Chicago’s Best Baseball Landmarks To Check Out
Whether you’re on the North or South Side, Chicago is a baseball city. Catch a game at Wrigley Field or Guaranteed Rate Field on a summer day and you can feel the love that fans have for their teams. Chicago Cubs and White Sox fandom has seeped into the very fabric of the city. It’s easy to find attractions around Chicago that honor both of the city’s rival teams. Here are a few of Chicago’s best baseball landmarks to check out.
1. The Wrigley Field marquee
Sports Center, Park
No visit to Chicago is complete without smiling for a photo in front of Wrigley Field’s welcome sign. You don’t need tickets to a game to visit this bright red Cubs emblem. The sign hangs at the entrance to the stadium at the legendary corner of Addison and Clark, declaring Wrigley Field as the proud home of the Chicago Cubs.
2. Relics of the old Comiskey Park
Park
So much history happened inside the original Comiskey Park. In addition to being the home of the White Sox from 1910 to 1990, it was also the site of the 1947 NFL Championship, the home stadium of the Negro American League’s Chicago American Giants and the place where Joe Louis famously beat James J Braddock in a 1937 heavyweight title match that has gone down in history. While this historic landmark has since been knocked down and replaced with a new stadium, a plaque on the sidewalk outside the current home of the White Sox marks where home plate used to be. In the parking lot, fans can also check out the painted foul lines of the old stadium.
3. Murphy’s Bleachers – and the surrounding Wrigleyville neighborhood
Bar, American, Cocktails, Wine, Beer
5. The Ernie Banks Memorial at Graceland Cemetery
Memorial, Cemetery
Anyone looking to honor Major League Baseball legend Ernie Banks can visit his memorial monument in Chicago’s Graceland Cemetery, where Banks is buried. Banks played for the Cubs from 1953 to 1971, during which time he secured his reputation as one of the best baseball players in history. Banks was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1977. He died in 2015 at age 83.
6. Guaranteed Rate Field
Sports Center, Stadium
Guaranteed Rate Field is the “new” home of the White Sox, who have played there since 1991 after moving from the old Comiskey Park. Since then, this park has been renamed from Comiskey Park to US Cellular Field (earning it the nickname ‘The Cell’) and finally to Guaranteed Rate. The park has undergone some huge updates over the past few years and now offers more healthy food options, multiple craft breweries and the 15,000-square-foot (1,400-square-meter) Xfinity Kids Zone, which antsy kids can visit during a game to participate in activities like Wiffle ball, base running and batting cages.
7. The Statues at Wrigley Field
Sports Center, Stadium
8. Cubs Bleacher Seats
Sports Center, Stadium
9. The White Sox Bars of Bridgeport
Pub, Irish
If you can’t score a ticket to a White Sox game, you can still enjoy it from one of the many bars in the surrounding neighborhood of Bridgeport. From Cork and Kerry to Mitchell’s Tap to Buffalo Wings and Rings, there are plenty of places to go and join in on the game-day fun.
10. 2016 Cubs World Series memorabilia at the Chicago Sports Museum
Museum
If you have kids – or if you’re just young at heart – the Chicago Sports Museum is filled with interactive exhibits that provide fun for the whole family. It also houses an exciting collection of Cubs memorabilia from the curse-breaking 2016 World Series. Visit this museum, located inside the famous Water Tower Place, to lay eyes on the grand-slam ball hit by Addison Russell in Game 6, the catcher’s gear worn by David Ross in Game 7 and much more. The museum lies on Chicago’s renowned Michigan Avenue, so while you’re there, take some time to wander up and down this popular shopping street.
This article is an updated version of a story by Elizabeth Newhart.
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