Hinchliffe Stadium in Paterson
February 17th, 2020 by Mr. C
I’ve always admired the beautiful but ragged & dilapidated stadium that I see on the backdrop when I make my 2-3 times a year visit to the Great Falls in Paterson. This time I actually walked around the structure known as Hinchliffe Stadium and boy, if walls, ticket booths, and stadium seats can talk, I’m sure there would be plenty of conversations in there! There must of been many interesting stories, events, & life flying around at that venue’s heyday! I’m not going to bore you with facts and history of Hinchliffe Stadium which you can read on the internet but I’m going to just mention a few names, teams, & performers that graced the old stadium. Hinchliffe first opened in 1932 and is well known for it’s baseball heritage there. Most notably, the Negro Baseball leagues played here and had their World Series equivalent games hosted there! Second, Paterson’s own native son & baseball legend Larry Doby played his EastSide High School baseball and football games there! Eventually, Larry Doby would get discovered by the Newark Eagles before he went along to break the color barriers being the first black player in the American League in 1947 (2nd in MLB – Jackie Robinson was 1st of course!) & eventually being inducted into the MLB Hall of Fame!
The New York Black Yankees called Hinchliffe Stadium home for about 12 years and the NY Cubans called it their La Casa for 2 years.
Boxing, rock concerts, auto racing, High School baseball & football games for the local Paterson schools of EastSide High, Kennedy, & Central High School called it home there. Did I also mention another Silk City – Paterson native son Lou Costello performed there with his lesser half (kidding) Bud Abbott – everyone knows as Abbott & Costello of course! I can imagine all 10,000 stadium seats were filled when Lou & abbott performed at Hinchliffe!
Hinchliffe Stadium remains as one of the very few still standing structures of Negro League History. The Stadium was built by the city in 1932-33 and was owned by the Paterson Public Schools since 1963, it was closed in 1996. Fast forward to 2020 and it looks like a mess. BUT Hinchliffe Stadium was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 2013 and recent years talks have been ongoing about rehabilitating it. Hinchliffe has been on the local news recently so maybe headway is being made to get the makeover rolling!
Tags: eastside high school, hinchliffe stadium, larry doby, lou costello, negro leagues, new jersey, ny black yankees, ny cubans, paterson, silk city
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