The Birmingham Coal Barons baseball team began playing professionally in 1887, with their home games at an informal park called "Slag Pile Field" in West End. In 1901 they joined the
Southern Association. Allen Harvey "Rick" Woodward, chairman of Woodward Iron Company and grandson of pioneer Birmingham industrialist Stimpson Harvey Woodward, purchased a majority share of the Birmingham Coal Barons baseball team from J. William McQueen in 1909 while he was still in his 20s. Immediately he began planning a grand showplace for his new team. He contacted
Connie Mack for advice on the details, including the field dimensions. He settled on
Shibe Park in
Philadelphia (which was controlled by Mack's team and later renamed Connie Mack Stadium) and
Forbes Field in
Pittsburgh as the models for the new park. He purchased land in the West End neighborhood of Birmingham from the Alabama Central Railroad. The $75,000 structure was designed by Southeastern Engineering Company of Birmingham (a short-lived subsidiary of
Pittsburgh's General Fireproofing Company) and completed during the summer of 1910. The 12.7
acre (51,000 m2) park was flanked along the basepaths by concrete and steel stands. A tile-roofed cupola on the roof behind home plate provided space for the announcer and the press. Woodward named the field after himself, using his nickname and the first part of his last name. It was the first concrete-and-steel stadium in
Minor League Baseball. Woodward invited Alabama Governor
Braxton Bragg Comer, Birmingham Mayor Culpepper Exum, civic leader,
George B. Ward and
Victor H. Hanson, publisher of
The Birmingham News, for opening day on August 18, 1910. The day was celebrated by businesses closing all over town to allow fans to fill the park for the first pitch at 3:30 P.M. Over 10,000 people attended that first game in which the Barons defeated the visiting Montgomery Climbers, 3–2. The new ballpark attracted the
Philadelphia Phillies to Birmingham for spring training in 1911. The
Philadelphia Inquirer reported, "The players were agreeably surprised to find Rickwood field, for such it is named, one of the most complete and commodious minor league parks in the country. It lacks nothing either for the convenience of the player or the comfort of the spectator." After a week of intrasquad games, the Phillies opened against the Barons on Saturday, March 11, 1911. In 1912, a spring tornado tore through the field, pulling up the outfield fence. Two years later, Woodward felt the need to have electric fans installed in the grandstands for the comfort of the crowd. The
Pittsburgh Pirates also made Rickwood Field their spring training home in 1919. ==1910s–1940s==