3,000 new US Citizens!
The Oath
The bullpen gets a makeover
Pesky's Pole, right field
From the dugout roof, and no baseball diamond looked so perfect
With # 23, Milton's own Louis Tiant
Luis Tiant, Pitcher (1971-78)
Luis won 122 games and compiled a 3.36 ERA in his eight years in
Boston, which included three 20-win seasons. “El Tiante” won Comeback
Player of the Year honors in 1972 (15-6 and A.L.-best 1.91 ERA). He won
18 games in 1975 and shut out the Reds 6-0 in Game 1 of the 1975 World
Series. He also won Game 4 when he threw 163 pitches in a 5-4 Red Sox
victory. His last Red Sox victory was a 5-0 two-hitter versus Toronto
on October 1, 1978 at Fenway.
Red Sox
Hall of Fame.
New citizens must apply for their Passports!
Fenway Park becomes federal court
for citizenship ceremony
BOSTON.COM
September 17, 2008 04:03 PM
By Maria Sacchetti and Andrew Ryan, Globe Staff
The confines of Fenway Park have been venerated in New England for
almost a century. This afternoon, the ballpark took on an entirely new
meaning when a judge consecrated it as a temporary federal court.
Fenway hosted its first naturalization ceremony as 3,032 immigrants
stood in the box and loge seats along the first base line and became
new citizens. Stretching from home plate into right field, they hailed
from 140 countries, wearing suits and Sunday dresses, bright African
robes and lightly colored head scarves. One type of clothing, however,
was conspicuously absent -- not a single Red Sox hat, T-shirt, or
jersey could be seen in the crowd, which may be a first for the
ballpark.
"We are honored to welcome you to Fenway, the United States of America,
and to Red Sox Nation," said Meg Vaillancourt, senior vice president
for corporate relations and executive director of the Red Sox
Foundation. "From all of us, welcome home."
The hourlong ceremony was led by US District Judge Patti Saris, who
wore her black robe and spoke to the group from a temporary stage that
had been erected over the Red Sox dugout. Saris was joined on the dais
by Mayor Thomas M. Menino and the Red Sox World Series trophies from
2004 and 2007.
Officials decided to hold the ceremony at Fenway after an impending
increase in fees sparked a surge in citizenship applications, and a
large space was needed for the crowd. For this particular group, Fenway
may have been the perfect venue for another reason: The largest number
of new citizens hailed from the Dominican Republic, the homeland of
David Ortiz, Manny Ramirez, and other Red Sox legends that helped the
team win those two Word Series.
In her remarks, Saris shared her own take on Fenway's new role as a
federal court.
"Usually, in my courtroom one side wins and one side loses," she said.
"Here, everyone wins."