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・ 23rd Street (IND Eighth Avenue Line)
・ 23rd Street (IND Sixth Avenue Line)
・ 23rd Street (IRT Broadway – Seventh Avenue Line)
・ 23rd Street (IRT Lexington Avenue Line)
・ 23rd Street (IRT Ninth Avenue Line)
・ 23rd Street (IRT Second Avenue Line)
・ 23rd Street (IRT Sixth Avenue Line)
・ 23rd Street (IRT Third Avenue Line)
・ 23rd Street (Manhattan)
・ 23rd Street (PATH station)
・ 23rd Street (Richmond, California)
・ 23rd Street (Sacramento RT)
・ 23rd Street (SF Muni station)
・ 23rd Street Ferry
・ 23rd Street Fire
23rd Street Grounds
・ 23rd Street Station
・ 23rd Street viaduct
・ 23rd TCA Awards
・ 23rd Tennessee Infantry Regiment
・ 23rd Tony Awards
・ 23rd U-boat Flotilla
・ 23rd United States Congress
・ 23rd Utah Senate District
・ 23rd Vanier Cup
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23rd Street Grounds : ウィキペディア英語版
23rd Street Grounds

23rd Street Grounds, also known as State Street Grounds and 23rd Street Park, and sometimes spelled out as Twenty-third Street Grounds, was a ballpark in Chicago. In it, the Chicago White Stockings played baseball from 1874 to 1877, the first two years in the National Association and the latter two in the National League.
23rd Street first hosted baseball in 1872–1873, rented out by the Chicago White Stockings as the club nursed its financial wounds following the 1871 Great Chicago Fire (for two years following the fire, it did not field a team). Seven games were even relocated to Chicago by professional teams in other major cities. The Cleveland and Troy clubs played two and four home games here, respectively, in 1872, when they were struggling economically (both went out of business). The Boston Red Stockings played one in 1873 when they were flourishing.
The grounds was on a block bounded by 23rd Street, State Street, 22nd Street (now Cermak Road) and what is now Federal Street. No illustration is known to survive, but contemporary newspaper descriptions imply that the diamond was in the north end of the block; a line drawn from home plate through the pitcher's mound and second base would have pointed south. If so, fair territory would probably have been shaped like a modern five-sided "home plate". (Home plate was square in shape at that time.) It has been discussed in ''Green Cathedrals'', Philip J. Lowry's book on American baseball venues.
== References ==

*''Green Cathedrals'', by Philip J. Lowry.
*Retrosheet. ("Park Directory" ). Retrieved 2006-09-04.



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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