Wearn Field Explained

Stadium Name:Wearn Field
Location:S Graham St & Winona St, Charlotte, North Carolina 28203
Opened:1912
Closed:1940
Owner:J.H. Wearn
Surface:Grass
Former Names:Hayman Park
Tenants:Charlotte Hornets (1912-1940)
Buffalo Bisons (IL) (spring training) (1913)
Philadelphia Phillies (NL) (spring training) (1919)
Syracuse Chiefs (IL) (spring training) (1935, 1937)
Dimensions:Left Field – ft
Center Field – ft
Right Field – ft

Wearn Field was a ballpark located in Charlotte, North Carolina and home to amateur and professional baseball in Charlotte from 1912[1] to 1940. Wearn Field was built and owned by Hornets club owner J. H. Wearn[2] alongside his lumber mill. Home plate was at the corner of South Graham and Winona Streets; the right field corner was at South Graham and Commerce.[3]

Wearn Field was home to the Charlotte Hornets minor-league baseball team, the Charlotte Red Sox negro league team, and was the spring training home of the Buffalo Bisons in 1913, the Philadelphia Phillies in 1919, and the Syracuse Chiefs in 1935 and 1937.[4]

History

The Charlotte Red Sox negro league club attracted many fans from the area. On Labor Day 1918, the team hosted a fundraiser where they played against Camp Greene’s Black soldiers at Wearn Field and the proceeds donated to support the soldiers.[5]

In April 1926, Babe Ruth led the Yankees to a win over the Brooklyn Dodgers in a preseason exhibition game before 4,000 fans at Wearn Field.[6] [7]

The first integrated baseball game in Charlotte was played at Wearn Field on July 8, 1933 when Highland Park, a white mill team, beat the North Charlotte Black Yankees. Contemporary news accounts differ on the game’s winner.[8]

The Charlotte Hornets were purchased by the Washington Senators in 1937. In 1940, the Senators's Calvin Griffith constructed a new 3,200-seat ballpark in Charlotte's Dilworth neighborhood on Magnolia Avenue, naming it Clark Griffith Park. The Hornets played their last season at Wearn Field in 1940 before moving to Clark Griffth Park in 1941.

In March 2014, the Charlotte Knights unveiled four murals at its Truist Field along the S Graham Street side to commemorate the former Charlotte-area homes of professional baseball including Wearn Field.[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Several Games Scheduled For The New Hornets . The Evening Chronicle . April 5, 1912 . Charlotte, North Carolina . 6 . 2023-04-03.
  2. Web site: Wearn Field. Perry . Maria. March 14, 2015 . Lost Charlotte: The Queen City of the South’s Past Revisited . MariaPerry1 . 2022-11-24 .
  3. Web site: The Semi-Pro: The Baseball Life of Walter Ancker (Chapter Two) . Norman . Charles. December 28, 2021. ReverbRaccoon.com . Charles Norman. February 27, 2023 .
  4. Book: Pomrenke, Jacob. April 5, 2011. SABR Spring Training Database: Sorted by host city. Society for American Baseball Research . 29.
  5. Web site: The forgotten history of Black baseball in Charlotte. Webb. Michael Turner . June 1, 2021 . CLTure.com . CLTre . 2022-11-25 .
  6. News: Wade. Jake. April 9, 1926. Good Time Had By All As Babe And Ben Deliver . Charlotte Observer . Charlotte, North Carolina . 15.
  7. Web site: Babe Ruth pays memorable visit to Charlotte . Powell. Lew. April 8, 2010 . blogs.lib.unc.edu . NC Miscellany . 2022-11-24 .
  8. Web site: Interracial baseball: Official game, but questionable score . Powell. Lew. July 8, 2012 . blogs.lib.unc.edu . NC Miscellany . 2022-11-24 .
  9. Web site: Knights Pay Tribute to Charlotte Baseball Past, Present & Future . March 27, 2014 . milb.com . MLB Advanced Media. 2022-11-25 .