Harris Park
Harris Park
What was here before?
Harris Field and many of the facilities and institutions of Jerome Park share the same origins. In the 19th century the area was part of Andrew Bathgate’s estate. It was later purchased by Leonard Walter Jerome, who operated the Jerome Park Racetrack there from 1866 to 1889. In 1895 the Department of Water Supply, Gas & Electricity acquired land for the Jerome Park Reservoir, which was first filled in 1905 with a capacity of 773,000,000 gallons of water. The east basin was to have had a capacity twice that of the west basin, but the pit was abandoned and filled in 1912 and returned to the city in 1917.
How did this become a park?
Harris Park was acquired by Parks in 1940. Labor provided by the Federal Work Projects Administration developed the site as an athletic facility. There were four baseball diamonds, two softball diamonds, fields for football and other sports, and a sitting area. In 1961 the fieldhouse was opened.
The park’s neighbors include Lehman College to the south (originally built as Hunter College Uptown in 1932), the Bronx High School of Science to the north (relocated here in 1958), and the subway yards of the Lexington Avenue Line of the Interborough Rapid Transit, which opened in 1917.
Reconstruction in 1997 included new asphalt paving, fences, benches, trees, picnic tables, and a water supply system. The ballfields, the central feature of the park, were reconstructed and resodded with new turf. In 2018 the lawns were remediated, and in 2025 the turf field was replaced.
Who is this park named for?
Father John Joseph Harris (1884-1937) dedicated much of his life to working with youth. A native of Yonkers, Father Harris first entered the novitiate in 1911 at Villanova, Pennsylvania and was ordained as a priest even years later. From 1919 to 1935 he was stationed at St. Rita’s High School in Chicago where he served as Prior, President, and Procurator. Father Harris joined St. Nicholas of Tolentine Church on University Avenue in 1935. He served as Prior there until his death from a heart attack on June 8, 1937. Harris's time in the Bronx was short, but his impact was significant enough that the City Council dedicated a park to him in 1940. The field was named in his honor in 1940.
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