Sabina Park

Sabina Park is a cricket ground and the home of the Kingston Cricket Club, and is the only Test cricket ground in Kingston, Jamaica.

Sabina Park
Ground information
LocationKingston, Jamaica
Coordinates17°58′40.47″N 76°46′57.24″W
Establishment1895
Capacity15,600[1]
TenantsJamaica cricket team, Jamaica Tallawahs
End names
Blue Mountains End
Headley Stand End
International information
First Test3–12 April 1930:
 West Indies v  England
Last Test30 August–2 September 2019:
 West Indies v  India
First ODI26 April 1984:
 West Indies v  Australia
Last ODI6 July 2017:
 West Indies v  India
First T20I19 February 2014:
 West Indies v  Ireland
Last T20I9 July 2017:
 West Indies v  India
Team information
Jamaica (1895 present)
Jamaica Tallawahs (2013 present)
As of 2 September 2019
Source: ESPNcricinfo

History

Sabina Park was originally a Pen (urban residence and adjoining land of a wealthy merchant, shopkeeper or professional),[2] part of which was eventually sold to the Kingston Cricket Club for their grounds. The entire Estate was 30 acres.[3] The Great House at Sabina Park Pen was named Rosemount.[3]

Sabina Park Pen

Higman and Hudson tell us that the name is a "transfer name" ie a name copied from somewhere else, in this case "the region around Rome" of Magliano Sabina.[4]

Shalman Scott, writing in the Jamaica Observer, claims that:[5]

Sabina Park murdered her four-month-old child and in her deposition in the Half-Way-Tree court, admitted that she had killed her child- and proceeded to give her reason for doing so. Sabina's complaint, according to the Crown witness, was that “she had worked enough for 'Backra' (Master) already and that she would not be plagued to raise the child…to work for white people”.

[She] was found guilty of murder by the court and hanged. She was buried on the Liguanea Plain at a place that bore, in perpetuity, her name — Sabina Park.

Sabina Park, the slave, was owned by Joseph Gordon, father of National Hero George William Gordon. She was one of 17 slaves on Goat Island, a property also owned by Joseph Gordon, a Scottish planter who was given huge acreage of land in Jamaica after the restoration of the Monarchy in England, by King Charles II...

Known ownership of Sabina Park Pen includes:[6]

DatesOwnerNotes
1809-1820Isabella HallFree woman of colour. Died c. 1822, partner of Robert Rainford senior (q.v.) with whom she had two sons, Robert and Samuel. Probably the daughter of Elizabeth Pinnock, "a free Negro woman" by Oliver Hall, born 05/02/1762 and baptised 16/06/1762 in Kingston, Jamaica. In her will she manumitted several enslaved people and divided her property between her nieces and her two sons, adding "All my wearing apparel to be equally divided among my slave relations."[7]
1823-c1825Netlam ToryA merchant in Liverpool, partner in Tory, Holt (q.v.) who apparently moved to Britain from Kingston Jamaica in the early 1830s.[8]
1825-1830William TitleyResident merchant of Kingston Jamaica, dying there in 1851.[9]
1839-18??Robert FairweatherResident planting attorney and slave-owner.[10]
18??-1???Ellen Agnes Hill née Blakely
Albert Maurice Hill (spouse)
Ellen Hill was the vendor of the land sold to Kingston Cricket Club.[3]

Sabina Park Cricket Ground

From 1880, Sabina Park was rented by Kingston Cricket Club from Mrs. Blakely, the then owner, for an annual fee of £27. This arrangement continued until 27 November 1890 when it was purchased for £750.[11]

Sabina Park became a Test cricket ground in 1930 when it hosted the visiting MCC team for the fourth and final Test in the West Indies' first home series.

The picturesque ground is perhaps one of the most significant in Test cricket history recording the first triple century in the game with England's Andy Sandham's 325 versus the West Indies in the 1930 game. The 365 not out by Sir Garfield Sobers which stood as a Test record for over 36 years is also regaled, as is Lawrence Rowe's world record on debut 214 and 100 not out against the visiting New Zealand in 1972.[12]

Sabina Park was the venue for the abandoned test in 1998 involving the touring England team. The test was abandoned after less than an hour's play due to the pitch being deemed unfit for play.[13][14]

Prior to Independence Park opening in 1962, it would also host the Jamaica national football team.

Facilities

The members pavilion lies square of the wicket on the west side.

The Blue Mountains form a backdrop to the north, facing the George Headley Stand, with Kingston Harbour to the south. This view is currently blocked by the Northern Stand, built as part of the ground's redevelopment for the 2007 Cricket World Cup.[12]

The George Headley stand which dominates the south end is currently the only stand in the ground named after anyone, and has a capacity of just over 6,000. The Eastern Stands has given way to a "Party Stand" replacing the popular "Mound" stand. The general capacity of Jamaicans for excess is aptly demonstrated in the construction of the huge five-level concrete stand which hosts the outside broadcast facilities, players facilities as well as a fleet of upscale private boxes.

In terms of size, Sabina Park is still relatively small. It can fit a 400-metre running track comfortably on its perimeter, but little else, and with its refurbishing, the capacity has increased to 20,000.

With the commissioning of floodlights in August 2014, Sabina Park became the last of the international grounds in the Caribbean to have this facility. The ground is now capable of hosting day/night matches and this is especially useful for the Caribbean Premier League where the Jamaica Tallawahs play their home games.[15]

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See also

References

  1. "Sabina Park Stadium of Jamaica Tallawahs CPL T20".
  2. Higman & Hudson, B. W. & B. J. (2009). "7 - Enterprise names". Jamaican Place Names (First ed.). Mona, Kingston, Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press. p. 169. ISBN 978-976-640-217-4.
  3. Beaumont-Jones, Beverly. "The story of Sabina Park". Jamaica Observer. Jamaica Observer Limited. p. Comment under article. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  4. Higman & Hudson, B. W. & B. J. (2009). "2 - Names and name givers". Jamaican Place Names (First ed.). Mona, Kingston, Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-976-640-217-4.
  5. Scotts, Shalman (10 June 2018). "What were the roles of Sabina Park, Cubah and John Dunbar in the struggle abina-park-cubah-and-john-dunbar-in-the-struggle-against-slavery-what-were-the-roles-of-sabina-park-cubah-and-john-dunbar-in-the-struggle-against-slavery-_135261?profile=1096". Jamaica Observer.
  6. "Estates | Legacies of British Slave-ownership". www.ucl.ac.uk. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  7. "Summary of Individual | Legacies of British Slave-ownership". www.ucl.ac.uk. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  8. "Summary of Individual | Legacies of British Slave-ownership". www.ucl.ac.uk.
  9. "Summary of Individual | Legacies of British Slave-ownership". www.ucl.ac.uk.
  10. "Summary of Individual | Legacies of British Slave-ownership". www.ucl.ac.uk. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  11. "Kingston Cricket Club". Jamaica's history - always something new to find out!. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  12. Heatley, pp. 174.
  13. "Sabina Park Test Abandoned". BBC. 29 January 1998. Retrieved 13 February 2009.
  14. "Sabina Park". Cricinfo. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  15. Limited, Jamaica Observer. "VIDEO: Sabina Park floodlights commissioned - News".
  • Heatley, Michael (2009). World Cricket Grounds: A Panoramic Vision. Compendium. ISBN 978-1-905573-01-1.
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