Charlie Weeghman's
New Venture
about the expansion
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
photo below - Mama Bear Virginia
via John Charleston
The Year
1924
Wrigley, Jr. buys the land under the field and
and radio announcements from the ballpark
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
The Tale of Ed Froelich
'Wrigleyville' by Peter Golenbock
This is part of his story:
These were the days when employees could become baseball players if the opportunity arose and baseball players would have part-time jobs off the fieldto make ends meet
Da' Bears
positioned as if in the Follies!! poster - Ebay
photos via Chicago Tribune
1920's? photo with 'Red' Grange in the background - Ebay
below photo - Calumet 412 Bears vs Giants
baseball coach George Gibson
and manager Bill Killefer
snipped - Living History of Illinois & Chicago-Facebook
photo below - Bleed Cubbie Blue
Below is a photo of the Chicago Bears playing the Chicago Cardinals six years before the Cardinals would call Wrigley Field their home field - from 1931 to 1939 season
photo - Chicago History Muesum
The Year
1926
Religion Comes to Town
program - Ebay
a reproduction - Ebay
The Year
1927
postcard - Ebayzoomed belowthe double deck occured in 1927-28 1927 photo - Ebay
with a wider view of the area below
photo - Chicago Tribune
1927 photo - Chicago History Museum
via Explore Chicago Collection
Wrigley and Mayor William 'Big Bill' Thompson, who by the way, was a resident of Lake View
Editorial
1927 The Chicagoan Magazine
photos - Chicago Tribune
a 1927 advertisement below - Chicago Public Library
The Year
1928
photos - Chicago Tribune
1928 photo - Chicago and the Midwest/Newberry Library
a 1928 scorecard above
and part of my collection
Bears complete program below - Ebay
via LakeView Historical-Facebook
A Bears Newsletter
much like the Cubs the Bears had their own
This newsletter was sold on Ebay by a British seller
for $1,750 in 2019
images - Ebay
The Year
1929
A World Series Year
The series was in the same month of the
Great Depression
That year marked the beginning of a
world-wide economic depression
text above - Wrigleyville by Peter Golanbock
photo - Ebay
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
an editorial
The Chicagoan
September 1929
Hack Wilson
image -Des Moines Register via Ebay
The Year 1929
in Pictures
via Chicago Tribune & Chicago Public Library
1929 photo - Chicago Public Library
via Explore Chicago Collection
photos - Chicago History Museum
photo - Ebay
the announcer Pat Pieper
1929 photo - Chicago Public Library
via Explore Chicago Collection
photo - Chicago Tribune
the old bleacher section
photo - Chicago Public Library
via Explore Chicago Collectionwith the former Lutheran Semminary buildings in the background
photo - Chicago Tribune
The Year
1930
ushers on parade
photo - Chicago History Museum
via Explore Chicago Collection
The Year
1931
1931 aerial view per Ebay
Three teams call it home
a 1931 article
a south-side team would use Wrigley Field for their home games 1931 through 1939
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
Ladies Day Only in 1931
an advertisement above - Chicago Public Library
image below - Steward Warner Collection
The Year
1932
Chicago Daily News Reports It
images from another article
An Article of Praise
National League Champions that year
by Earl Camembert & Michael Blane & me
Earl was able to figure out the year
Chicago Sunday Tribune via Ebay
images - David Zorning
via Forgotten Chicago Discussion Group on the reverse side below
another ticket - Ebay
another view of it - Ebay
both photos - EbayA Chicago Cardinals/Bears
image - Ebay
images - Ebay
a reproduction - Ebay
Some photos
from the 1930's
photo - via Chicago Tribune
postcard - Ebay
photo - 'Ballpark of Baseball' Bob Hendricks via Vanished Chicago FaceBook George Brace photographer
1930's photo - Ebay
photos - via Chicago Tribune
photo - part of my personal collection
photos via Chicago Tribune
Once
a Boxing Venue
That Coal Yard
across the Street
pre 1909 address
2020 N Clark = 3637 N Clark Street
an interesting location for coal yard silo's
but it did predate the ballpark
The RR tracks predated the ballpark by 60 years. The now defunct & removed that RR was once used used for freight and called the 'Evanston branch' of the
Chicago, Milwaukee, & St. Paul Railroad
photo via Bleed Cubbie Blue
Maps of the Area
a 1894 Sanborn Fire Map
The Peter Connors Coal Yard
zoomed from above
The Collin & Wiese Company Coal Yard
by 1923
a more zoomed view below
photo below - Hank's Trunk Farm
The Coal Yard
Exists the Landscape by 1961
the second owner of the baseball park
1932-1977
photo - Alchetron
text - Chicago Cubs by Warren Brown
but after a while
He like 'things not people'
Wrigleyville by Peter Golenbock
big NO on night games
photo - Sport Seer
PK Wrigley did entertained lights in the park in late 1941 spending $185,000 on a light system including 165 tons of steel but the WWII was declared in December of that year. PK donated the steel and other materials to the government according Wrigley Field: Year by Year by Sam Pathy.
