Central Park (Pittsburgh) Explained

Central Park
Location:Chauncey Street and Humber Way
Hill District
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Coordinates:40.4471°N -79.9721°W
Opened:Summer 1920
Demolished:1925
Owner:Alexander M. Williams (1920-25)
Sell Hall (1925)
Surface:grass
Architect:Louis Arnett Stuart Bellinger
Tenants:Sell Hall’s American Giants (Ind.) (1920)
Pittsburgh Keystones (NNL) (1921-1922)

Central Park was a baseball venue located in the Hill District of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from 1921–1925. The stadium was the first black-owned, controlled and managed baseball park in the city.

The ballpark served as the home of the Pittsburgh Keystones of the Negro National League. Officially named Central Amusement Park, the field's construction was commissioned in 1920 by Keystones' owner Alexander M. Williams and was designed by the prominent African-American architect Louis Arnett Stuart Bellinger, who would later design Greenlee Field for the Pittsburgh Crawfords.[1] [2]

The ballpark was on a block bounded by Humber Way (north/northwest, third base); buildings and Junilla Street (northeast/east, left field); Hallett Street (southeast/south, right field); and Chauncey Street (southwest/west, first base). Across Humber were buildings and then Wylie Avenue. Well south of Hallett was a larger thoroughfare named Centre Avenue. Newspapers often gave the location as Wylie, Chauncey and Centre.

After the Keystones folded after their 1922 season, Williams lost his savings, and by 1924 he had sold the park to Sell Hall. Central Park was sold again and turned into a “summer dancing pavilion.”[3]

In 2012, Central Park was denied an historical marker by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. According to the Commission, the venue was seen as a local or regional interest rather than a national and the state already had several other markers commemorating the Negro leagues.[4]

The ballpark site is now occupied by a public park.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ashwill . Gary . Pittsburgh's Central Park . 2006-05-07 . 2012-04-07.
  2. Web site: Tannler . Albert M. . Pittsburgh's African-American Architect Louis Bellinger and the New Granada Theater . 2006-05-07 . 2012-04-10.
  3. Web site: Ashwill . Gary . Central Park, Pittsburgh 1920-1925 . 2009-09-09 . 2012-04-07.
  4. Web site: Ashwill . Gary . Pittsburgh Keystones. December 28, 2012. August 6, 2015.