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How Baltimore’s old Memorial Stadium lives on David B. Stinson stands at the site of the old Memorial Stadium in Baltimore, which is now called Memorial Field at the Y.
It’s a reminder of the Baltimore sports arena that served the Orioles, Colts and Ravens in a stretch of history that goes back to 1922. The old stadium is gone now, but a new community ...
You get your heart broken, we all have, do you ever forget it? It's true, the Baltimore Colts weren't selling out games before they left town. Old Memorial Stadium was shot, as Ziemann even admitted.
Post World War II, Baltimore used to be described as: “that marble-step city stuck on a railroad track between New York and Washington.” That changed, and the Baltimore Colts of the 195… ...
Only glories were on field Park: Memories of the Colts and Orioles aside, Memorial Stadium, built in fits and starts, was never a monument to the city’s vision.
When it opened as Fairgrounds Stadium on Sept. 9, 1956, to an NFL exhibition between the Baltimore Colts and the Philadelphia Eagles, the day was perhaps remembered most for two non-football ...
The historic venue opened as Fairgrounds Stadium on Sept. 9, 1956, to an NFL exhibition between the Baltimore Colts and the Philadelphia Eagles.
The Ravens’ season gets underway Sunday here in Baltimore and while the Ravens are Baltimore's team, it was the Baltimore Colts that started the city's rich football history.
Photos, helmets, even the old Baltimore Colts lettering are all on display inside the Sports Legends Museum. It's an emotional look back at a beloved football team.
Twenty-five years ago Sunday, the world as Baltimore Colts fans knew it ended. Even now, there are lingering wounds left behind after the Colts' midnight flight to Indianapolis.
For history detectives who search around the Memorial Stadium site there are visible chunks of concrete, a brick or two and rebar west of third base. It’s a reminder of the Baltimore sports ...
For history detectives who search around the Memorial Stadium site there are visible chunks of concrete, a brick or two and rebar west of third base. It’s a reminder of the Baltimore sports ...