a Cubs program for that year
images - Ebay
The Year
1933
photo & text - Glenn Miller
Bears vs Cardinals
1933 home game
for both teams
The Year
1934
photo - John Quin via Forgotten Chicago-Facebook
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
Game 3 of the 1935 World Series below
A Post Game Scene
part of my collection
A Color Conversion Photo
watching the game from Sheffield Avenue in 1934
Phil Cavarretta
1934-1953
He played for the Cubs continuously
for almost 20 years
photo - Brace Collection via Ebay
photo - Ebay
The Pennants
of the 1930's
from my personal collection
The Year
1935
converted color print - Chicago History/Facebook
National League Champions that year
photo is part of my collection
photo - Chicago Railroad Historians
with a zoomed view some folks
overlooking the crowds below
photo - part of my personal collection
A Cubs program book
from Ebay
another scorecard - Ebay
Cardinals vs
Detroit in 1935
football
negatives - Chicago History Museum
Chicago Bears vs Chicago Cardinals in December
... was the last year for the original scoreboard
photo - Wrigley Field: Year by Year by Sam Pathy
1936 photo below via Chicago Tribune
Western Union Ticket Buys ...
photo - Ebayphoto below
via Ball Park of Baseball
Chicago Bears
vs the Chicago Cardinals
both home teams at Wrigley Field from 1931-39
*the front cover advertised next weeks game*
images - Ebay
The Year
1937
a year of renovations
which included the bleachers
but there other prior renovations ...
It Began in July
photo above - Baseball Yesterday and Today
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
More Photos
of the Construction
photo - via Skcelton
photos via Wrigley Report-Facebook
photo via Ball Park of Baseball
John J Kulidas via Chicagoland Before We Were Born/Facebook
photo via Ball Park of Baseball
as you recall the Chicago Cardinals had their home games at Wrigley Field during the 1930's
Packers vs Bears
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
The Year
1938
1938 press photo
zoomed from above Charles Weeghman
is Dead
National League Champions that year
this photo is part of my collection
image - Ebay
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
zoomed in sections from above
press photo - my personal collection
images - part of my collection
Baseball's New Names by Art Krenz
... and the last year for the Chicago Cardinals
The Year
1940
Active Ancients by Sords via Ebay
The Cubs Managers to this Date
image - Chicago Sunday Times via Ebay
Cardinals no longer
at Wrigley Field
the team for 1940
part of my personal collection
The War Years:
Dec. 1941 - Aug. 1945
photos via 'Chicago World War II'
by Images of America
photo below - Ebay
Cub News
in May 1941
newsletter is part of my collection
image - Philip Roeda via Original Chicago-Facebook
'Le Roy Paige first played for the semi-professional
Mobile Tigers from 1924 to 1926. He began his professional baseball career in
1926 with the Chattanooga Black Lookouts of the "Negro" Southern League and
became one of the most famous and successful players from the Negro leagues.
