BUILDING RICKWOOD
The story of Rickwood Field, America's oldest ballpark, began in 1910 when millionaire Birmingham industrialist A.H. "Rick" Woodward bought a controlling interest in the city's professional baseball team, the Birmingham Barons (originally named the Coal Barons). Until this point, the Birmingham Barons had played all their games since their inception in 1885 at the Slag Pile, which seated 600 and was leased 60 days at a time.
Woodward announced plans to build the first concrete-and-steel ballpark in the minor leagues (and the fifth in all of baseball at the time). Woodward consulted with Connie Mack of the Philadelphia Athletics during an A's exhibition game in Birmingham. Mack helped lay out the site of the diamond and suggested the installation of wooden louvers between the top row of the grandstand and the roof. The original layout mirrored Shibe Park in Philadelphia.
The Birmingham News conducted a contest to name the park; the winning submission, presumably to Mr. Woodward's delight, was "Rickwood Field." By the time Rickwood was ready for baseball in August 1910, the project cost had increased to a staggering $75,000 for the 5,000-seat facility.