List of jewel box baseball parks
Jewel box is a term sometimes used in reference to the group of Major League Baseball ballparks built primarily between 1909 and 1915, after the wooden ballpark era and before the modern multipurpose stadium era. These parks featured two-tier grandstand design to take advantage of the steel structural supports and often squeezed inside a city block bringing fans right on top of the action. The "retro" ballparks constructed in the 1990s were an attempt to capture, to some degree, the perceived intimacy and baseball-focus of these parks.
Jewel box ballparks by city
Here is a list of the Jewel Box ballparks, their dates of use as a Major League Baseball facility^, and some indication of their remnants, if known:Boston
- Braves Field – Right field pavilion and concourse, as well as ticket office, survive as part of Nickerson Field on the campus of Boston University.
- Fenway Park – Still standing and active as of October 8, 2019.
- Ebbets Field – Plaque marking its location. Apartment building on site.
- Comiskey Park – Outline of batters boxes with replica of home plate. U. S. Cellular Field parking lot on site.
- Weeghman Park/Cubs Park/Wrigley Field – Still standing and active as of October 8, 2019.
- Redland Field/Crosley Field – Plaque and some old grandstand chair seats. Office park on site.
- League Park – Ticket office, part of grandstand wall, and ballfield..
- Navin Field/Briggs Stadium/Tiger Stadium – Abandoned for MLB but stood for nearly nine years. Demolition began summer 2008. After plans for saving the field and the dugout-to-dugout portion of the stands fell through in June 2009, demolition continued, and was completed at the end of the year. The ballfield and outfield flagpole remain in place. They are unofficially maintained by a group of volunteers known as the Navin Field Grounds Crew. The field is available for anyone who would like to play a pick up game of baseball or just a game of catch.
- Polo Grounds – Plaque marking its location, along with parts of old stairway down from Speedway. Apartment building on site.
- Yankee Stadium – Demolition completed in 2010 for public parkland.
- Baker Bowl – A Pennsylvania Historical marker stands on Broad Street just north of West Huntingdon Street, Philadelphia. The marker is titled, "Baker Bowl National League Park".
- Shibe Park/Connie Mack Stadium – Plaque marking location. Church on site.
- Forbes Field – Parts of outfield walls and the flagpole exist at the original site; another part of the outfield wall now stands at the Pirates' current home of PNC Park; and home plate is preserved under lucite in Posvar Hall, a University of Pittsburgh academic building standing on most of the stadium site.
- Sportsman's Park – Ballfield as part of Herbert Hoover Boys' Club on site.
- Griffith Stadium – Plaque. Howard University hospital on site.
Night baseball – lights added
Jewel Box Parks were used during the era that saw the Major Leagues begin playing games at night. Below is a list of when each park had lights installed.Park | Year lights were installed |
Crosley Field | 1935 |
Ebbets Field | 1938 |
Connie Mack Stadium | 1939 |
Comiskey Park | 1939 |
Polo Grounds | 1940 |
Sportsman's Park | 1940 |
Forbes Field | 1940 |
Griffith Stadium | 1941 |
Braves Field | 1946 |
Yankee Stadium | 1946 |
Fenway Park | 1947 |
Tiger Stadium | 1948 |
Wrigley Field | 1988 |
Baker Bowl | Never |
League Park | Never |
The Cleveland Indians also played home games at Cleveland Stadium starting in 1932. They played their first night game at Cleveland Stadium in 1939.