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Connie Mack Field

Coordinates:26°42′26.35″N80°3′40.43″W / 26.7073194°N 80.0612306°W /26.7073194; -80.0612306
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former ballpark in West Palm Beach, Florida

Connie Mack Field
Mack Field
Map
Interactive map of Connie Mack Field
Full nameConnie Mack Field
Former namesMunicipal Athletic Field (1924–1926)
Wright Field (1927–1952)
LocationWest Palm Beach, Florida
Capacity3,500
SurfaceGrass
Construction
OpenedOctober 1924
DemolishedFebruary 1992
Tenants
St. Louis Browns (AL) (spring training) (1928–1936)
Rochester Red Wings (IL) (spring training) (1940)
Philadelphia / Kansas City Athletics (AL) (spring training) (1946–1962)
West Palm Beach Indians (FECL) (1940–1942); (FIL) (1946–1954); (FSL) (1955)
West Palm Beach Sun Chiefs (FSL) (1956)
West Palm Beach Braves (FSL) (1965–1968)

Connie Mack Field was a ballpark in midtownWest Palm Beach, Florida, which was the long-time spring training home of the Philadelphia Athletics/Kansas City Athletics.

The stadium was built in 1924 and initially named Municipal Athletic Field. It hosted its first event, a football game, in October 1924. The first baseball game was played in December 1924.[1]

It was renamed Wright Field in 1927 for West Palm Beach City Manager George C. Wright, then was renamed Connie Mack Field in 1952 in honor of long-time Philadelphia Athletics owner and managerConnie Mack.

The grandstands originally held about 2,000; Black fans were restricted to a small section in the right-field corner to keep them away from the White fans. Total capacity was about 3,500.[2]

Record attendance for baseball was on March 20, 1949, when 6,988 fans saw the A's defeat theBrooklyn Dodgers in a spring training game, by a 6-0 decision, which featuredJackie Robinson on the field and then-Secretary of State General of the ArmyGeorge C. Marshall in attendance.[3]

The stadium was replaced in 1962 byWest Palm Beach Municipal Stadium although the grandstand remained until 1973. The ball field continued to be regularly used by neighboringTwin Lakes High School.

The field was bulldozed in 1992 for a parking garage for the newRaymond F. Kravis Center for the Performing Arts where there is a tribute display in the garage by the main elevator.[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Eliot Kleinberg (June 18, 2009)."Honor To Field's Namesake Was Posthumous". Archived fromthe original on February 16, 2010. RetrievedSeptember 22, 2009.
  2. ^Eliot Kleinberg (December 26, 2007)."Mack Field Hosted Baseball Greats". Archived fromthe original on April 30, 2010. RetrievedSeptember 22, 2009.
  3. ^McGowen, Roscoe (March 21, 1949)."Mackmen triumph over Brooklyn, 6-0".The New York Times. p. 27. RetrievedSeptember 22, 2009.
  4. ^Kleinberg, Eliot (2006).Palm Beach Past: The Best of "Post Time". Charleston, South Carolina: The History Press. p. 51.ISBN 1-59629-115-X.

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26°42′26.35″N80°3′40.43″W / 26.7073194°N 80.0612306°W /26.7073194; -80.0612306

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