Hinchliffe Stadium
Former names | Hinchliffe City Stadium |
---|---|
Address | Maple and Liberty Streets Paterson, New Jersey |
Coordinates | 40°55′6″N 74°10′52″W / 40.91833°N 74.18111°W |
Owner | Paterson Board of Education |
Capacity | 10,000 Baseball: 7,800 |
Acreage | 5.7 acres (2.3 ha) |
Construction | |
Built | 1931–1932 |
Renovated | 1963-1964, 1983, 2021-2022 |
Closed | 1997 |
Reopened | 2023 |
Architect | Olmsted Brothers |
Tenants | |
Paterson Giants (IFL) 1932-1933 Paterson Night Hawks (I) 1932-1933 Silk City Bears (I) 1932 New York Black Yankees (NNL II) 1933-1937, 1939-1945 New York Cubans (NNL II) 1936 Paterson Panthers (AA) 1936-1941,1946-1950 New Jersey Jackals (FL) 2023- | |
Hinchliffe Stadium | |
Architectural style | Art Deco with Mission style elements |
NRHP reference No. | 04000223[1] |
NJRHP No. | 4234[2] |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP | March 22, 2004 (local significance error)[3][4] |
Designated NHL | March 11, 2013[2] |
Designated NJRHP | January 27, 2004 |
Hinchliffe Stadium (/ˈhɪntʃ.lɪf/) is a 10,000-seat stadium located in Paterson, New Jersey, USA. The stadium is located atop the Great Falls of the Passaic River, and is part of the surrounding National Historical Park. The stadium, built in 1932, was closed in 1996 after years of neglect but reopened in 2023.
The stadium's primary user is the Paterson Board of Education, where it serves as a multipurpose facility for the city’s two high schools, Eastside High School and Kennedy High School. As of 2023, it also serves as the home stadium for the New Jersey Jackals of the independent Frontier League in Minor League Baseball; the Jackals spent their previous 25 seasons playing at Yogi Berra Stadium in Little Falls, New Jersey.
Hinchliffe Stadium was also used as the home of the New York Black Yankees of the Negro Leagues, and is one of four stadia still standing that hosted Negro League baseball games.[5][6]
Early days
The stadium, a large concrete oval with near-continuous seating laid out like a classical amphitheater, was inspired by a decade-long popular "stadium movement" in the 1920s, and was finally brought to fruition through the persistent efforts of its namesake Mayor John Hinchliffe, who made his fortune from Hinchliffe Brewing before it closed due to Prohibition. It opened on July 8, 1932, as a combination athletic facility and a "paying investment" for the working people of industrial Paterson, New Jersey, who were by then struggling through the early years of the Great Depression. Many workers laid off from the mills found work under a New Deal-financed program to provide enhancements to the stadium in 1932–34.
The stadium immediately played host to Negro league and "barnstorming" games. In 1933, the stadium's first complete season hosting baseball, Hinchliffe hosted the Colored Championship of the Nation, the Negro leagues equivalent of the World Series. That following year, the New York Black Yankees made the stadium their home, a tenure that lasted until 1945 and was interrupted only once, when the team booked Triborough Stadium on Randall's Island in New York for the 1938 season. After World War II, the Black Yankees left Hinchliffe and took up residency at Red Wing Stadium in Rochester, New York. Hinchliffe was also home to the New York Cubans in 1935 and 1936.
The baseball played at Hinchliffe Stadium was some of the best and most competitive in the game, including prodigious athletes like Monte Irvin, Josh Gibson, Oscar Charleston, and "Cool Papa" Bell, among many others. Hall-of-Famer Larry Doby, the legendary player who broke the American League color barrier in 1947, grew up in Paterson playing football and baseball in Hinchliffe Stadium for Paterson's Eastside High School, and was scouted from Hinchliffe for the Newark Eagles in 1942.
Hinchliffe became an important venue for boxing (Diamond Gloves, precursor to the Golden Gloves), auto racing (precursor to NASCAR featuring stock car racing, pre-Indianapolis racing, and midget car racing events), and professional football.[7] Racers that appeared at Hinchliffe included Dutch Schaefer, Ted Horn, Bill Schindler, Art Cross, and Tex Keene.[7] Victory Bond rallies held at the stadium during World War II drew sports stars and New York and Hollywood celebrities by the dozens. Among the many notable events headlined at Hinchliffe were shows performed by Abbott and Costello. (Lou Costello was born and raised in Paterson's Eastside section.)
