Sacred Ground in Hough
This is League Park — one of the most historic baseball sites in the country, where Cleveland’s Black baseball legacy helped shape the city’s identity. Today, the Baseball Heritage Museum operates out of the park’s original 1909 ticket office, preserving stories that feel both nationally significant and deeply local.
Hough itself is one of Cleveland’s oldest neighborhoods, founded in 1799 and shaped by generations of change, culture and community.
The Buckeyes and Cleveland Pride
Long before integration reshaped Major League Baseball, League Park was home to the Cleveland Buckeyes, the last Negro League team to play professionally in the city. From 1942 to 1950, the Buckeyes brought championship energy to Hough, including a 1945 Negro World Series title win right here at League Park.
For Cleveland’s Black community, the Buckeyes were more than a team. They were pride, proof and possibility. At a time when segregation forced Black athletes to build their own leagues, Cleveland became a powerful stage for hope — and what happened here mattered far beyond the city limits.
Breaking Barriers in The Land
When baseball’s color barrier began to fall, Cleveland was again at the center of history. Just weeks after Jackie Robinson debuted in Brooklyn, Larry Doby joined the Cleveland Indians in 1947, becoming the second Black player in Major League Baseball and the first in the American League. Soon after, Satchel Paige made history as the league’s first Black pitcher.
That same spirit of breaking barriers extends beyond the game. In 1966, Hough became a focal point of Cleveland’s Civil Rights Movement during the Hough Uprising — a response to years of racial inequities and disinvestment. What followed marked a turning point for the city, including the election of Carl Stokes as the first Black mayor of a major U.S. city and new efforts to support community-led progress.
These weren’t footnotes. They were defining moments, with Cleveland at the center of it all.
Preserving What Could Have Been Lost
As integration advanced, the Negro Leagues were often left out of the broader baseball narrative. That erasure is exactly why the Baseball Heritage Museum exists.
“If we don’t preserve our history, it will be gone,” said Ricardo Rodriguez, director of the Baseball Heritage Museum.
Inside, artifacts, photographs and personal accounts center the Black athletes, teams and communities who helped build the game. Beyond baseball, organizations like the Hough Area Development Corporation have helped support long-term investment in the neighborhood, ensuring Hough’s story continues to be told by the people who live it.
A Legacy Still in Play
Since League Park’s renovation in 2014, the site has reemerged as an anchor in Hough. Youth baseball games once again fill the field. Families gather. Neighbors pass a living reminder of what this place has meant for generations. Through programs like the League Park Academy, the museum invests directly in local youth, offering skills training and mentorship rooted in the traditions of the game.
Because in Cleveland, baseball has always been bigger than baseball. It’s grit in the face of barriers. It’s community showing up for its own. It’s excellence that refuses to be overlooked.
That same energy shows up across the neighborhood today, from League Park to community-driven spaces like Chateau Hough, where sustainability, entrepreneurship and culture come together in a way that feels distinctly Cleveland.