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Ebbets Field
Ebbets Field
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IMAGE DATE1929

Ebbets Field grandstand, from Bedford Avenue and Sullivan Place. June, 1929.

The Ebbet's Field Ballpark was named after Charles Ebbets, owner of the Dodgers, who began the park's formation in 1905. Buying the land in small pieces, Ebbets was able, for about $100,000, to secure enough land to begin construction on the field. Though initially planned for 18,00 people, it was eventually expanded to be able to seat more than 31,000. From then on, it would serve as the home as the Dodgers from 1913 to 1957 when they left Brooklyn. By the 1940s the stadium began to suffer structurally and was already being overwhelmed by its limited capacity. These tensions, combined with the Dodger's owner Walter O'Malley getting into disputes with Robert Moses over the location of a new stadium, caused the team to be moved to Los Angeles in 1958. The beloved Ebbet's Field, at this point elderly and abandoned, was torn down and replaced by the Ebbets Field Apartments.

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