Throughout its history, though, Hinchliffe Stadium's primary use was as a venue for Paterson high school sports. Its two high schools, Eastside High School and Central High School, shared the stadium for various sports including football and baseball until the late 1960s. (Kennedy High School, opened in 1965, also used Hinchliffe.) The schools' annual intercity Thanksgiving Day matchup was always held at Hinchliffe, and the venue would also play host to other schools' teams who took advantage of its large capacity; for instance, Paterson's neighbor Clifton used the stadium for its football team during the 1940s until opening its own Stadium October 14, 1950.
Later days
At first Hinchliffe, sometimes called "City Stadium", was municipally owned. In 1963, as the schools assumed full ownership, they undertook an array of repairs and upgrades that included repositioning the baseball diamond and adding fill to the area above and along the river (the "cliff" area, called "The Valley of the Rocks") in order to enlarge the football field and lengthen the track. In the following decades, the stadium did yeoman service for both school sports and major public events, including—from the 1970s on—concerts, antique car shows, and the fireworks displays for the Great Falls Festivals that have become a favorite feature of Paterson's Labor Day celebrations. Duke Ellington held one of his last major concerts here in 1971.
In 1983, the field received another upgrade under Mayor Frank X. Graves, Jr. These repairs made previously temporary stands permanent, added handicap access and storage facilities, and resulted in the installation of an Astroturf field surface. In 1988 Hinchliffe Stadium became the home of the New Jersey Eagles of the American Soccer League, and the Eagles called the stadium home for two seasons before moving to another venue for their third and final season.
The general decline of the school system in Paterson over the next decade meant the diversion of maintenance resources away from the stadium. Although the facility continued to be used through the 1990s, Hincliffe Stadium fell into further and further disrepair due to underfunding and was eventually closed at the end of the 1996–97 school year and threatened with demolition. This forced Eastside High School and Kennedy High School to play their entire 1997 football seasons on the road and both schools returned to playing in Paterson for the 1998 season at Bauerle Field, located near Eastside High School.
The threat of demolition sparked a new movement to find ways and means of restoring and revitalizing this historic venue. A group of local citizens formed the non-profit Friends of Hinchliffe Stadium, announcing in September 2002, on the 70th anniversary of the stadium's dedication. A month later, Schools Superintendent Edwin Duroy announced a proposal to revitalize the facility into a stadium complex. The National Register of Historic Places designation by the State Office of Historic Preservation deemed Hinchliffe as only "locally significant", even though segregation and the Negro leagues were of national prominence. This cost the stadium much-needed funding from the Save America's Treasures grant funding program.
Stadium renovation
In 2009, efforts to renovate Hinchliffe began in earnest when Paterson mayor Andre Sayegh, then a member of the city council, visited Rickwood Field in Birmingham, Alabama, one of the few remaining Negro League stadiums still standing. Sayegh believed that Hinchliffe could be restored and vowed to himself that if he was elected mayor he would lead effort.[8][9]
Elected mayor in 2018, Sayegh secured the necessary political support and funding for the renovation and in 2021 ground was broken on a $94 million project to both restore and upgrade the stadium.[10] Funding for the project was dependent on the return of a professional baseball team, a condition that was met when the New Jersey Jackals announced they would leave Yogi Berra Stadium in 2023 and play at Hinchliffe.[8]
The stadium had a soft opening on May 17, 2023 that featured a high school softball game, as well as a baseball game between Paterson's Eastside High School and Don Bosco Prep.[11] Hinchliffe's grand opening occurred on May 19, 2023 and was attended by numerous celebrities, including Whoopi Goldberg and New Jersey Senator Cory Booker.[12] Goldberg told the media that preserving the stadium was essential to preserving American history, saying "Anything that's happened in this country should never be erased from books of any kind because we need to know, we need to remember. Little kids need to know, and they need to understand. There's not a color in this country that doesn't participate in our collective history."[12] Other notables in attendance included Executive Director of the MLB Players Association Tony Clark, former baseball team manager Joe Maddon, and MLB Network insider Tom Verducci.[13]
During the opening ceremonies, Sayegh said that he and former professional baseball player Harold Reynolds had spoken to MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred about hosting an annual major league baseball game at the stadium as a means of honoring the Negro Leagues.[8]
The Jackals played their first game at the stadium on May 21, 2023, against the Sussex County Miners. 400 people attended the game and saw the Jackals defeat the Miners 10-6. [14]
Critics of the stadium renovation included Jackal fans who questioned the decision moving the team to an area with significant crime and transportation issues. Jackals owner, Al Dorso, who agreed to lease the stadium from the city annually for 180 days, was also criticized by community leaders for placing profits over the needs of local residents.[8]
See also
Some Negro league ballparks that are still standing or rebuilt elsewhere include:
- Josh Gibson Field in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania is still standing and was renovated in 2008.
