Baker Bowl
A 1928 aerial view of Baker Bowl with the soon-to-be-demolished Huntingdon Street station (at right) in Philadelphia | |
| Former names | Philadelphia Baseball Grounds (1887–1895) National League Park (1895–1913, officially thereafter) |
|---|---|
| Location | 2622 N. Broad St./2601 N. 15th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
| Coordinates | 39°59′35″N 75°9′21″W / 39.99306°N 75.15583°W |
| Public transit | Reading and Pennsylvania Railroad: Huntingdon Station (1891–1929), North Broad station (1929–1950) |
| Owner | Philadelphia Phillies |
| Operator | Philadelphia Phillies |
| Capacity | 12,500 (1887–1894) 18,000 (1895–1928) 20,000 (1929) 18,800 (1930–1938) |
| Field size | Left Field – 341 ft (104 m) Center Field – 408 ft (124 m) Right-Center – 300 ft (91 m) Right Field – 280 ft (85 m) |
| Surface | Grass |
| Construction | |
| Opened | April 30, 1887 |
| Renovated | 1894–1895 |
| Closed | June 30, 1938 |
| Demolished | 1950 |
| Construction cost | $80,000 ($2.8 million in 2024 dollars) |
| Architect | John D. Allen |
| Tenants | |
| Philadelphia Phillies (NL) (1887–1938) Philadelphia Athletics (EL) (1892) Philadelphia Phillies (ALPF) (1894) Philadelphia Athletics (AtL) (1896–1900) Philadelphia Phillies (NFL) (1902) Philadelphia Eagles (NFL) (1933–1935) La Salle Explorers (NCAA) (1931–1936) | |
| Designated | August 16, 2000 |
National League Park, commonly referred to as the Baker Bowl after 1923, was a baseball stadium home to the Philadelphia Phillies from 1887 until 1938, and the first home field of the Philadelphia Eagles from 1933 to 1935. It opened in 1887 with a capacity of 12,500. It burned down in 1894 and was rebuilt in 1895 as the first ballpark constructed primarily of steel and brick and with a cantilevered upper deck.
The ballpark's first base line ran parallel to Huntingdon Street; right field to center field parallel to North Broad Street; center field to left field parallel to Lehigh Avenue; and the third base line parallel to 15th Street. The stadium was demolished in 1950.