Former names | Veto Grounds |
---|---|
Address | 701 S. Compton St. Louis, Missouri United States |
Coordinates | 38°37′39″N 90°13′45″W / 38.6274°N 90.2292°W |
Owner | David J. Ranken, director of the Missouri Pacific Railroad and later of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition |
Seating type | Grandstand |
Capacity | Roughly 1,000 in 1875 |
Construction | |
Built | 1874 |
Opened | 1875 |
Demolished | ca. 1898 |
Tenants | |
St. Louis Red Stockings |
Red Stocking Base-Ball Park was a baseball grounds in St. Louis, Missouri. It was home to the St. Louis Red Stockings of the National Association (NA) during the 1875 season, so it is considered a major league ballpark by those who count the NA as a major league.
The site is first known to have been used for baseball in about 1867, when it was the home of something called the Veto Club, and was called the Veto Grounds. The grounds were evidently already well-known, as local newspapers in 1867 were calling it the "old" Veto Grounds. In 1874, the Red Stockings—then a local amateur club—built a grandstand behind home plate and a wooden stockade fence around the field. "The diamond lay near the southeast corner of the lot, home plate facing northwest," wrote Joan M. Thomas for the Society for American Baseball Research.[1]
The venue was also known as Compton Avenue Baseball Park or just Compton Park, as it was bordered by South Compton Avenue (east, first base). Its other boundaries were railroad tracks (south, third base); Edwin Street and Theresa Avenue (west, left field); Spruce Street (north, right field); and with Scott Avenue and Gratiot Street T-ing into Compton from the east. In 1892, a new fence and additional seats were installed.[2]
The park was used as a baseball venue off-and-on until it was razed in the late 1890s. It also hosted other local sports, including trap shooting and bicycle racing.
The site is currently occupied by Metro Transit's Central Facility.