While his outstanding control as a pitcher first got him noticed, it was his
infectious, cocky, with a enthusiastic personality and his love for the game that made
him a star.' - Wikipedia
article & illustration by Jack Sords via Ebay
1941 team photo - Ebay
a baseball player
photo - City at War: Chicago
'Real Cubs fans never called him 'Big Bill'. To us, he was Big
Bill, or Nick. The Swish nickname originated in Brooklyn. The big left handed
hitter always leveled his bat across the plate several times when stepping in
to face an opposing pitcher. Dodger fans would yell, "Swish, swish,
swish," in unison with his practice swings. The name caught on on the east
coast, but was soundly rejected in Chicago. Because news is made in New York,
the Swish designation has survived and Big Bill has been all but forgotten. But
you won't see Swish used here. Nicholson was the archetypical home run hitter of the
1940's. His numbers don't look impressive today, but in that low octane era, 20
homers was a big deal. He led the Cubs in home runs eight seasons in a row, a
mark that was tied by Ernie Banks and finally broken by Sammy Sosa. From 1940
through 1944, he never finished lower than fourth in the National League in
home runs. Although he topped 30 only once, he led the league in homers and
RBI's in back to back seasons, 1943 and 1944.' - text from the film a football player
The Year
1942
and the history of lights on the field
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
photo below - Ebay
The Year
1943 photo - Ebayphoto via Chuck Humberson Bronko Nagurski 1943
War Happenings
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
The Year
1944
Chicago Cubs News
image - Ebay
1944 photo - Ebay
ski jumping in 1944
photos - Calumet 412
Slides of the Bears at play in 1944 from Ebay
The Year
1945
the Year of that Damn Goat
and the last year of World War II
National League Champions that year
photo is part of my collection
photo - Cera Chicago
photo - Calumet 412
photo via Chicago Tribune
article & photo via The Seattle Times
The Cubs lost to series in game 7
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
photo & text below - Calumet 412
Read an accounting of the last game
by the Associated Press
The Blame Game Wrigleyville by Peter Golanbock
pin - from my personal collection
Bears vs Packers 1945 program booklet
images - Ebay
split pages
Former Bears watching
a Bears Game at Wrigley
The Year 1946
Move to Rivervierw Park??
heading to the game via El
press photo - part of my personal collection
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
The Year
1947
part of my personal collection
The Year
1948
painting by Norman Rockwell
images via Calumet 412
images - part of my collection
The Year
1949
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
A Pocket Schedule
photos - Ebay
below photo - part of my personal collection
below 1940's photo - Art Institute of Chicago
a reproduction - Ebay
The Year
1950
1950 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map 1951
a rodeo comes to town
aerial photo view - Chicago History Museum
photo via Wrigley Report-Facebook photo - Trolley Dodger
slides of the event is part of my personal collection
program - part of my personal collection
photo below via Chicago Tribune
new manager 1954-1956 and field player 1932-1947
image by City-Autograph
The Year
1952
First increase of box seats since 1919
The Year 1953
photos - part of my personal collectionEnter Ernie Banks
1956 postcard - seller 'greg morris cards' via Ebay
Wrigleyville by Peter Gozenbock
photo below - Brace Collection via Ebay
photo below via Chicago Reader
a 1970 photo - my personal collection
below photo of Ernie Banks with Pearl Jam in 2016
and part of my personal collection
Chicago Tribute video honoring him on Opening Night 2015
The Year
1954
March 29, 1954 The Cubs fire skipper Phil Cavarretta
after he tells reporters the team had little chance to finish in the first
division. The 36-year-old player-manager, who compiled a 169-213 (.442) record
during his three years at the helm, is the first person to lose a managerial
position during spring training. The dismissal was all the more bitter for him
since it came after an exhibition game in Dallas, where at the time he made his
home and owned a children’s amusement park. - Marty Swartz, Living History
of Chicago & Illinois-Facebook
playing the St Louis Cardinals
RBK Kodachrome 3D stereo photo slide via Ebay
The Year
1955
press photo - part of my personal collection
press photo - part of my personal collection
the year of my birth - images from Ebay
Cleaning up after a Bears Game
in December of that year
part of my personal collection
selected pages
images - my personal collection
The Year 1956
a experiment that failed
before the season was over
the rendering above photo - Calumet 412
photo above - EbayThe Year 1957
Ground-Keeper Bobby Dorr Dies
A part of Bobby Dorr story was saved when the Ricketts Family decided to renovate his home in 2017
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
A 'Green Hornet' Passes By
photos below from the Trolleydodger
heading south on Clark toward Seminary
below the #22 heading north passed Addison Street
images - part of my collection
Bears Team photo - Ebay
1958
photo - part of my personal collection
Lights at Wrigley Mentioned
Boxing Continues at Wrigley
image - Ebay
press photo - part of my personal collection below
southwest corner of Sheffield/Addison - late 1950's
The Year
1960
scorecard - part of my collection
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
No Lights Yet!
