Note - I will leaving today for a conference in Cincinnati...if the weather holds up I'll be going to the Cincinnati Reds-Arizona Diamondback game tonight...Stiles Points will be back on Friday, July 3rd - hopefully with some photos...
It's been gone for quite a while, but the City of Pittsburgh is still celebrating its greatest sports facility - Forbes Field and its 100th anniversary...June 30, 1909 the Pirates played the first game at Forbes Field...Robert Dvorchak of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette writes a well researched history of the famed ballpark... Robert Dvorchak - Forbes Field
Here are a few interesting facts about Forbes Field: - It featured lavatories specifically designated for women - There were public telephones - An underground parking garage - Ramps instead of steps
Here is a real throwback, the ballpark was named after a British general, not some internet site or corporate sponsor... "The place was named after John Forbes, the British general whose forces built a road through the Pennsylvania wilderness to evict the French from Fort Duquesne in 1758. In his after-action report, the general called it "Pittsbourgh," and the name stuck even if the spelling didn't."
- Tenants: Pittsburgh Pirates (NL 1909-70); Pittsburgh Pirates/Steelers (NFL 1933-63); University of Pittsburgh (football 1909-24); Homestead Grays (Negro National League 1939-48); also Duquesne, Carnegie Tech and Pitt freshman football.
- Groundbreaking: March 1, 1909 - First National League game: June 30, 1909 (Cubs 3, Pirates 2) - First NFL game: September 20, 1933 (NY Giants 23, Pirates 2) - Last NFL game: December 1, 1963 (Eagles 20, Steelers 20) - Last National League game: June 28, 1970 (Pirates 4, Cubs 1) - Demolished: July 28, 1971 - Baseball capacity: 25,000 (1909); 41,000 (1925); 33,537 (1939); 34,249 (1953); 35,000 (1960) - Surface: Natural grass
- Architect: Osborn Engineering - Builder: Nicole Construction Company - Owners: Pittsburgh Pirates (1909-57); University of Pittsburgh (1958-71) - Cost: $2 million (1909)
Dimensions: - LF foul line: 360 ft (1909), 365 ft (1930), 335 ft (1947 Greenberg Garden/Kiner's Korner), 365 ft (1954) - LF alley: 406 ft (1926) - Deep left-centerfield corner: 462 ft (1909), 457 ft (1930) - Center field: 442 ft (1926), 435 ft (1930); 436 ft (1946) - Right-center at corner: 408 ft (1926) - Short right-center: 375 ft (1925) - RF foul line: 376 ft (1909), 300 ft (1925) - Home plate to backstop: 110 ft (1909), 84 ft (1938), 75 ft (1959)