It didn't. The old Yankee Stadium was called 'The House that Ruth Built'.
The old renovated "House that Ruth built" Yankee Stadium was demolished as the Yankees wanted a new, modern stadium.
"Old Yankee Stadium" or Yankee Stadium I, was home to the New York Yankees from 1923 - 2008 . Yankee Stadium was also known as "The House that Ruth Built."
Yankee Stadium was known as "the house that Ruth Built" not in honor of Babe Ruth but because of the crowds the Yankees drew to come and see the Babe play while the Yankees were playing at the Giants Polo Grounds. Because the Yankees were drawing larger crowds than the Giant the Giants owner told the Yankees to get their own field. Yankee Stadium was opened in 1923.
The new Yankee Stadium was built in 2008-2009 and open for the 2009 season. The old Yankee Stadium (the house that Ruth built) was dedicated in 1923. Prior to that, the Yankees (known as the Highlanders then) played at Hilltop Park, in 1913 the Yankees moved to the Polo Grounds (also home to the New York Giants) and played there until Yankee Stadium was built in 1923.
in my house yesterday
"The House that Ruth Built" hosted 37 World Series for the New York Yankees from 1923 to 2003.
Yankee Stadium.
The House that Ruth Built.
The House that Ruth Built.
86 years
Before Yankee Stadium opened in 1923, the Yankees rented from their cross-town rivals, the New York Giants and shared the space at the Polo Grounds. Threatened with eviction, the Yankees were forced to build their own stadium in the Bronx, but this move arguably could not have happened without the fame and popularity of their marquee player, George Herman "Babe" Ruth. Ruth drew large crowds and made the Yankees an astoundingly popular team, and after Yankee Stadium opened, it was known colloquially as The House that Ruth Built as a result of Ruth's starpower drawing in enough revenue and fan support to build the park. In Ruth's first season with the Yankees in 1920, the Yankees were drawing more fans than their cross-town rivals, the Giants, and the Yankees owners decided to take a chance on the popularity of their team. Because both the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers had stronger roots in New York than the relatively young Yankees, building a new park - larger than most ballparks - on the assumption that the Yankees could draw 60,000 fans to their games was quite a gamble. But the Yankees also had Babe Ruth, who was the biggest name in sports at the time. After tenuous relations began developing between Giants and Yankees ownership, the Yankees decided it was time to invest in what would become the House That Ruth Built.
The House that Ruth Built.