photo - Ebay
The Year
1961
1961 photo - Forgotten Chicago Discussion Group
While the coal yard is gone
the RR tracks remain
photo - Chicago History Museum
photo below - Manny Manotas Velez
via Original Chicago-Facebook
photo below via Bleed Cubbie Blue
photo above - Lance Grey
photos of the Bears below - Ebay
The Year
1962
photography by Algimantas Kezys via Calumet 412
view of Clark & Addison
Kodachrome photo - Vintage Everyday
press photo - part of my personal collection
When rooftoppers were only local residents
part of my personal collection
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
The Lights are Mentioned Again
images - part of my collection
a Chicago Tribune Advertisement
football practice slides - Ebay
football photo below - Ebay
The Year
1963
photo above - Geoff Schultz
via History of Chicago & Illinois-Facebook
Marty Swartz, via Living History of Chicago and Illinois-Facebook, mentioned that the "Chicago Bears relied on their defense to defeat the New York Giants 14-10 and win the national football championship. The heart of the 1963 Bears' league-leading defense - and of the entire team - was its linebackers
clearing the field of tons of snow
photo - part of my personal collection
photos via Marty Swartz
photo - part of my personal collection
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
pennant - part of my personal collection 1964
photo via Chicago Tribune
Halas yes, Wrigley no
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
press photo - my personal collection
A Food Hangout for 20 Odd Years
Franksville Restaurant
1110 W Addison/on Sheffield
1964-1980
photo & text - Ebay
1966 Chicago Tribune ad
zoomed address below
Enter Leo Durocher
one of the controversial managers
1966 photos -Library of Congress
1966 photo - part of my personal collection
He managed the Cubs from 1966-1972
Wrigleyville by Peter Golenbrock
photo below - Ebay
the Bears that year
The Year
1965
photo - Calumet 412
The Year
1966
photo above - Marty Swartz via
Living History of Illinois & Chicago-Facebook
'The Wrigley Duo' by Algimantas Kezys' 1966, Calumet 412
The Year
1967
An All in One Field
photos - StadiumPage.com
Pocket Schedule
photos - Ebay
waiting for tickets at 3am
part of my personal collection
part of my personal collection
the Bears that year
photo - Ebay
The Year
1968
An Aerial View
photos - Chicago History Museum
with Clark to the right, the elevated to the leftmove past the field toward Clark Street with view east toward Clark below The Year
1969
photos - Chicago History Museum
view #1
view #2
view #3
view #4
view #5
view #7
3 photos - Chicago History Museum'Between 1967 and 1972 one of the best teams ever
assembled played in the friendly confines of Chicago’s Wrigley Field. The Cubs
during those years were perennial favorites to win at least the National League
championship. Anchored by three Hall of Fame players—Ernie Banks, Billy
Williams, and Ferguson Jenkins—and a Hall of Fame manager, Leo Durocher, they
should have dominated the league. A late arrival to the Hall of Fame, Ron
Santo, also played for them. But they never even made the playoffs.' - Roger Lanunis's
image - plaquelady via Ebay
Wrigleyville by Peter Golonbock
Ron Santo catching a foul ball - Chicago History Museum
and those fans
photos - Ebayphoto - Chicago History Museum
The Year
1970
1970 photo - Chicago History-Facebook
new fencing
photo via Chicago Tribune
booklet - part of my personal collection
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
A Rehab Year
5 photos - Chicago History Museum
press photo - part of my personal collection
photo - part of my personal collection
scorecard - part of my collection
"The Chicago Bears played their final game at Wrigley
Field in 1970, bringing to an end their nearly 50-year relationship with the
stadium. The Bears began playing at Wrigley back in 1921 when the team was
