Ballparks - # 20 - Memorial Stadium, Baltimore, MD
When we visited Schuyler Colfax’s grave last month, I noted that we were in South Bend, Indiana on the way to Wisconsin. The primary reason for the trip was to attend Beck’s 50th high school reunion.
A couple of teachers from a half-century gone by were there and one of them, Pat Schellenger, had kind words to say about my little platform here. She said she particularly liked the ballpark posts. So, before we fly west in August to shoot the Hawaii capitol and two new ballparks, I want to introduce one more. I’m guessing she has no connection to the Orioles or Baltimore, but this one’s for Pat.
One more ballpark you newbie collectors can’t do is the Oriole’s former home, Memorial Stadium in uptown Baltimore. Built soon after WW II and Korea…what else could they call it? The stadium was also known as The Old Gray Lady of 33rd Street, and (for Colts games), The World's Largest Outdoor Insane Asylum.
After the O’s moved to their gorgeous new Camden Yards home, the old relic was demolished in 2001. One positive note – the thousands of tons of rubble were used to create an artificial reef in the Chesapeake Bay.
In the thirty seasons they have played at Camden Yards, the team was in the playoffs five times and never made it to the World Series. Before moving to Baltimore in 1954, they were the lowly St. Louis Browns. In 52 years, they managed one World Series appearance…which they lost to their cross-town rivals, the Cardinals in 1944.
The team’s glory years were at Municipal Stadium. In thirty-eight seasons, Hall of Famers like Frank Robinson, Cal Ripken, Brooks Robinson, Eddie Murray, Jim Palmer and manager Earl Weaver led the team to eight playoff appearances and won the World Series three times. The 1971 club had four 20 game-winning pitchers…a feat accomplished only one other time in major league history…by the Chicago White Sox in 1920.
Back to that ‘Insane Asylum’ remark. In what could have been a real tragedy, a fan [?] crashed a small airplane into the upper deck of the stadium shortly after an NFL playoff game in 1976. No one was seriously hurt, including the pilot, as the fans had just left the scene. The pilot, a disgruntled fan who was arrested on multiple charges, was upset because he was thrown out of a bar owned by a retired Colt linebacker.
The final line is a quote from Gen. John J. Pershing, commander of the American Expeditionary Forces during World War I. That part of the Memorial Stadium wall was saved from demolition and is currently outside the Camden Yards ballpark.
The current development on the Memorial Stadium property includes Maryland’s largest YMCA, a number of senior apartment complexes and a new recreational baseball field dedicated to the Ripken Family…with home plate in the very same spot it was in the former stadium.
1 Comments:
As a kid, we lived about 12 blocks from Memorial Stadium. I only attended one game there and I have few memories of that game with The Baltimore Bays. I passed by that stadium many times on the bus going downtown. We bought a few Christmas trees there and I went ice skating there. On a little hill near our house by a shopping center we would watch fireworks fired from the field. Never have seen an Orioles game ever nor the Baltimore Colts or Ravens either. Just not into sports, hon.
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