By 1900, the
baseball diamond was completed on the northern end of the park (Washington bordering the third base line), with a team to play in the new
California League. It would be the first team to be called the Los Angeles Angels. It was also home of the
Vernon Tigers. Following games, a gate in the center field fence was opened and fans were allowed to enter the theme park. The Chutes Park ballfield was also sometimes called Washington Park. It was replaced by what the newspapers termed a "new"
Washington Park in 1911, which had been built just south and east of the old one, and overlaying both the old outfield and the former waterslide area. The new ballpark was expanded for the 1913 season, supplanting most if not all of the former amusement park. The Chutes / Washington area was abandoned entirely when the Angels moved to
Wrigley Field at 42nd Street and Avalon Boulevard. The Chutes Park site is now occupied by the Metropolitan Courthouse of the
Los Angeles County Superior Court, as well as commercial space and parking lots. == Gallery ==