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Neil Park (Columbus, Ohio)

Coordinates:39°58′22.5″N82°59′27.7″W / 39.972917°N 82.991028°W /39.972917; -82.991028
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Baseball park in Columbus, Ohio
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Neil Park
Map
Interactive map of Neil Park
AddressColumbus, Ohio
U.S.

Neil Park was abaseball park inColumbus, Ohio.

It was the home field of several Columbus professional baseball teams, notably theColumbus Senators, from1900 until it was abandoned in mid-season1932 with the opening ofRed Bird stadium and later demolished in 1946.[1] Other home teams included the Columbus Buckeyes (NNL11921), Columbus Turfs (NSL1932), and Columbus Bluebirds (NNL21932).[2]

It is sometimes referred to as "Neil Park I" and "Neil Park II" by historians. The original park was built in April1900, with the first game played on April 15,1900.[2] Its first incarnation had the diamond in the southeast corner. The park was rebuilt in 1905 and became the first ballpark in the country to use concrete and steel construction. The1905 reconstruction cost $64,000 and involved building a new grandstand due to the success of the Columbus Senators in the newly formed American Association.[2] During this reconstruction the diamond was reoriented in the southwest corner.

Its location was listed inDrehers Simplex Street and House Number Guide, Columbus, Ohio, 1929 -1930 as 475Cleveland Ave. Other early city directories listed it as "west side Cleveland Avenue north of Buckingham Street." and "west side Cleveland Avenue oppositeFort Hayes." The original park was reassembled and renamed Neil Park after Robert Neil, the owner of the land, after contractorJohn D. Evans dismantled Athletic Park and moved it to 512 Cleveland Avenue on April 5,1900.[2]The site is now occupied by one of several locations ofAbbott Laboratories and Abbott Nutrition. Like Baker Bowl and Polo Grounds II, the Columbus clubhouse was in centerfield; notably, Terry "Cotton Top" Turner once hit two home runs in a single day, both going through the clubhouse door. This was the first concrete and steel stadium in organized baseball, predating Forbes Field, which was built in1909.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"PS_B116_F04_10a; PS_B116_F04_10a.tif".digital-collections.columbuslibrary.org. RetrievedJune 22, 2025.
  2. ^abcde"Neil Park".www.projectballpark.org. RetrievedJune 30, 2025.

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[edit]
Former stadiums of the National Football League
Early era:
19201940
Post-war and
pre-merger era:
19411969
Current era:
1970–present
Stadiums
used by
NFL teams
temporarily

†= Team's stadium under construction or refurbishment at time
1 = A team used the stadium when their permanent stadium was unable to be used as a result of damage.

39°58′22.5″N82°59′27.7″W / 39.972917°N 82.991028°W /39.972917; -82.991028

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