The facility, originally known as Jacksonville Baseball Park, was built in 1954 at a cost of $400,000 to replace the aging Durkee Field. It was intended to be the new home stadium of Jacksonville's minor league team, the Jacksonville Braves of the South Atlantic League. One of the major proponents of the stadium was Braves owner Samuel W. Wolfson, a local businessman. Wolfson had purchased the struggling Jacksonville Tars franchise and reorganized them as the Braves prior to the 1953 season. The new park opened on March 16, 1955 with an exhibition game between the Washington Senators and the Cincinnati Redlegs. According to H. B. Richardson, Jacksonville Braves general manager at the time, "When the new park opened, it was the best park in the SouthAtlantic League and probably better than most Southern League parks at the time. It was a showcase." Phil Niekro stated, "When I played there, Wolfson Park was one of the finest in the country. It made me feel like I was already in the big leagues." Although used primarily for baseball, the facility hosted other events until the Jacksonville Coliseum was built in 1961. A show in July 1955 featured a young Elvis Presley who hid out in a bathroom, then the ticket office, to avoid being mobbed by female fans. After selling the team to Bill Terry in 1958, Wolfson became president of the South Atlantic League for a year. In 1962, he was named president of the Jacksonville Suns, a new Triple-A franchise. Wolfson died of bone cancer in 1963 and the Jacksonville Baseball Park was renamed Wolfson Park after him. The park continued to serve as the Suns' home stadium for the next four decades. However, age took its toll, and in 2000 plans were drawn up to replace it. The last exhibition game played at Wolfson Park was in 1998, when the Florida Marlins played the Detroit Tigers.
Features
The park had several features that were unusual among ballparks.
The infield and base paths outside of the mound, around home plate, and sliding pits around each base were grass, a configuration more commonly associated with artificial turf fields.
The outfield wall was 25 feet high, all the way around. There were no seats in the outfield.
The first three rows of seats were in front of the dugouts, permitting fans to look directly into them.
The scoreboard was not located inside the stadium—it was across a street from the outfield wall.
The entire grandstand, including the lower boxes, was covered by a roof.
The facility was demolished in 2002 and replaced with new practice fields for the Jacksonville Jaguars and a parking lot for Alltel Stadium. The Suns moved two blocks west to the new Baseball Grounds of Jacksonville in 2003.