Swampoodle Grounds. Photograph courtesy Architect of the Capitol |
Swampoodle Grounds, also known as Capitol Park (II), was the
home of the Washington Nationals baseball team of the National League from 1886
to 1889. The park was named for the
surrounding Swampoodle neighborhood. The
right field and the infield portions of the site are now occupied by the Union
Station (Square 678). The left field portion was later occupied by the Main
Post Office, which is now the National Postal Museum.
The owners of Square 678 in 1887 were listed as Thomas Galt
and William Smith; they owned the west side together, and had split up the east
side with Smith owning the top portion and Galt the lower half. On the 1887
Hopkins map seen here, there are just a few small wood frame buildings on the
entire square (those yellow squares you see on the west side of the square).
One was built in 1887 as a "clubhouse" by the
Washington Baseball Club, according to the building permit index. It measured 10x30 feet, and had to be removed
within 90 days upon request from the owner of the land. That was all about there was in regard to
physical structures. Spectators
apparently lined the edge of the field instead of sitting in grandstand seats.
Swampoodle Grounds held 6,000. The Washington Statesmen
folded after the end of the 1889 season.
Copyright Paul K. Williams