Gunther Park Explained

Gunther Park
Location:Chicago, IL
Built:1905
Closed:1913
Surface:grass
Capacity:5,000
Tenants:Gunther Nine (1905-1913)
Chicago Green Sox (1912)

Gunther Park (now Chase Park) was a semi-professional baseball park in Chicago, Illinois. The field site was a large block bounded by North Ashland Avenue (west, home plate); Hills Court (north, left field); buildings and North Clark Street (east, center field); and Leland Avenue (south, right field) and was built in 1905.[1] It was just 11 blocks north of the eventual site of Wrigley Field,[2] and held a capacity of approximately 5,000.[3]

A handful of local amateur football and baseball games were played at the location in late autumn of 1904, the first being held on November 2.[Chicago ''Tribune'', November 3, 1904, p. 8] The venue was initially called "Gunther's Park".

After housing the Gunther Nine of the Chicago City League[4] and the Chicago Green Sox of the outlaw and short-lived United States Baseball League, as well as many other local amateur sporting events, the site was redeveloped in 1920. It was converted into a recreational park for the benefit of the Ravenswood district, with tennis courts, basketball courts, playgrounds, baseball fields, soccer fields, and pools. It was renamed in honor of Salmon P. Chase.[Chicago ''Tribune'', December 9, 1920, p. 17]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chicago Park District: Chase Park . www.chicagoparkdistrict.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20051130012356/http://www.chicagoparkdistrict.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/parks.detail/object_id/BBBC1DDA-D725-4C13-A9A2-72A22A8E6C23.cfm . 2005-11-30.
  2. Wrigley Field: the unauthorized biography. By Stuart Shea, George Castle, p. 8-9
  3. Black baseball and Chicago: essays on the players, teams, and games. By Leslie A. Heaphy, p. 175
  4. Black baseball and Chicago: essays on the players, teams, and games. By Leslie A. Heaphy, p. 175