The Fairgrounds were home to an
agricultural fair and to a
horse trotting track, usually called the Driving Park. "
Driving" was a commonly used synonym for trotting, long before the term came to be associated primarily with the not-yet-invented automobile. The Driving Park opened in May 1872, and hosted baseball by August of that year. Horse racing at the grounds took place as late as July 1894, but appears to have ceased after that time due to local officials disallowing "pool-selling" (gambling) on races.
Professional baseball Driving Park hosted some
professional baseball games prior to Worcester acquiring its own franchise. These included an exhibition between the
National Association (NA) pennant winner
Boston Red Stockings and runner-up
Philadelphia Whites, played on October 30, 1873, after the end of the season—Boston prevailed, 15–9, before a crowd of 2,000. A regular-season NA contest was held at Driving Park on October 30, 1874, between Boston and the
Hartford Dark Blues. The
Worcester Worcesters competed in 1879 in a later
National Association (unrelated to the earlier NA), then for three seasons, 1880 to 1882, in the major-league
National League (NL). On June 12, 1880, Worcester pitcher
Lee Richmond threw the first
perfect game in major-league history. There is a granite post commemorating the perfect game on the former
Becker College campus. The park was also the site of the first, true major league
doubleheader. For the price of a single game, Worcester fans saw two games against the
Providence Grays on September 25, 1882. The last game for the local major-league club was played on September 29, 1882, with
Troy defeating Worcester, 10–7. But it was not the last major-league game in Worcester; five years later, on August 17, 1887, the fairgrounds hosted an NL game between
Washington and
Boston. The contest—to make up a previously postponed game in the
District of Columbia—was played in Worcester at the recommendation of Washington manager
John Gaffney, who had grown up in Worcester. Boston won, 6–5. ==References==