773- 404-CUBS
www.ballparks.com/baseball/national/wrigle.htm
It’s
internationally famous as Wrigley Field. Chicagoans refer
to it familiarly as The Friendly Confines. You can call it
Cubs Park, but did you know it started its career under
the moniker Weeghman Park? Or that, for a brief,
embarrassing moment in 1915, Wrigley was known as Whales
Park?
Located at 1060 W.
Addison Street at Clark Avenue, Wrigley was designed in
1914 by Zachary Taylor Davis, and opened April 23rd of
that year under the direction of then-owner Charlie
Weeghman for his team, the Chicago Federals. After the
Federals’ league failed, an early incarnation of the
Cubs organization took it over in 1916. It was renamed
Wrigley Field in 1926, in honor of owner William Wrigley
Jr., of the chewing gum Wrigleys.
It’s the oldest
surviving National League ballpark. Zachary Davis also
designed the late, lamented Old Comiskey, now replaced by
a spanking new structure on the city’s south side.
Wrigley, however exhibits the twin virtues of historic
significance and longevity. For the moment, it seems to be
safe. On a soft summer day, before the weather gets too
hot, (or, perversely, too cold) a cup of beer and a seat
in Wrigley Field can make you feel like you’ve died and
gone to heaven. Gazing over the stands to the rooftops
outside the park, you can wave to the fans who’ve set up
their lawn chairs and barbecues from their privileged
perches.
Wrigleyville, the
neighborhood surrounding the park, is full of the expected
sports bars and burger joints, but also the unexpected.
Cabaret Metro, the city’s foremost rock venue, is right
up Clark, and there’s a lovely residential street one
block north named Alta Vista Terrace that looks like a
little piece of London in hailing distance of the park.
There are some fine bookstores in the neighborhood, as
well as some cosy neighborhood bars. They won’t all
admit it, and there’s a lot of grousing about parking
and ungentlemanly behavior, but many Wrigleyville
residents moved to the neighborhood just so they could
walk to the park on a summer afternoon. The Cubs may be
the National Leagues’ losingest team, but they have the
most devoted fans. Steppenwolf Theater alums Joe Mantegna
and Dennis Franz developed the theatrical tribute to Cubs
fans in "Bleacher Bums," a play based on a group
of real-life fans that heckled, cheered, and harassed the
Cubs from 1966 into the late ‘70s. "Bleacher
Bums" defined the passion and perversity of those
die-hards for whom hope springs eternal, and their
decendants live on today. The definitive Wrigley Field
anthem (aside from "Take Me Out to the Ball
Game" as sung by the late Harry Caray) is folksinger
Steve Goodman’s "A Dying Cub Fan’s Last
Request."
Tickets may be
ordered at (773) 404-CUBS
Trivia and the
not-so-trivial can be found at an informative website at
http://www.ballparks.com/baseball/national/wrigle.htm