still the Chicago Staleys and the field was called Cubs Park. The growing
popularity of the team and the sport itself led to consistent overcrowding at
the affectionately dubbed “friendly confines.” Portable bleachers and folding
chairs were crammed into every available space to accommodate the mass of
spectators. But the close proximity of players and fans at Wrigley Field
fostered a unique level of connection between the two, and the Bears enjoyed
many successes as a result. In fact, they won a total of eight championships
while at Wrigley. However, in 1971, amid growing safety concerns, the addition
of television cameras, and the NFL’s desire to accommodate 60,000 fans, the
Bears finally uprooted and moved to their current home at Soldier Field, where
they brought home the championship in 1986. The posted photo is Gale Sayers
greeted by fans near the ivy." - Marty Swartz via Living History of Illinois & Chicago
‘There was a tee-pee outside of Wrigley Field in the ‘70's,
and it had nothing to do with Cleveland or Atlanta baseball teams. It was put
there by a group of Native Americans protesting poor social services and
housing conditions for Native Americans relocated to Chicago. But it wasn’t at
Clark and Addison – it was on the other side of Wrigley Field at Seminary and
Waveland. The protest began in May 1970 when a Menominee woman
named Carol Warrington and her six children were evicted from their apartment
on North Seminary for refusing to pay rent. [Ms.] Warrington was withholding rent to
pressure the landlord into improving the building’s living conditions.' according to the article written by WTTW corespondent Erica Gunderson with full article above.
And Then One Year Later ...
An Agreement by August
The Year
1971
images - part of my collection
Wrigley Field: Year by Year photos below - Pro Football at Wrigley Field
by Beth Gorr/photos by Ron Nelson
(this book is part of my personal collection)
The Year
1973
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
I ain't lookin' it up and prefer that it always be a
mystery company or brand or whatever it was. When I was little my Dad was in the Air Force, and he
always insisted that we not live on the air bases but rather, we were
constantly buying houses and selling houses.We were stationed in Hawaii for 3 glorious years, and
when we moved sold our house (which was on a lake and a short drive to the
beach) for... $16,000.Long time ago, but...I equate the value of that real estate with the location
of the Torco sign. Wouldn't you love to know what Mr. Torco paid to have his
sign up for all those years? Across the street but basically the same place that
Anheuser Busch is now actively helping Tom Ricketts pay for Yu Darvish or
Anthony Rizzo.' - by Cubby Blue
The List of Other Advertisers
1914-2012
text below - Wrigley Field: Year by Year by Sam Pathy
The RR Tracks
along Seminary Avenue
photo - EbayThe Evanston Branch of the Chicago, Milwuakee, St. Paul RR once sliced through Lake View next to the ballpark. Below is a engine parked along the now decomissioned/removed Seminary Avenue segment east of Clark & north of Addison. More on this RR in my other posts about transportation.
images - Flickrphoto - part of my collection
The Year
part of my personal collection
photo - part of my collection
images - part of my collection
The Year 1975
photo - Bob Rehak Photography
photo above via Chicago Tribune
photo below - Calumet 412
images - part of my collection
1977
PK Wrigley Dies
text - Wrigley Field: Year by Year by Sam Pathymid 1970's photo below - Ebay
Pitching Pennies on Sheffield in 1977
part of my collection
the third owner 1977-1999
There is very little about him online other then what appears on Wikipedia. I am assuming his interest was more about his grandfathers company then Chicago Cubs and Wrigley Field.
