[graphic header] Detroit: A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary, National Park Service

Tiger Stadium
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For over 85 years, the unique sounds of sports have echoed from within the confines of Tiger Stadium. Propelled by the aggressive and talented Ty Cobb, the Detroit Tigers reached the World Series (but didn't win) in 1907, 1908, and 1909. Attendance increased repeatedly, and owner Frank Navin paid for the $300,000 construction of a new "modern" concrete-and-steel park in 1911 that alleviated the constant threat of fire presented by wooden grandstands. In 1923, growing attendance led Navin to double-deck the ballpark's stands from first to third base and add a press box to the stadium's roof. The team's first World Series victory over the Chicago Cubs in 1935 paid for additions that enclosed and double-decked the entire park in 1936, bringing seating capacity up to 53,000. The Tigers have been World Series Champions three times since WWII: in 1945 carried by the heavy hitting of Hank Greenberg, in 1968 with a powerful team led by Al Kaline, and again in 1984, when Sparky Anderson managed a dominant Tiger team. In 1938, the Detroit Lions football team began playing in Tiger Stadium, and stayed until 1975, when the team moved to the Pontiac Silverdome. Today, Tiger Stadium is among the last of the once numerous 1910s and 1920s concrete-and-steel ballparks. Make a visit in the next few seasons, however, for the Tigers are scheduled to move to a new park in the spring of 2000. After that only two historic concrete-and-steel parks -- Boston's Fenway Park and Chicago's Wrigley Field -- will remain active, and Tiger Stadium and its collected history will join the ranks of the always remembered, but never again experienced, ballparks of baseball history.

Tiger Stadium is located at 2121 Trumbull Avenue directly north of Michigan Avenue, and directly south of U.S. Highway 75. Tiger Stadium is open to the public from April to October for Tigers baseball games, for which admission is charged. Tours of the stadium are also available; call Guest Services at 313-962-4000 for more information.

Tiger Stadium Aerial View Tiger Stadium Aerial View
Photograph by Mark Hicks, courtesy of the Detroit Tigers

  The 1909 Tigers Ty Cobb and the 1909 Tigers
Click here for a high-res panorama of the team
Photograph courtesy of the Libray of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, DLC/PP-1909:43881

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