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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Lincoln_Park_Grounds
rdf:type
yago:Region108630985 wikidata:Q41176 dbo:Venue dbo:Building yago:YagoGeoEntity yago:Whole100003553 dbo:ArchitecturalStructure owl:Thing yago:YagoLegalActorGeo yago:WikicatSportsVenuesInCincinnati,Ohio yago:WikicatDefunctBaseballVenues yago:YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity yago:Area108497294 yago:Stadium104295881 yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 yago:Scene108645963 yago:Location100027167 yago:Object100002684 yago:Artifact100021939 yago:Venue108677628 yago:Structure104341686 umbel-rc:Stadium dbo:Place geo:SpatialThing
rdfs:label
Lincoln Park Grounds
rdfs:comment
The Lincoln Park Grounds, commonly known as Union Grounds, was a former baseball park, part of Lincoln Park, located in Cincinnati, Ohio. The Grounds were built for the Union Cricket Club in 1856; they "were used for cricket and baseball in the summer and were flooded for skating in the winter." In 1865 Harry Wright became the professional of the Cincinnati Cricket Club, which also used the grounds, and the next year Aaron Champion, president of the new Cincinnati Base Ball Club, "approached Wright to propose a limited use of the grounds if the CBBC and Live Oaks club would put in $2000 each to revamp the Lincoln Park Grounds."
foaf:name
Lincoln Park Grounds
foaf:nick
The Grand Duchess Union Grounds
geo:lat
39.10895156860352
geo:long
-84.53249359130859
dbo:location
dbr:Cincinnati,_Ohio
dcterms:subject
dbc:Baseball_venues_in_Ohio dbc:Cricket_grounds_in_the_United_States dbc:Defunct_cricket_grounds dbc:Baseball_in_Cincinnati dbc:Defunct_baseball_venues_in_the_United_States dbc:Cincinnati_Union_Terminal dbc:Defunct_college_football_venues dbc:Sports_venues_completed_in_1856 dbc:Sports_venues_in_Cincinnati dbc:Cincinnati_Bearcats_football
dbo:wikiPageID
12118261
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
938836842
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Baseball dbc:Cricket_grounds_in_the_United_States dbc:Baseball_venues_in_Ohio dbr:Avenue_Grounds dbr:Harry_Wright dbc:Defunct_cricket_grounds dbc:Baseball_in_Cincinnati dbr:Union_Terminal_(Cincinnati) dbr:Cincinnati,_Ohio dbr:Live_Oaks_Base_Ball_Grounds dbr:Cincinnati_Red_Stockings dbc:Defunct_baseball_venues_in_the_United_States dbr:National_Association_of_Professional_Base_Ball_Players dbr:Lincoln_Park_(Cincinnati) dbc:Defunct_college_football_venues dbc:Sports_venues_completed_in_1856 dbc:Sports_venues_in_Cincinnati dbc:Cincinnati_Union_Terminal dbr:Atlanta_Braves dbr:Cincinnati_Reds_(1876-1880) dbc:Cincinnati_Bearcats_football dbr:Washington_Olympics dbr:Cincinnati_Union_Terminal
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
n14:PK_CIN01.htm
owl:sameAs
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dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbt:Cincinnati_Bearcats_football_navbox dbt:Reflist dbt:Coord dbt:End dbt:Succession_box dbt:Infobox_venue dbt:S-start
dbp:after
None
dbp:before
dbr:Live_Oaks_Base_Ball_Grounds
dbp:location
Hopkins & McLean Ave. Cincinnati, Ohio
dbp:nickname
The Grand Duchess Union Grounds
dbp:seatingCapacity
4000
dbp:stadiumName
Lincoln Park Grounds
dbp:surface
Grass
dbp:tenants
dbr:Cincinnati_Red_Stockings
dbp:title
Home of the dbr:Cincinnati_Red_Stockings
dbp:years
1867
georss:point
39.10895277777778 -84.53249166666667
dbo:abstract
The Lincoln Park Grounds, commonly known as Union Grounds, was a former baseball park, part of Lincoln Park, located in Cincinnati, Ohio. The Grounds were built for the Union Cricket Club in 1856; they "were used for cricket and baseball in the summer and were flooded for skating in the winter." In 1865 Harry Wright became the professional of the Cincinnati Cricket Club, which also used the grounds, and the next year Aaron Champion, president of the new Cincinnati Base Ball Club, "approached Wright to propose a limited use of the grounds if the CBBC and Live Oaks club would put in $2000 each to revamp the Lincoln Park Grounds." A year later the [Red Stockings] leased the grounds of the Union Cricket Club for its hometilts. Most club members referred to the field as the Union Grounds, although it also was known as the Union Cricket Club Grounds and the Lincoln Park Grounds, given the fact that the eight-acre, fenced grounds were located in a small park behind Lincoln Park in Cincinnati, near the Union Terminal. It was a twenty-minute ride by streetcar to the Union Grounds from the heart of downtown Cincinnati. Aaron Champion ordered that approximately $10,000 worth of improvements be made to the home grounds for the 1867 season, including grading and sodding of the field and building of a new clubhouse and stands. Lincoln Park was bounded by Kenner Street (north); Freeman Avenue (east); Hopkins Street (south); and Hoefer Street (west). Old maps show the western one-third of the park designated as "ball field". The ballpark hosted three National Association games in the spring and summer of 1871.[1] One of them was held on July 4, featuring the Boston Red Stockings as the "visitors" and the Washington Olympics as the "home" team. Those were the two clubs that most of the 1869-70 Cincinnati Red Stockings players had joined when the Cincinnati club disbanded after the 1870 season. The previous day, those former members of the Red Stockings had played an exhibition game against the other members of the Boston and Olympic clubs, advertised as the "Old Reds" against a "picked nine". The "picked nine" won the game 15-13.(Cincinnati Enquirer, July 4, 1871, p. 4) The Union Grounds were used until 1875; the next year a new Cincinnati Red Stockings club played at the Avenue Grounds two miles to the north. Lincoln Park itself was eventually closed and its property became the site of the Cincinnati Union Terminal.
gold:hypernym
dbr:Park
dbp:wordnet_type
n23:synset-stadium-noun-1
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:Lincoln_Park_Grounds?oldid=938836842&ns=0
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4487
dbo:seatingCapacity
4000
dbo:tenant
dbr:Cincinnati_Red_Stockings
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:Lincoln_Park_Grounds
geo:geometry
POINT(-84.532493591309 39.108951568604)