Inside the Scoreboard
in 1977
photos - Ebay
The Year
1978
photo - part of my personal collection
trying to catch the ball in the fencing along with the garbage
photo below - Calumet 412
The Year
1979
scenes - William Barnes via Picture of Chicago-Facebook Wrigley Field: Year by Year
from a book called Blizzard '79
this snowstorm last two days - January 13-14th
Dave
Kingman hit 3 home runs and the Cubs scored a total of 22 runs but lost to the Phillies
23-22
video from Greg Siewert via Original Chicago-Facebook
photo - part of my personal collection
The Year
1980
A smiling George Halas, 85, throws out the ceremonial pitch at the Cubs’ home opener in 1980
photo - Marty Swartz, Living History of Illinois & Chicago
scorecard from my collection
A desenter ...
' a fashion shot
a Danish photographer, Dirk Bakker,
photo - Art Institute of Chicago
The Year
1981
a new owner
According to the New York Times, ‘The Chicago Cubs, one
of major league baseball's least successful franchises on the field in recent
years, were sold yesterday for $20.5 million by William Wrigley to the Tribune
Company, parent of The Chicago Tribune and The Daily News in New York. In
announcing an agreement for the transfer of his 81 percent ownership and all
remaining 1,900 shares in baseball's only publicly owned corporation, Mr.
Wrigley, a Chicago chewing gum manufacturer, ended a family association with
the National League team that began when his grandfather became a minority shareholder
in 1916. That family tie, which was strengthened when the grandfather acquired
a majority interest in 1921, was the oldest in major league baseball.’
photos - Man on Five
The Chicago Sting (1974-1988)
would occasionally play at Wrigley Field
text - Wrigley Field: Year by Year by Sam Pathy
photo - part of my personal collection
photo - part of my collectionbelow personal photo by Mike Tuggle
Photographer Jim Dow View
image - Art Institute of Chicago
The Year
1982
opposition to night games intensifies
photo - Mears Auction
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
called 'The Cubs Light Up' via GE Reports
*forgotten sources*
photo below - Jody Avirgan via Twitter
The C.U.B.S.
backed by Lake View Citizen's Council
photo - part of my collectionJeff MacNelly Chicago Tribune 1982
via Ebay
The Year
1983
part of my collection
bleacher fans
and a record number at Wrigley
photo below - Calumet 412
The Year
1984
Ron Kolman - Frogotten Chicago Discussion Group
photo - part of my personal collection
artwork 1984
via Ebay
(video)
A Winter Call to Arms
A Cold Day View
photos - Chicago History Museum
The First
Musical Concert
images - Ebay
The Year
1985
Jeff MacNelly Chicago Tribune 1985
via Ebay
photo - part of my personal collection
artwork 1985
via Ebay
The Northside vs Southside:
a 1985 article
The Year 1986
photo - part of my personal collection
The Year 1987
William Louis Veeck Sr.—not to be confused with his
legendary, franchise-owning, promotional stuntman of a son (think exploding
scoreboards and Disco Demolition)—was a by-the-book but out-of-the-box leader
who rewarded loyalty and regularly took the long view. A baseball fan from a
young age, Veeck was born in Indiana in 1877 and had his roots in journalism,
not management. His first job was selling newspapers, and as a teenager he
worked as a printer’s apprentice. Veeck never attended college and eventually
landed a job in the cutthroat world of Chicago newspapers. He bounced around
among publications until gaining purchase at the Chicago Evening American,
first reporting on the city desk and later on sports, where his lifelong love
of baseball paid off. He wrote under the pen name “Bill Bailey,” and there was
a quality to his work that went beyond simply posting gameday recaps and
churning out stats. He demonstrated a nuanced understanding of the game that
caught the baseball world’s attention—so much so that when the Cubs began
considering a new management direction, Veeck’s name was on the short list. - Cubs Vine Line Blog
Mayor Harold Washington
Steps In on the Light Issue
text below via Wrigleyville by Peter Golenbock
shirt - Ebay
the apparent mood of the time ...
