Editing Admiral Mason Park

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision Your text
Line 1: Line 1:
 
'''Admiral Mason Park''' is a 5.5-acre [[City of Pensacola]] park located in the [[Hawkshaw]] area along [[Pensacola Bay]], at the intersection of [[9th Avenue]] and [[Bayfront Parkway]].
 
'''Admiral Mason Park''' is a 5.5-acre [[City of Pensacola]] park located in the [[Hawkshaw]] area along [[Pensacola Bay]], at the intersection of [[9th Avenue]] and [[Bayfront Parkway]].
  
From [[1956]] to [[1974]] it was the site of a baseball stadium also called Admiral Mason Park. The ballpark was named in honor of [[Charles P. Mason]], a Vice Admiral in the [[United States Navy]] and two-time [[Mayor of Pensacola]]. After the stadium was demolished, the land was partitioned to create the adjacent [[Veterans Memorial Park]]. The remaining space was later redeveloped as a landscaped park which continues to bear Mason's name.
+
From the 1950s to the early 80s{{date uncertain}} it was the site of a baseball stadium called Admiral Mason Park. The ballpark was named in honor of [[Charles P. Mason]], a Vice Admiral in the [[United States Navy]] and two-time [[Mayor of Pensacola]]. After the stadium was demolished, the land was partitioned to create the adjacent [[Veterans Memorial Park]]. The remaining undeveloped space is used informally for soccer and other sports, and for overflow parking during festivals and events in the [[Seville Square Historic District]].
  
 
==Ballpark==
 
==Ballpark==
 
[[Image:Admiral Mason Park.jpg|thumb|right|Admiral Mason Park, [[1959]]]]
 
[[Image:Admiral Mason Park.jpg|thumb|right|Admiral Mason Park, [[1959]]]]
 
<!-- will try to get permission [[Image:AdmiralMasonSenatorsProgram.jpg|thumb|right|Program illustration for the [[Pensacola Senators]] at Admiral Mason Park]] -->
 
<!-- will try to get permission [[Image:AdmiralMasonSenatorsProgram.jpg|thumb|right|Program illustration for the [[Pensacola Senators]] at Admiral Mason Park]] -->
Admiral Mason Park was a 2,000-seat baseball stadium situated on the waterfront site with the address 100 South [[9th Avenue]].  The park is best remembered as the home of various Pensacola-based minor league baseball teams including the [[Pensacola Dons|Dons]] and [[Pensacola Senators|Senators]]. The Dons were owned by [[Fred Davis]] and started playing at the park in [[1957]].<ref>[http://www.alabama-florida-league.com/nafl_-_articles_Pensacola_Baseball.htm Deep South Class D Baseball]</ref> The team became the Senators, after major league affiliate the [[Wikipedia:Washington Senators|Washington Senators]], in [[1961]]. The park was a popular destination, but odors from the nearby [[9th Avenue Wastewater Treatment Plant]] prompted the nickname "Stinko Stadium" from some patrons.<ref>J. Earle Bowden. "It's spring and the feeling is baseball." ''Pensacola News Journal'', March 31, 2001.</ref> After the league folded in [[1962]] for refusing to accept black players, Admiral Mason Park languished for more than a decade before ultimately being demolished in [[1974]].
+
Admiral Mason Park was a 2,000-seat baseball stadium situated on the waterfront site with the address 100 South [[9th Avenue]].  The park is best remembered as the home of various Pensacola-based minor league baseball teams including the [[Pensacola Dons|Dons]] and [[Pensacola Senators|Senators]]. The Dons were owned by [[Fred Davis]] and started playing at the park in [[1957]].<ref>[http://www.alabama-florida-league.com/nafl_-_articles_Pensacola_Baseball.htm Deep South Class D Baseball]</ref> The team became the Senators, after major league affiliate the [[Wikipedia:Washington Senators|Washington Senators]], in [[1961]]. The park was a popular destination, but occasional odors from the nearby [[Main Street Wastewater Treatment Plant]] prompted the nickname "Stinko Stadium" from patrons.<ref>J. Earle Bowden. "It's spring and the feeling is baseball." ''Pensacola News Journal'', March 31, 2001.</ref> After the league folded in [[1962]] for refusing to accept black players, Admiral Mason Park languished for almost two decades before ultimately being demolished.
  
