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Honoring History

Remember the greatness

The restless ghosts of Cubs past are at peace this afternoon.

In front of about 100 fans, assorted dignitaries and a five-piece band playing music from a century ago, the memory of the Chicago National League Ball Clubs of 1893-1915, who played on the near West Side of Chicago at the nearly forgotten -- until today -- West Side Grounds, was hallowed forever. A permanent marker memorializing the site was unveiled this morning at 912 S. Wood St. in Chicago on the campus of the University of Illinois at Chicago, now home to the Neuropsychiatric Institute of UIC.

Honoring Cubs greats forever
Click on photo to open a larger version in a new browser window

This project was started several years ago by UIC graduate Mike Reischl, who knew that there had been a major league baseball park on the site but didn't know quite where. He formed the Way Out In Left Field Society, dedicated to getting permanent recognition for this great era in Cubs history, a park where they won five pennants and the only two World Series -- so far -- in their history.

Thanks to UIC and the Illinois State Historical Society, there is now a prominently placed marker, pictured here, immortalizing the feats of Tinker, Evers (properly pronounced "EE-vers", not "eh-vers"), Chance, Brown, Steinfeldt and the rest of the Cubs who won 100 games four different times and 99 one other year. Speakers included Mike Reischl and Brian Bernardoni from the Society, a couple of UIC officers, 2nd Ward Ald. Robert Fioretti and Mike Lufrano from the Cubs; a recital of a Ring Lardner article written after the Cubs left the West Side for good in 1915 read by Bill Savage, and the grand unveiling, performed, appropriately, by Mr. Cub, Ernie Banks. Stories were told of Cubs owner Charles Murphy, who was disliked in much the way that Sam Zell has gotten criticized today, and how he had originally planned to build a new park on the site of West Side Grounds, only to see the club sold to Charlie Weeghman and moved to Weeghman's brand new North Side ballpark, where the Cubs still play today. Others in "attendance" included "President William Taft", in period costume, and a man dressed as former Cubs PA announcer Pat Pieper, introducing each speaker with a megaphone.

Let's play two!
Ernie Banks speaks at the dedication ceremony on Saturday, September 6. Standing to his left is Mike Reischl of the Way Out In Left Field Society; seated, facing camera, is Mike Lufrano of the Cubs and at left, Dutchie Caray.

I post here the three or so minutes of cellphone video I took of the unveiling itself. The quality is surprisingly good, but I cannot for the life of me get it converted to a more Internet-friendly format. If any of you know how to do this, download it and email me the converted file and I'll repost it. Clicking here will open a .3g2 file which you can then save and convert.

Here is another page from the snazzy eight-page program they handed out at the event, showing the location of West Side Grounds in the current street map:

Where they played

Many other old ballparks have been honored in this way, notably Forbes Field at the University of Pittsburgh. It has been nearly ninety-three years since a major league baseball game has been played on the West Side of Chicago; on October 3, 1915, the Cubs beat the Cardinals 7-2 before "not more than 3,000 fans", according to the account in the next day's Tribune. It is far past time to honor them. Kudos to Mike Reischl and all involved for the ceremony this afternoon. I may have more photos available later today; if so, I will add them to this post.

And now, on to the business of winning in 2008.

UPDATE: More photos from the event, taken by David Sameshima.

And now...

... unveiled!
Ernie Banks unveils the historic marker

Honoring history
Another view of the historic marker

0 recs  |  17 comments

Comments

We shall overcome

The 2008 Cubs will keep the ghosts comfy .. and they won’t be joining them

The Cubs, or the Tribune, weren't a sponsor?

(The plaque cites four sponsors, but not the team itself.)

That’s kind of odd, unless they were an anonymous sponsor or something. And no Cubs logo on the plaque either (not even the old bear one from the 1908 era).

Hey don’t mind me, I just like to find fault and complain!

The Cubs were represented by Mike Lufrano.

But no, they’re not a “sponsor”. In this case I don’t think that distinction matters much.

Did Omar Vizquel

appear at the ceremony? Didn’t he play a few seasons while the West Side grounds were used?

I believe

you’re thinking of Julio Franco. Wait, he was on opposing teams, so maybe that doesn’t count.

Great post Al,

I find all of this very interesting and yes, maybe a few ghosts are at peace. Only two world series yet: INDEED! Now that our ghosts are in line, let’s get starting winning again!

What kind of phone was that video taken on?

I’ve been trying to find a way to convert it, but the audio track is reporting itself as having 9 channels. Either that’s a very fancy phone, or it deliberately encodes its audo to confuse converter programs.

Samsung Instinct.
Well, good news and bad news

I can’t seem to find a way to convert this video using free tools. Rather, I can convert the video, but since the real audio channel is hidden amongst 8 dummy channels, nothing I’ve got can pick it out of the crowd.

However, when I downloaded the file, it pulled up and played perfectly in Apple’s free version of Quicktime. I suspect that someone with a copy of Quicktime Pro may be able to convert it to something a bit more universally recognized.

That'd be great.

I tried some free conversion tools myself, but couldn’t get the audio, either.

It does open up in RealPlayer on my computer, so anyone with that might try to open it that way.

maybe that was the curse!!! They tear down and don't respect the old ballpark

they are destined to never win one in a new one…until now!!!

That is so cool that Mr. Cub himself was there
Very Nice

Thanks for the photos and the writeup!

I didn't know

that was the origin of “way out in left field.” Cool

That was beautiful

I’m an old-time baseball fan, and I think those pictures and that plaque were just beautiful.

Just think. Cap Anson played there.

Very cool

you would think just about all baseball fans could appreciate this. It isn’t every day that a great piece of baseball history is honored.

I worked at that site

I worked at the UIC Neuropsychiatric institute in the 90s (medical transcriptionist to the neurosurgery team).

Cool plaque cool ceremony cool idea.

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