Someone lucky enough to live on Milwaukee’s near north side between 1888 and 1952 could experience the world without ever leaving the neighborhood. Nestled between North Seventh and Eighth Streets and West Chambers and Burleigh, Borchert Field was Milwaukee’s major sports venue for 64 years. In this rickety wooden stadium (originally called Athletic Park), Wisconsin residents had a close-up view of sports history in the making, along with rodeos, thrill shows, and even multiple eruptions of Mount Vesuvius. In Borchert Field, baseball historian Bob Buege introduces the famous and fascinating athletes who dazzled audiences in Milwaukee’s venerable ballpark. All the legendary baseball figures—the Bambino, Satchel Paige, Ty Cobb, Joltin’ Joe, Jackie Robinson, the Say Hey Kid—played there. Olympic heroes Jim Thorpe, Babe Didrikson, and Jesse Owens displayed their amazing talents in Borchert. Knute Rockne’s Fighting Irish competed there, and Curly Lambeau’s Green Bay Packers took the field 10 times. Buege tells stories of other monumental moments at Borchert as well, including a presidential visit, women ballplayers, the arrival of television broadcasting, the 1922 national balloon race, and an appearance by scat-singing bandleader Cab Calloway. Borchert Field is long gone, but every page of this book takes readers back to the sights, sounds, and spectacle of its heyday.
Caldwell was in his 18th year of pro ball as he subdued the St. Paul Saints , 5-2 , with his sidearm curves.83 This was better than what acting mayor John L. Bohn did in dropping the first ball 10 feet short on that Wednesday , April ...
Ted Gibson offered photos and information regarding his grandfather, Claude Elliott. Judith Gloyer, Marion Kusnick, Sue Mobley and Virginia Schwartz of the Milwaukee Public Library acted as liaisons in our effort to locate historical ...
THE LAST OPENING DAY AT BORCHERT FIELD . Milwaukee baseball fans didn't realize it at the time , but this home opener against the Minneapolis Millers would be their last at the rickety wooden structure at 8th and Chambers Streets ...
Covington now had 11 home runs, most ofwhich came after he became the everyday left fielder in June. Covington had quickly become an important part ofthe Braves lineup, giving them a complementary left-handed power bat behind Eddie ...
... 206, 250, 271–272 Van Brunt, W.T. 263 Vance, David 70 Van der Beck, George 207, 209, 213, 215, 217, 220, 223–224, ... 120, 129, 135–136, 160–162 Weldenferrie, C.A. 185 Welles, E. Clinton 15, 17, 23 Wells, Frank 152–154, 155 Werden, ...
Killilea decided to recognize Otto Borchert's imprint on Milwaukee baseball by changing the name of Athletic Park to Borchert Field (nicknamed “Borchert's Orchard”). The field had a unique charm that stemmed from an odd shape, ...
The foul poles in left and right fields were a tempting 267 feet from home plate, and there was no individual seating, ... Built in 1888 as Athletic Park, Borchert Field was a fairly typical nineteenth-century ball diamond.
Robinson's name is inlaid in the marble and granite floor, and a Citi Field's first base entrance is named after Gil Hodges, the beloved Dodgers first baseman. The Ebbets-esque home plate giant sculpture of his number, 42, serves as the ...
In 1951 I went down to Borchert Field, where the Milwaukee Brewers played. And I'm sitting outside the ballpark at Borchert Field one afternoon about three-thirty, just sitting against the boards, and this gentleman came by and I knew ...
Then, in February of 1914, Jack Dunn, owner of the minor league Baltimore Orioles, signed Ruth to a contract. Because he was only nineteen, Dunn had ... When he arrived at spring training, his veteran teammates called him Dunn's “Baby.