Which baseball team use to play in the comiskey park?”
Comiskey Park (35th Street & Shields Avenue, Chicago, Illinois) was the ballpark in which the Chicago White Sox played from 1910 to 1990. It was built by Charles Comiskey after a design by Zachary Taylor Davis, and was the site of four World Series (one of which was played by the Chicago Cubs due to lack of seating at Wrigley Field) and more than 6,000 major league games. The field was also the site of the 1937 heavyweight title match in which Joe Louis defeated then champion James J. Braddock in eight rounds. The successor to Comiskey Park was built across 35th Street to the south, and was also named Comiskey Park (or “New” Comiskey Park) until 2003, when it was renamed U.S. Cellular Field. The original Comiskey Park is now sometimes known as “Old Comiskey Park”.
Comiskey Park (renamed U.S. Cellular Field in 2003) is home to American League baseball’s Chicago White Sox. The original Comiskey Park, built in 1910 at 35th Street and Shields Avenue, was dubbed the “baseball palace of the world” for its modern steel and concrete construction. When it was torn down after the 1990 season to make room for a new stadium across 35th Street, Comiskey Park was the oldest professional baseball park in operation. In 1908, Charles A. Comiskey, first owner of the White Sox, purchased 15 acres between 34th and 35th and Wentworth and Shields in an area housing working-class ethnic whites. Architect Zachary Taylor Davis, a graduate of nearby Armour Institute (Illinois Institute of Technology), integrated Comiskey Park into its surroundings by creating a stadium with sloping Romanesque archways and red pressed brick reflective of the neighborhood ethnic churches. Inside, the dimensions were 362 feet down the right and left field lines and 440 feet to deep center f