photo - Art Institute of Chicago
Thomas Frederick Arndt photographer
The Year 1988
the year of the lights
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
image - Ebay
photo via Chicago Tribune
the first night game was not completed due to rain
page 2
The Installation
images below via Chicago National League Ball Park, Inc.
a booklet called 'Wrigley Field'
This booklet is part of my personal collection
The Under the Lights Benefit
before the game
3 photos - Chicago History Museum
The original document was 34 pages
photo below - Ebay
photo below - Wrigleyville Sports
91 year old Harry Grossman turns on the lights
also that year
with a video from YouTube
photo - part of my personal collection
The Year 1989
photo via Chicago Tribune
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
selling dirt from the field that year
postcard - Ebay
below photos - part of my personal collection
The Year 1990
an artist view in July 1990 via Ebay
photo - part of my personal collection
The Year
1991
postcard - Ebay postmarked in 1991
The Year 1992
part of my collection
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
The Line Up for the Year
baseball cards - Ebay
A Movie that Highlighted
Wrigley Field and an earlier era
This DVD is part of my personal collection
scorecard from my collection
1992
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
there is always the bars in Wrigleyville
The Year
1993
photo above - part of my personal collection
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
A Day
at the Park
photos - Chicago History Museum
The Year
1994
no more smoking
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
3 photos - Chicago History Museum in the Addison Street Station
The Year
1996
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
1954 photo below - Cut4 via Twitter
1998
photo via Albuquerque Journal
"Someday the Chicago Cubs are going
to be in the
World Series"
text via Wrigleyville by Peter Golenbock
image above - Princeton Club of Chicago
photo below via ABC News
The Year
1999
2001
photo via Wrigley Report-Facebook
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
What Happened ...
It is so ready for renovations!
versus
photos - The Urinals of Wrigley Field
2000 article about expansion
of the bleachers
landmark status maybe??
published by a 2001 Preservation Magazine
(click on images to enlarge)
page 1
page 2
The Year
2002
More Bleachers Planned
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
The Year 2005
photo via Chicago Cubs Yesterday and Today
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
The Year
2006
photo via Chicago Cubs Yesterday and TodayWrigley Field: Year by Year
The Year
Sam Zell
Sam Zell bought the Chicago Tribune hence the Chicago Cubs and Wrigley Field in 2007. He tried to sell off the pieces of it to the highest bidder instead of selling both the Cubs and the baseball field as a package deal.
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
The Year
2009
Cubs & Wrigley Field Bought Out
the new owners - The Ricketts Family
photo via The New York Times
Theo Epstein-president with Chairman Tom Ricketts
photo via Zimbio
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
caption/photo - Greg Siewert via Original Chicago-Facebook
"Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane
lead the charge for the
Blackhawks"
The Roof Advertising
3701 N Kenmore Avenue
2009 photo - Google Maps Wrigley Field: Year by Year
The Year
2010
photo via Chicago Magazine
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
images below - part of my collection
Buying/Investing
up the Rooftops Begin
The Year
2012
'"There is no doubt in my mind that if the Cubs were
willing to leave Wrigley Field and build a state-of-the-art stadium with all of
the amenities that fans have come to expect these days, they would be able to
make a deal in the range of $20-25 million per year," he said. "However,
if I was running a major corporation and I was asked to buy the naming rights
to a renovated Wrigley, I would not touch that deal because of the potential
for negative backlash from the Cubs' huge fan base who have known that ballpark
as Wrigley Field Field for nearly 100 years.' - per article
the independent roof-top owners & their patronsWrigley Field: Year by Year
2013 photos via Chicago Tribune
The Year
2013
Major Renovation Announced
Wrigley Field: Year by Year
Bob Russel took his family to the watch the Cubs play the Reds at Wrigley Field in August of 2013 a year before the renovations. This is his story through the eye of a camera. The Year
2014
The Renovation Years Begin
'The restoration of historic Wrigley Field is officially
underway. On Saturday, Oct. 11, the Chicago Cubs and the Ricketts family hosted
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, Major League Baseball Commissioner Allan H. (Bud)
Selig, former Cubs pitchers Milt Pappas and Kerry Wood, city and state
officials, community and corporate partners, and representatives from the
project team at the groundbreaking ceremony for Wrigley Field’s long-awaited
expansion and restoration, now titled The 1060 Project.
