreal, Newark, NewOrleans, New York, Omaha, Rochester, St Louis, St Paul, St Petersburg, Salt Lake City, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, Tokyo (Japan), Toledo, Toronto, Washington, D.C., Wilmington.

About the Author

Dennis Evanosky and Eric J. Kos publish the Alameda Sun , a weekly newspaper across the bay from San Francisco. Dennis has written three books about Bay Area history.

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