 
In January [[1991]] the [[City of Pensacola]] appropriated 5.5 acres of the former stadium's site for the planned "[[Wall South]]" memorial, a half-scale replica of the [[Wikipedia:Vietnam Veterans Memorial|Vietnam Veterans Memorial]] in Washington, D.C.  While the city retains ownership of the land, park maintenance and day-to-day operations are wholly the responsibility of [[Vietnam Veterans of Northwest Florida]].  This site has since become known as [[Veterans Memorial Park]] and is now home to several other monuments.
 
In January [[1991]] the [[City of Pensacola]] appropriated 5.5 acres of the former stadium's site for the planned "[[Wall South]]" memorial, a half-scale replica of the [[Wikipedia:Vietnam Veterans Memorial|Vietnam Veterans Memorial]] in Washington, D.C.  While the city retains ownership of the land, park maintenance and day-to-day operations are wholly the responsibility of [[Vietnam Veterans of Northwest Florida]].  This site has since become known as [[Veterans Memorial Park]] and is now home to several other monuments.
 
==Demolition==
 
Derelict and standing in the path of planned Shoreline Drive (which would become [[Bayfront Parkway]]), the city-owned Admiral Mason Park baseball stadium was condemned in [[1970]] and demolition began on [[July 10]], [[1974]].<ref>"Ball Park Demolition Begins." ''Pensacola News'', July 10, 1974.</ref>
 
  
 
==Urban wetland==
 
==Urban wetland==
Line 19: Line 16:
  
 
[[Image:AdmiralMasonPondProposal.jpg|thumb|right|Artist's rendering of the retention pond proposed by the [[Hawkshaw Village]] developers]]
 
[[Image:AdmiralMasonPondProposal.jpg|thumb|right|Artist's rendering of the retention pond proposed by the [[Hawkshaw Village]] developers]]
In [[2007]], the developers of the [[Hawkshaw Village]] project offered to construct a drainage pond at Admiral Mason Park that would provide stormwater retention and treatment to a 40-acre area, including the project's site at [[9th Avenue|9th]] and [[Romana Street|Romana]] and the proposed [[technology park]] north of [[Aragon]]. The pond would have included a water feature, similar to [[Wikipedia:Lake Ella|Lake Ella]] in Tallahassee. Construction was estimated to cost $690,000, and developers had pledged an additional $300,000 in landscaping and amenities to make the location more attractive.<ref>"Hawkshaw Village." ''Pensacola News Journal'', October 21, 2007.</ref> However, the project was ultimately scrapped, with the Hawkshaw developers citing a poor economy and a failure by the [[Pensacola Bay Area Chamber of Commerce|Chamber of Commerce]] to fund a portion of the wet retention.<ref>"Hawkshaw East canceled." ''Pensacola News Journal'', January 1, 2009.</ref>
+
In [[2007]], the developers of the [[Hawkshaw Village]] project offered to construct a drainage pond at Admiral Mason Park that would provide stormwater retention and treatment to a 40-acre area, including the project's site at [[9th Avenue|9th]] and [[Romana Street|Romana]] and the proposed [[technology park]] north of [[Aragon]]. The pond would include a water feature, similar to [[Wikipedia:Lake Ella|Lake Ella]] in Tallahassee. Construction is estimated to cost $690,000, and developers have pledged an additional $300,000 in landscaping and amenities to make the location more attractive.<ref>"Hawkshaw Village." ''Pensacola News Journal'', October 21, 2007.</ref> However, the proposal will first need to be approved by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, which is not expected until March [[2008]], and then by the [[Pensacola City Council]].<ref>"Hawkshaw Village changes OK'd by development panel." ''Pensacola News Journal'', October 24, 2007.</ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Please note that all contributions to Pensapedia, the Pensacola encyclopedia are considered to be released under the GNU Free Documentation License 1.2 (see Pensapedia:Copyrights for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource. Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

To edit this page, please answer the question that appears below (more info):

Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)

Template used on this page: