If there is a place where the ghosts of baseball players come at night
to relive their glory days, it is Warren Ballpark in the old
copper-mining town of Bisbee, Arizona. Warren Ballpark has been in use
as a sports facility since 1909--longer than any other ballpark in the
United States. Some of the most colorful and notable figures in baseball
history have stepped onto its field as barnstorming big leaguers or as
minor-league players hoping to make their way up to the Big Show.
Several players implicated in the infamous 1919 Black Sox scandal played
in an outlaw league at Warren Ballpark during the 1920s. In 1917, it was
the holding facility for 1,500 striking copper miners rounded up during
the Bisbee Deportation. It is also the site of one of the
longest-running and most bitterly contested high school football
rivalries in America, between the Bisbee Pumas and the Douglas Bulldogs.