The primary focus of the project’s first phase, to be
completed this offseason, is infrastructure work. The ballpark’s structural
steel and foundation will be strengthened, and much of the concrete in the
Budweiser Bleachers will be replaced. More than 50 million pounds of new
concrete will be poured at the Friendly Confines during the course of the
restoration.' - Cubs Vine Blog
A New Mascot indroduced called Clark
(video) Post Notes:
The Hotdog Science
The Scoreboard:
its' many faces
the first one via Bleed Cubbie Blue
the second one under construction via Ballparks of Baseball
the second one completed in 1938 via Hoy of Los Angles
photo via via Ballparks of Baseball
1978 photo via CBS Chicago
post 2014 photos via MLB/Cut4
(the second one)
2017 photos - Omaha Public Radio
2014 photo below - 'Man of Five'
The Center of Baseball
the Universe
by Duna Photography in 2012
Wrigley Field:
photo - Redfin
"In the world of real estate, location means everything. But does a property around the corner from Wrigley Field command $9.8 million? The sellers of 3710 N Kenmore Ave. realize that there is much more to the property than the two-story frame house that sits on it. The property has some potential to earn a few bucks and the listing agent is suggesting that investors consider erecting rooftop advertising (specifically a digital billboard) on the site. The Ricketts family have famously scooped up several of the surrounding rooftop properties, but this property is billing itself as one of the few that is not under the control of the Cubs organization. Broker Amy Duong of Jameson Sotheby's Intl Realty tells us that the seller has been paying attention to sales in the neighborhood, notably the McDonald's parking lot that the Ricketts family paid $20 million for. Duong also tells us that there's no mistake in the price in the listing and the seller is fine with sitting on the house until a reasonable offer comes forth." - Curbed Chicago
Historical Cub Logos
via Mark McHugh
and Joa was its name
List of
Owners, Presidents, and Managers
The Cubs
According to Shoe
published in 1988
and part of my collection
before 1914
located along the existing lakefront along Michigan Avenue
... and a 1877 page from Harpers Weekly - Ebay
The 1907-08
World Series Trio
reprints and part of my personal collection
The Chicago Bears
at Wrigley
When the Chicago Cardinals
played at Wrigley Field
The 1937
Renovations
photos - Ebay
College Football at Wrigley Field
photo - Wikipedia
Once the park movement in Chicago was established in the late 19th century the movement apparently split into two according to a site called The Digital Library of Illinois Research Journal. "Two distinct movements, out of the ordinary, are
noticeable this year [1904], the first being the number of new parks which are being
fenced in at the desirable locations all over Chicago, nearly all of which are
proving money makers right from the start, while the second movement is the
rapid rise of many of the smaller baseball clubs into the semi-professional ranks.
The first of these movements, that of the building of baseball parks, is
directly traceable to the enormous success scored by West End Park, the grounds
at Forty-eighth Avenue and West Madison Street, where the crowds went in droves
almost on the opening day and have continued ever since.
When Gunther Park [now Chase Park] was
opened almost at the end of last year, at the corners of Ashland, Leland
Avenues and North Clark Street, it capped the success of the West End Athletic
Association, and the rival managers of the grounds have been in friendly
argument ever since as to which is drawing the most people."
other baseball parks at that time
West Side Ball-Park
(enlargement)
Located at Polk, Lincoln, Wood and Taylor streets 1904 photos below - Library of Congress
The Torco
Sign
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1987
19881990
1993
and in 2000
photo below - Mark Czerniec
More about Signs
The Chicago
Bears
Some Reference Books
for this Post
all books are part of my collection
To Find Countless Photos
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