![]() Interactive map of 23rd Street Grounds State Street Grounds | |
| Location | Chicago,Illinois |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 41°51′11″N87°37′42″W / 41.853101°N 87.628326°W /41.853101; -87.628326 |
| Surface | Grass |
| Opened | 1872 |
| Closed | 1877 |
| Tenants | |
| Chicago White Stockings | |
23rd Street Grounds, also known asState Street Grounds and23rd Street Park, and sometimes spelled out asTwenty-third Street Grounds, was aballpark inChicago, in what is now theChinatown district. In this ballpark, theChicago White Stockings playedbaseball from1874 to1877, the first two years in theNational Association and the latter two in theNational League.
The1871 Great Chicago Fire had put the original White Stockings club out of business, and its best players scattered to other National Association clubs. For 1872, the Chicago Base Ball Association was formed, with the intention of eventually fielding a new Chicago ball club, which it finally did in 1874. Until then, they staged some games figuring to get good attendance and some revenue. In early May, the organization built a new grounds "on 23rd Street near State Street", with the inaugural game coming on May 29, Baltimore defeating Cleveland 5–2. The land was owned byCharles Follansbee.[1]
23rd Street hosted a total of eight National Association games during 1872–1873, along with other contests. The Cleveland and Troy clubs played two and four home games there, respectively, in1872, when they were struggling economically (both eventually went out of business). TheBoston Red Stockings played one in August of1873 when they were flourishing. Their opponent was the Philadelphia club, and the two clubs played there again a few days later, swapping "home" and "visitor" roles.
The grounds occupied a city block well south and east of the 1871 fire's origin onDeKoven Street.
Several modern sources say it was bounded by 23rd Street,State Street, 22nd Street (nowCermak Road) and what is now Federal Street. This location is inconsistent with contemporary city directories and newspapers. The directories say:
Newspapers varied in naming the location as 23rd (usually spelled out as "Twenty-third") and State, 23rd "near" State or 23rd "west of" State. State was touted as the best thoroughfare to get to the park.
The ChicagoInter Ocean for April 20, 1872, p. 6, gave a few details about the ballpark, and specifically stated its location was to be "between Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth Streets, on Burnside Street, extending [west] to the track of theMichigan Southern Railroad."
The ChicagoTribune for May 5, 1872, p. 2, reported in some detail on the ballpark's construction:
No contemporary illustration of the ballpark is known to survive.
The first game for the re-formed Chicago White Stockings came on May 13, 1874, with the locals defeating the Athletics (Philadelphia).[1]
The first home game for the Chicago White Stockings in the newly formed National League came on May 10, 1876, with the locals defeating Cincinnati.[2]
The final game played at this park was on Saturday, October 6, 1877. Chicago defeated Louisville 4–0 behind a shutout effort from hurlerLaurie Reis. The final home run at the grounds was hit four days earlier byLip Pike of Cincinnati.[3]
The ballpark was on a portion of what was called the Uhlich Tract, which was a 60-acre plot bounded by 22nd Street (north), State Street (east), 25th Street (south) and Wentworth Avenue (west). The ballpark's lot was available in part because there were various legal disputes over the ownership of the larger property. The only permanent building was the Uhlich House hotel on the southwest corner of 22nd and state.[ChicagoTribune, April 26, 1874, p. 5]
By 1875, the disputes had been resolved and the owners announced plans to develop the mostly-vacant area into residential properties.[ChicagoTribune, December 12, 1875, p. 6] Once the ball club's lease ran out, they went shopping for a new location, and secured a lease on the lakefront site which had been their home grounds for the ill-fated 1871 season.
| Preceded by | Home of the Chicago White Stockings 1874 – 1877 | Succeeded by |