- McCormick Field in Asheville, North Carolina was originally built in 1924 then used in the 1940s by the Asheville Blues. It was rebuilt in 1992 is used as a ballpark by the Tourists.
- Rickwood Field in Birmingham, Alabama is still standing and is an active sports venue and museum.
- Olmsted Brothers Architects - Architects for Hinchcliffe Stadium
References
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ a b "New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places - Passaic County" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection - Historic Preservation Office. November 22, 2013. p. 6. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 16, 2014.
- ^ "National Register of Historic Places Listings April 2, 2004". Retrieved June 7, 2009.
- ^ "Ballparks of the Negro Leagues and Barnstorming Black Baseball Teams". Negro League Baseball Players Association. Archived from the original on June 10, 2009. Retrieved June 8, 2009.
- ^ Mallinconico, Joe (May 15, 2013). "After three-year battle, Paterson's Hinchliffe Stadium gets local historic status". Patterson Press. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
- ^ Salant, Jonathan D. (December 12, 2014). "Congress adds N.J. stadium where Negro League stars played to Paterson national park". NJ.com. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
- ^ a b "Racing: An Overview". Retrieved June 8, 2009.
- ^ a b c d Phillips, Gary. "Baseball returns to the hollowed grounds of a Negro League stadium". The New York Times. Retrieved May 21, 2023.
- ^ Reichard, Kevin (September 15, 2022). "Jackals announce move to Hinchliffe Stadium for 2023". Ballpark Digest. August Publications. Retrieved September 16, 2022.
- ^ Nightengale, Bob (April 13, 2021). "'A magical place': Hinchliffe Stadium, former Negro Leagues ballpark, being restored to its former glory". USA Today. Retrieved March 24, 2022.
- ^ Tartaglia, Greg (May 25, 2023). "The son of a former NY Mets infielder, Paterson baseball star looks to make his own mark". The Bergen Record. Woodland Park, New Jersey. Retrieved May 25, 2023.
- ^ a b Johnson, Anthony. "Historic Hinchliffe Stadium reopens after 2 year, $103M transformation". ABC7 News. Retrieved May 21, 2023.
- ^ Cichalski, Dan. "Nearly century-old 'sacred stadium' has historic reopening". MLB.com. Retrieved May 21, 2023.
- ^ Cichalski, Dan. "History -- and homers -- on display as Jackals debut at Hinchliffe Stadium". MLB.com. Retrieved May 22, 2023.
Further reading
- Whiteside, Kelly (October 11, 2019). "Can the Rebirth of a Negro League Stadium Revive a Distressed City?". The New York Times.
External links
- Friends of Hinchliffe Stadium
- Digital Ballparks - Hinchliffe Stadium
- Hinchliffe Stadium Documentary produced by The City Concealed
- "Hinchliffe Stadium: Celebrate African American History Month 2005--A National Register of Historic Places Feature". Retrieved June 7, 2009.
- Hinchliffe Stadium 2018 Images and history
- Sports venues in New Jersey
- Buildings and structures in Paterson, New Jersey
- Sports venues on the National Register of Historic Places in New Jersey
- National Historic Landmarks in New Jersey
- Negro league baseball venues
- Sports venues completed in 1932
- Soccer venues in New Jersey
- Defunct soccer venues in the United States
- Motorsport venues in New Jersey
- Buildings and structures in Passaic County, New Jersey
- Tourist attractions in Passaic County, New Jersey
- Sports in Paterson, New Jersey
- National Register of Historic Places in Passaic County, New Jersey
- New Jersey Register of Historic Places
- African-American history of New Jersey
- Negro league baseball venues still standing
- 1932 establishments in New Jersey
- Baseball venues in New Jersey
- High school baseball venues in the United States
- High school football venues in the United States
- American football venues in New Jersey