Spring Training in Bradenton and Sarasota
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About this ebook
Raymond Sinibaldi
Raymond Sinibaldi has lived in Sarasota County since 1986 and taught history in Bradenton for 21 years. A Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) member and baseball historian, as well as the coauthor of Images of Baseball: Fenway Park in 2012, Sinibaldi has tapped the Manatee County Library, the Sarasota History Center, the St. Louis Cardinals, the Boston Public Library, and the Baseball Hall of Fame to tell this remarkable story.
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Spring Training in Bradenton and Sarasota - Raymond Sinibaldi
(REJMJ).
INTRODUCTION
As much as any one man, Henry Ford was responsible for spring training in Florida. His wonderful invention of the automobile opened up the Sunshine State for the common man. Previously accessible by boat or train, and thus exclusively by the wealthy, the auto opened a new world to regular Americans, and Florida was destined to be a part of it. The 1920s were roaring, opportunities abounded, and Florida cities and businessmen were determined to roar with them.
Bradentown, which officially became Bradenton in 1925, stepped first into the foray of the Roaring Twenties when it built a ballpark on Ninth Street to lure the St. Louis Cardinals for their spring training. The Cardinals spent the majority of their springs in Texas but thought it was time to give Florida a whirl. The new park garnered a lot of attention in St. Louis, and in January 1923 stories appeared on the city’s sports pages with nothing but words of praise for the new facility. The greenskeeper from the golf course across the street was hired to lay the infield, and it was clear that Bradentown was leaving no stone unturned as it constructed the greatest baseball training camp in the entire country.
St. Louis skipper Branch Rickey sang the praises of the state-of-the-art facility, saying, There isn’t another spot in the south that equals Bradentown . . . the new clubhouse equals Sportsman Park and the grass is so smooth I could sink a 40 foot putt with my eyes closed.
The new clubhouse was indeed of major-league quality, at 60 feet by 35 feet with 60 lockers, five showers, and a handball court just outside. Rickey was convinced that the warm weather will aid the pitchers,
and Cardinals owner Sam Breadon was so excited that he proclaimed, These fine training grounds are sure to turn up a bunch of World Series winners.
As Gutzon Borglum was announcing his plans for Stone Mountain in Georgia and Howard Carter was excavating the chamber of King Tut’s tomb, the St. Louis Cardinals were trickling in to the lovely Manavista Hotel that was, according to the Bradenton Herald, just a hop skip and a jump from the shores of the Manatee River.
A six-game schedule was in place, and opening-day anticipation was heightened when W.A. Manning and Harry Land of the Bradentown Board of Trade invited commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis, the supreme arbitrator of all things baseball,
to attend the festivities. Landis was the principle speaker at the annual banquet of 125 members of the board of trade. Arriving by plane, Landis made his way to the game following his speech.
Bradentown was baseball crazy,
and the fanfare was commensurate with the mood, as plans were made to actually take moving pictures
of the players. Alas, despite the unmatched facilities, the Cardinals were unable to, as the Herald put it, turn up a bunch of World Series winners.
After just two years, they were bound for Stockton, California.
A few miles south in Sarasota, Calvin and Martha Payne donated 60 acres of land to the city to be used for park purposes. The city fathers took their opportunity to cash in on the roar of the 1920s as well, bringing the Ringling Brothers Circus to the park. What became a marriage of the circus, baseball, and entrepreneurialism played out in the friendship of circus magnate John Ringling and New York Giants manager John McGraw, and the Giants were on their way to Sarasota in the spring of 1924. The success of the Cardinals in Bradentown in 1923 was not lost on the astute eyes of these two giants of the entertainment industry.
The inaugural season, 1924, was a success. Marked with appropriate fanfare and with National League president John Heydler tossing out the first pitch, the locals turned out in droves throughout the spring. McGraw and his Giants endured the logistical nightmare of not having quality hotel space and agreed to return in 1925.
With the attention brought to Sarasota throughout the Northeast, particularly in New York, the city nearly doubled in population by the following spring. Charles Ringling opened the Sarasota Terrace Hotel within walking distance of Payne Park, and John McGraw saw an opportunity for himself to personally cash in as well. Working with realtor A.S. Skinner, McGraw lent his name and resources to the development of Pennant Park. Skinner ran ads in the Sarasota Herald urging one and all to join [McGraw] in making Pennant Park.
Calling it a proposition of national importance and drawing national interest
and claiming that a big proposition should be handled in a big way,
he proclaimed it a matter of civic pride
to participate.
Participation was ferocious and attracted some of the city’s biggest names, including Calvin Payne and Charles Ringling; however, turning a quick profit drove the project more than a desire to make Sarasota Bay a permanent home for spring training. At times, lots sold several times a day in an atmosphere that resembled the floors of Wall Street. McGraw’s energies in Sarasota seemed to be drawn more towards Pennant Park than Payne Park, and he left the baseball matters to his coaching staff.
In September 1926, the Great Miami Hurricane ripped through the tip of Florida and swept across the Gulf, hitting the Florida Panhandle and killing between 300 and 800 people, leaving thousands homeless, and causing $105 million in damage. If that storm occurred today, estimates of up to $150 billion are reasonable taking into account coastal development. Although Sarasota escaped the storm’s direct fury, it effectively put an end to the Florida land boom and thus to McGraw and company’s Pennant Park. The Giants returned for the 1927 spring, but in 1928 they were bound for Augusta, Georgia, leaving Payne Park to the Indianapolis Indians of the American Association.
When Tom Yawkey purchased the Red Sox in 1933, he returned major-league baseball to Payne Park and Sarasota in the springtime. The Sox arrived in the first year of Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt’s administration and did not leave until the administration of George H.W. Bush. They changed their color from red to white, but, except for one year, the Sox
occupied Payne Park for the remaining 55 springs of its life.
The White Sox bid adieu to Payne Park in 1988 and headed a few miles west to Ed Smith Stadium, the brand-new facility on Twelfth Street. They remained there for nine years before leaving for Tucson. The Cincinnati Reds moved from the