Fans Field (Bloomington)

Fans Field was a minor league baseball park in Bloomington, Illinois, and was home to the Bloomington franchise of the Illinois–Indiana–Iowa League, popularly known as the Three-I League or jokingly as the Three-Eye League, from the early 1900s through 1939. The team had various names, but was primarily known as the Bloomington Bloomers, as well as the Bloomington Blues, Bloomington Bengals, Bloomington Cubs and Bloomington Cardinals. It was a short block east of South Main Street, on the south side of Lafayette, perhaps not coincidentally near the Brewery that sat just west of South Main and served the city's significant German population well. One of that Brewery's buildings was later used for a clubhouse at the Highland Park golf course. As for the ballpark, after the end of minor league ball in the city, the stands were converted for use as a fairgrounds, and later a ballroom was built on the site.

Fans Field
"RT Dunn Fields"
Former namesFans Field (1901-1939) (Bloomington Baseball Park)
Location109 E Lafayette St, Bloomington, IL 61701
OwnerCity of Bloomington Parks and Recreation
OperatorCity of Bloomington Parks and Recreation
Capacity2875 (1921)
Field size319-398-353[1]
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Built1901
Opened1902
Renovated1921, 1935
Expanded1921, 1935
Demolished1947
Tenants
Illinois-Indiana-Iowa League
Bloomington Bloomers (1938-1939, 1935, 1919-1929, 1903-1917)
Bloomington Bengals (1937)
Bloomington Cubs (1930-1931)
Bloomington Blues (1902)

Teams that played at Fans Field

Minor league teams that played at Fans field were independent for the most part, but fans field did see some minor league teams that were affiliated with Major League Baseball teams. The 1935 Bloomington Cardinals were affiliated with the St. Louis Cardinals, the 1938 Bloomington Bloomers were affiliated with the Cleveland Indians and the 1939 Bloomers were affiliated with the Chicago Cubs. Fans field hosted four league championship teams. League champion teams included the 1903, 1919, and 1920 Bloomers and the 1935 Bloomington Cardinals.

The site today

Today, the site is home to the RT Dunn Fields at 109 E. Lafayette. The site remains adjacent to the National Guard Armory, has five acres with two lighted ball fields and is also utilized for football and soccer.[2]

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gollark: Because the God-Emperor saith so.
gollark: You use ward, which helps them for, what, 6 hours?
gollark: If TJ09 does not want to remove a useless mechanic to fix a really serious problem, it's on him.
gollark: There aren't really any ways to prevent viewbombing which would not also wreck sickness anyway.

References

  1. https://www.baseball-reference.com/register/park.cgi?id=IL003
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-19. Retrieved 2016-03-14.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  • Minor league Bloomington Bloomers last played in 1939, by Bill Kemp of The Pantagraph.
  • Sesquicentennial Stories of McLean County, by Don Munson of WJBC radio.
  • Official Baseball Guides through the years


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