Gilmore Field Location within the Los Angeles metropolitan area Gilmore Field Gilmore Field (California) Gilmore Field Gilmore Field (the United States) | |
Location | Beverly Boulevard, Hollywood, California, United States |
---|---|
Coordinates | 34°4′31″N 118°21′26″W / 34.07528°N 118.35722°W |
Capacity | 12,987 |
Field size | Left Field – 335 ft. Center Left – 385 Center Field – 400 ft. Center Right – 385 Right Field − 335 ft. |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 1938 |
Opened | May 2, 1939 |
Closed | September 5, 1957 |
Demolished | 1958 |
Tenants | |
MLB Spring Training: Pittsburgh Pirates (NL) (1948) Minor League Baseball: Hollywood Stars (PCL) (1939–1957) Professional football: Hollywood Bears (PCPFL) (1940–1942, 1945) |
Gilmore Field was a minor league baseball park in Los Angeles, California, that served as home to the Hollywood Stars of the Pacific Coast League from 1939–1957 when they, along with their intra-city rivals, the Los Angeles Angels, were displaced by the transplanted Brooklyn Dodgers of the National League.
History
Gilmore Field opened on May 2, 1939 and was the home of the Hollywood Stars of the Pacific Coast League until September 5, 1957. The stadium had a seating capacity of 12,987 people.
Location
The ballpark was located on the south side of Beverly Boulevard between Genesee Avenue and The Grove Drive, just east of where CBS Television City is currently located. A couple hundred meters to the west was Gilmore Stadium, an oval-shaped venue built several years earlier, which was used for football games and midget auto racing. To the east was the famous Pan-Pacific Auditorium. Both facilities were built by Earl Gilmore, son of Arthur F. Gilmore and president of A. F. Gilmore Oil, a California-based petroleum company which was developed after Arthur struck oil on the family property.[1] The area was rich in petroleum, which was the source of the "tar" in the nearby La Brea Tar Pits. Later, the Gilmore Drive-In Theater was built, just south of the ballpark and east of the Farmers Market.
Field
The field had intimate quarters from the spectator standpoint – first and third bases were 24 feet from the first row of seats. Home plate was 34 feet from the stands.[2] The outfield gave the pitchers more of a break with foul lines 335 feet long, power alleys about 385 feet, and 407 feet to center field. (Ritter, p. 75) The power alleys were thus 40 feet deeper than in the cross-town counterpart, Wrigley Field. The diamond was situated in the northwest corner of the field.
Baseball
Hollywood Stars
In 1938 Herbert Fleishaker, owner of the Mission Reds moved his team to Los Angeles, and took the name of the Hollywood Stars after the city's previous PCL franchise. After but one season, the team was sold to new owners, among them Bob Cobb of Brown Derby Restaurant fame and the inventor of the California Cobb Salad. In their salad days, as it were, the Stars attracted glamorous actors and other celebrities or anyone else who wanted to be "seen", much as Dodger Stadium would later. One of the L.A. Angels players, Chuck Connors, made a successful move from one side of the box seat railing to the other, becoming the star in The Rifleman, a popular 1950s TV show. The Stars would play at Gilmore Field through the 1957 season.
Pittsburgh Pirates
In 1948, Gilmore Field was used as the spring training location for the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Movies
Although L.A.'s Wrigley Field seemed to get the majority of Hollywood screen time, Gilmore Field also had its moments on celluloid. It was featured in a 1949 movie called The Stratton Story, starring James Stewart and June Allyson, the true story of a promising pitcher (Monty Stratton) whose career was curtailed due to a hunting accident that left him with an artificial leg. Stratton's major league baseball career was over, but he made a comeback at the minor league level. The scenes at the end of the movie were set elsewhere but were filmed at Gilmore Field. The layout of the outfield, and especially the exceptionally high left and right field corners, help to identify it.
In The Atomic City (1952), Gilmore Field plays the site of a "Communist spy drop" during a game, with the still-new televising of the game providing the FBI agents with close-ups.
Gilmore Field was also seen in the movie 711 Ocean Drive (1950). Half of the neon art deco "Hollywood Stars" sign, above the stadium entrance, is clearly visible.
Demolition
The ballpark site was abandoned after 1957. Gilmore Field was razed in 1958, beginning soon after an announcement in the Los Angeles Times of January 17. Much of the site is now occupied by a parking lot at CBS Television City, near the Farmers Market. In September 1997, the Pacific Coast League Historical Society, CBS, and the A.F. Gilmore Company dedicated a bronze plaque in commemoration of Gilmore Field on a wall outside CBS Studio 46. "The Ferris Wheel", one of the episodes of Rescue 8, a syndicated United States television series broadcast in September 1958, was filmed at the demolition of Gilmore Field and includes many views of the stadium as it was being razed.
References
- ↑ "Gilmore Field". Project Ballpark. Retrieved January 11, 2014.
- ↑ "The History of Farmers Market". Farmers Market L.A. Archived from the original on June 26, 2007. Retrieved June 22, 2007.
- "Lost Ballparks" by Lawrence Ritter.
External links
- "Colorized postcard of Gilmore Stadium, Gilmore Field, Pan Pacific Auditorium and Farmers Market". LA Insider Tours. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved July 14, 2021.
The Los Angeles Farmers Market circa 1940s. Gilmore Stadium can be seen on the left and Gilmore Field on the upper left.
- "Gilmore Field Model". The Baseball Reliquary. Archived from the original on February 17, 2004. Retrieved July 14, 2021.