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Hilltop Park

Hilltop Park
Hilltop Park
Hilltop Park
Former names American League Park (official)
Location Broadway between 165th and 168th St
New York City
Coordinates 40°50′26″N 73°56′32″W / 40.84056°N 73.94222°W / 40.84056; -73.94222Coordinates: 40°50′26″N 73°56′32″W / 40.84056°N 73.94222°W / 40.84056; -73.94222
Owner Frank J. Farrell
Capacity 16,000 seated with 10,000 standing
Field size Left Field – 365 ft (111 m)
Left-Center – 378 ft (115 m)
Center Field – 420 ft (128 m)
Right-Center – 424 ft (129 m)
Right Field – 385 ft (117 m)
Backstop – 91 ft (27 m)
Surface Grass
Construction
Opened April 30, 1903
Closed October 5, 1912
Demolished 1914
Construction cost US$200,000 *
* mostly from rock blasting and excavations
($5.33 million in 2017 dollars)
Tenants
New York Highlanders (MLB) (1903–1912)
New York Giants (MLB) (1911)

Hilltop Park was the nickname of a baseball park that stood in the Washington Heights neighborhood of New York City. It was the home of the New York Yankees Major League Baseball club from 1903 to 1912, when they were known as the "Highlanders". It was also the temporary home of the New York Giants during a two-month period in 1911 while the Polo Grounds was being rebuilt after a fire.

The ballpark's formal name (as painted on its exterior walls) was American League Park. Because the park was located on top of a ridge of Manhattan Island, it came to be known as Hilltop Park, and its team was most often called the New York Highlanders (as well as the Americans and the Yankees). This "Highland" connection contrasted with their intra-city rivals, the Giants, whose Polo Grounds was just a few blocks away, in the bottomland under Coogan's Bluff.

Hilltop Park sat on the block bounded by Broadway, 165th Street, Fort Washington Avenue, and 168th Street. The structure consisted of a covered grandstand stretching from first base to third base and uncovered bleacher sections down the right and left field lines. The bleachers were covered in 1911, and additional bleachers were built in 1912 in center field. Originally built in just six weeks, the park sat 16,000, with standing room for an additional 10,000 or so.

The field was initially huge by modern standards — 365 ft (111 m) to left field, 542 ft (165 m) to center field and 400 ft (120 m) to right field. An inner fence was soon constructed to create more realistic action. Both the park and the nickname "Highlanders" were abandoned when the American Leaguers left, at the beginning of the 1913 season, to rent the Polo Grounds from the Giants. The Polo Grounds had a far larger seating capacity, and by that time was made of concrete due to the 1911 fire. Hilltop Park was demolished in 1914.

American League baseball came to New York City in 1903 when gambler Frank J. Farrell and former New York City Police Chief William S. Devery, bought the Baltimore Orioles franchise for $18,000. They established the team at Hilltop Park, a hastily constructed wooden park seating about 16,000 fans, on the west side of Broadway between 165th and 168th streets. Opening Day came on April 30, 1903, when the New York Highlanders played the Washington Senators.


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