Bleecker Stadium

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Former namesBleecker Reservoir
Location721 Clinton Avenue
Albany, New York 12206
Coordinates42°40′08.37″N 73°46′31.92″W / 42.6689917°N 73.7755333°W / 42.6689917; -73.7755333
OwnerCity of Albany
Bleecker Stadium
The Bleecker Stadium grounds
Bleecker Stadium is located in New York
Bleecker Stadium
Bleecker Stadium
Location in New York
Bleecker Stadium is located in the United States
Bleecker Stadium
Bleecker Stadium
Location in United States
Former namesBleecker Reservoir
Location721 Clinton Avenue
Albany, New York 12206
Coordinates42°40′08.37″N 73°46′31.92″W / 42.6689917°N 73.7755333°W / 42.6689917; -73.7755333
OwnerCity of Albany
Capacity7,000 for football and soccer; 2,000 for baseball
Field size
Bleecker Stadium and Swinburne Park
NRHP reference No.100000889
Added to NRHPFebruary 20, 2018
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Opened1934
Tenants
Albany Twilight League (1934–)
Albany Metro Mallers (NEFL) (1974–2011)
New York Eagles (ASL) (1979, 1981)
Albany A's (EL) (1982)
Albany Capitals (ASL/APSL) (1988–1991)
Albany Dutchmen (NYCBL) (2009–2010)

Bleecker Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium in Albany, New York.[1] The stadium was once a reservoir for the Albany public water system. Today it has a baseball diamond, football/soccer field, and a softball field used by area high schools, colleges, and youth and adult leagues.[1] Bleecker Stadium hosts several post-season games and series, including the Capital District Pop Warner Super Bowls.[2] The stadium is on Clinton Avenue which is to the south, Ontario Street is to the east, and Second Street is to the north. Swinburne Park borders Bleecker to the west.

In 2018 the stadium and neighboring Swinburne Park were added to the National Register of Historic Places.[3]

Bleecker Reservoir is shown in this crop from an 1895 map of Albany.

Bleecker Stadium was built as a Federal public works project;[4] originally the stadium was the Bleecker Reservoir, which was constructed in 1850.[5] As Governor of New York, Franklin D. Roosevelt established a jobs relief program that made the conversion of the reservoir, which had become obsolete, possible; and this led to the creation of between 500 and 1,000 jobs. The stadium opened on Thanksgiving Day 1934. The clubhouse was built in 1940 under the Works Progress Administration, also set up by Roosevelt, who by then was President of the United States. Covering 9.5 acres (3.8 ha), the stadium was the ninth largest in the entire United States and the second largest on the East Coast behind Philadelphia. It was named for Albany businessman James Edward Bleecker, a member of an old Albany family which produced several mayors and other officials.[6]

Serial killer Lemuel Smith was brought to Bleecker Stadium in 1977 for an unusual police line-up. Smith and several others were placed behind large plywood sheets scattered around one end of the stadium and a police canine named Crow at the other end sniffed at a priest vestment that Smith had used to wipe himself when defecating after a double-homicide. Crow ran straight across Bleecker Stadium to Smith.[7]

In 1981, the stadium was the site of a rugby match between a regional team of Americans against the South African national rugby team, called the Springboks. Governor Hugh Carey tried to block the game from being played as protest against the South African policy of apartheid, and he even brought the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court. Mayor Erastus Corning 2nd and the Albany Times Union both supported the game being played.[8]

Steve Ontiveros, Charlie O'Brien, and Mike Gallego are all Major League Baseball players who once played at Bleecker Stadium.[9] Hall of Fame ballplayer Johnny Evers was appointed the Superintendent of Bleecker Stadium after being in financial straits and ill-health later in life.[10]

Structure

The stadium has an 18 ft (5.5 m) embankment with three visitor entrances cut through it, each is dedicated to veterans of a particular war; the US Civil War, Spanish–American War, and the First World War.[11] Bleecker Stadium seats 7,000 people for football and soccer and 2,000 for baseball.[1]

Teams

See also

References

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