Dayton Daily News

Archdeacon

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fence.

Constructi­on workers at the site Thursday said the field would be installed the week after Memorial Day.

“Obviously the field is going to be very popular once our society opens back up for outdoor sports,” Parlette said in reference to the COVID-19 pandemic that’s curtailed all area sporting ventures for the past two months.

Parlette sees the field being a big draw, especially for youth football teams, though it will be available to adult teams, schools and other groups. At the outset he said the field will just be lined for football, but eventually could be configured for soccer, lacrosse and other sports.

“We’re all over the place in terms of opportunit­y,” Parlette said. “We’ve got our recreation staff doing some preliminar­y programmin­g ideas. We anticipate training type opportunit­ies for other sports, too.”

Originally the field was to be built at Triangle

Park, near where the first game was played. But just before groundbrea­king last May, a cultural heritage management firm using non-invasive ground penetratin­g radar tests discovered a unique and sizable “abnormalit­y” in the soil at a depth that predated the park and may have been prehistori­c.

There was a real concern this was the site of a Native American burial ground and the project was immediatel­y halted.

Parlette said no effort was made to find out what the abnormalit­y was:

“You don’t want to disturb the ground. In trying to find out what it is you could inadverten­tly destroy something.”

An alternativ­e site was sought and the old Park Side expanse — just over 60 acres and already part of a riverfront master plan for outdoor athletic use, Parlette said — became the focus.

The city — after dealing with Greater Dayton Premier Management, which, in turn, worked with HUD (United States Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t) — got access to build the field and is in the process of getting ownership of the site, which is adjacent to Kettering Field.

Parlette said the city is paying for the cement pad and the fencing, which will ensure proper access for those who sign up to use the field at reasonable rates.

The NFL Foundation

— in conjunctio­n with FieldTurf and Vesco — paid for constructi­on and installati­on of the field.

“I don’t want to speak for the NFL, but in preliminar­y conversati­ons a year ago they saw that Dayton didn’t have a field readily available for football for all aspects of the community,” Parlette said.

“This isn’t a case of the rich getting richer. Dayton didn’t have anything except Welcome Stadium, but that’s now owned by Dayton Public Schools. This will be available to the whole community.”

It was to ensure that and salute Dayton’s football history that the NFL became so involved.

A year ago the league set out to celebrate the 13 communitie­s that were home to the 14 teams that were part of the inaugural 1920 season. At first the league was known as the American Profession­al Football Associatio­n, but soon after changed its name to the National Football League.

Dayton’s team was made up primarily of factory workers who earned up to $50 a week to put on leather helmets and wear a blue Triangles jersey. The team’s early stars included guys like Lou Partlow, “The West Carrollton Battering Ram,” George “Hobby” Kinderdine, who played with a limp, Francis Bacon and Lee Fenner.

The Panhandles, who Dayton beat 14-0 in that first game, were made up of workers on the Pennsylvan­ia Railroad.

The Triangles continued to play in Dayton until 1929 when a bootlegger bought them and moved them to Brooklyn, New York.

In the decades that followed, the memory of the team — and the contributi­on it had made to the league — faded into near obscurity, even though the Greater Dayton area has sent a steady stream of players — over three dozen — to the NFL.

It’s just in the past 15 to 20 years that recognitio­n of and pride in the Triangles has steadily returned.

And with it now comes this field to nurture some of those same dreams local players had here a century ago.

 ?? TOM ARCHDEACON / CONTRIBUTE­D ?? A football field courtesy of the NFL is being installed at the site of the old Park Side Homes off Keowee Street. It’s in recognitio­n of Dayton’s storied history with the league through the Dayton Triangles.
TOM ARCHDEACON / CONTRIBUTE­D A football field courtesy of the NFL is being installed at the site of the old Park Side Homes off Keowee Street. It’s in recognitio­n of Dayton’s storied history with the league through the Dayton Triangles.
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