Start My Family Tree Welcome to Geni, home of the world's largest family tree.
Join Geni to explore your genealogy and family history in the World's Largest Family Tree.

Russwood Park, Memphis TN (1896-1960)

Project Tags

Top Surnames

view all

Profiles

  • Charley Frank Pride (1934 - 2020)
    Country Legend Charley Pride Dies of COVID-19 Complications at 86 =Charley Pride was the first Black member of the Country Music Hall of Fame and the first Black person to host the Country Music Associ...
  • Leroy Robert "Satchel" Paige (1906 - 1982)
    Satchel Paige was an American professional baseball pitcher who played in Negro league baseball and Major League Baseball (MLB). His career spanned five decades and culminated with his induction into t...
  • William L "The Human Vacuum Cleaner" Robinson (1903 - 2002)
    Note: I (CLM) found William Robinson while looking for Satchel Paige. Moreover, he was not on the NSL list for players on the Pensacola Giants Team., yet he was on the Mobile Black Bears list on Page 8...
  • Glover "Gus" Clarence Gardner (1898 - 1990)
    N= Gardner, Clarence, Glover. “Gus”. Geni - Glover "Gus" Clarence Gardner (1898-1990)- Vicksburg Glover Clarence Gardner (1898-1990) - Find a Grave Memorial DOB=11/26/1889. POB=Newton, Newton Co.MS. DO...
  • Mack A ""Mack the Knife" "Pops" Pride, Jr (1932 - 2018)
    Mack Pride From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigationJump to search Mack Pride Mack Pride Baseball.jpg Pitcher Born: May 27, 1932 Sledge, Mississippi Died: September 23, 2018 (aged 8...

Russwood Park, Memphis TN:

This Project is for the Fans,Staff, and Players.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russwood_Park

Russwood Park

Article
Talk
Read
Edit
View history

Tools
Coordinates: 35.140766°N 90.030084°W
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Russwood Park was a stadium in Memphis, Tennessee. It was primarily used for baseball and was the home of the Memphis Chicks minor league baseball team until the spring of 1960. The ballpark was originally built in 1896, and was known as Elm Wood Park or Red Elm Park. In 1915, team owner Russell E. Garner incorporated his name into the ballpark's name. The "wood" part of the name would figure into its demise.

Prior to its dramatic end, the ballpark was best known for being among the more uniquely shaped ballfields in the country. As with Nashville's Sulphur Dell, it was in a natural "bowl". The slopes were used as convenient foundations for seating areas. Constrained by its topography, a creek, and pre-existing buildings, the park was on an asymmetrical lot, with the deepest parts of left and right fields being significantly farther from home plate than straightaway center.

City directories gave its street address as 914 Madison Avenue. Its boundary streets included Madison (south, home plate); Dunlap Street (west, left field); and Jefferson Avenue beyond bordering buildings (north, center field). The creek (later covered to make a parking lot) ran outside the right field fence. The outfield dimensions following the 1921 remodeling were: left field 424 feet (129.2 m); center field 366 feet (111.6 m); and right field 301 feet (91.7 m), quickly angling out to a very deep right-center, about 425 feet (129.5 m); . The left field distance was later shortened somewhat by construction of an inner fence and bleachers.

It was also the home field for the Memphis Tigers football team from 1912 to 1928 when they were known as the West Tennessee State Normal School and the West Tennessee State Teachers College.

One of its better-known non-baseball events was a concert held by Memphis' adoptive son Elvis Presley on July 4, 1956. Coincidentally, 21 years later Elvis would be pronounced dead at the Baptist Hospital across Madison Street to the south.

The largest crowd attendance for wrestling in Memphis was set on August 17, 1959 at Russwood Park. The main event was Billy Wicks and Sputnik Monroe fighting to a no contest for Monroe's Tennessee Championship. Attendance for the event has been reported to be between 17,000 and 18,000. The record would stand until the Monday Night Wars Era.

The final event at the old ballpark was a pre-season exhibition game between the Chicago White Sox and the Cleveland Indians on Easter Sunday, April 17, 1960. A reported 7,279 fans watched the Indians beat the White Sox, 2-1.

The ballpark was a relic, constructed primarily of wood except for steel supports for the roof. That night after the game, a fire of undetermined origin destroyed the ballpark.[1] The blaze threatened the Baptist Hospital across the street from it, and patients had to be evacuated.

The Chicks played in several temporary facilities for the 1960 season, including a very cramped high school football field a couple of blocks northeast of the ballpark site, called Hodges Field; and then a city-owned field called Tobey Park. After the season, the club moved to Macon, Georgia. As it happens, the entire Southern Association disbanded after the 1961 season. A revived minor league entry for the city, called the Memphis Blues, began play in 1968 at Tim McCarver Stadium.

Sources
Baseball Parks of North America by Michael Benson, 1989.
References

Lauderdale, Vance. "The Russwood Park Fire". memphismagazine.com. Retrieved 27 April 2019.

External links
Photos of the ballpark (for reference only)
A list of minor league tenants
Russwood Park at Historic-memphis.com
[1] and [2] 1952 Sanborn maps showing Russwood Park