National League Park
National League Park is the name of two former baseball grounds located in Cleveland, Ohio, United States. The first ground was home to the Cleveland Blues of the National League from 1879 to 1884.
The Kennard Street Baseball Grounds, later renamed National League Park, was bounded by Sibley Street on the north, Cedar Avenue on the south, Kennard Street on the west, and the eastern edge ended at the boundary of the back yards of the houses facing Willson Avenue. A contemporary plat map indicates the diamond was closest to the Kennard-Cedar intersection.
The second National League Park was the home of the Cleveland Spiders of the American Association from 1887 to 1888 and of the National League from 1889 to 1890. This ground was located a few blocks northwest of the Kennard site. It was contained within a large block bounded by Payne, Euclid, Case and Sterling Avenues, with the main entrance at Payne and Douglass Avenues. The third base line was parallel to Payne, and the first base line parallel to Sterling. That put the main stand in the northwest corner, near Payne and Sterling. During 1887–1888 the newspapers called it "Association Park", and during 1889–1890 the papers called it "National League Park" or just "League Park".
After the 1890 season the Spiders moved to League Park.