- "May the activities on  this field promote courage, self-reliance, fair play, spirited competition, good  sportsmanship, and physical fitness for all who participate here.  May such  activities help to develop the highest qualities of American citizenship in the  youth of today and tomorrow."
Source:  Dedication Brochure  for "Parkway Field" -- Today's "Glover Field" -- October 15, 1955. 
The image immediately above is taken from the first page of the program issued on the occasion of the dedication of "Parkway Field" -- today's "Glover Field" -- on October 15, 1955.
The field known today as "Glover Field" took many years -- and one failed school bond  vote -- to build.  When first created, the field was known as Parkway Field.   It stood next to the Hutchinson River Parkway.  At the time, the field stood near the Hutchinson River Parkway  toll booths.  Tens of thousands of drivers each year tried to avoid the  tolls on the Parkway by driving through the streets of Pelham.  (Consequently, Pelham residents detested the Hutchinson River  Parkway.)
The story of today's  Glover Field is not quite as pretty or romantic as one might hope.  For decades,  sewerage was collected, processed and treated in the area and then passed into  Eastchester Creek (known as the Hutchinson River).  Over time, the large,  rocky area became known as "Stink Field".  One can only imagine  why.
Originally, Pelham Memorial High  School had a spectacular set of athletic fields on its grounds.  However, as the  Town's population (and families' educational objectives) grew, the original high  school building became entirely inadequate.  By 1935, additions to the original  High School complex required the School Board to cannibalize the athletic  fields.  Thereafter, the High School had no varsity sports fields whatsoever as  the Great Depression roared.  
 
For years, Pelham varsity teams  played most games "away".  Occasionally, they played "home" games.  (That meant  that they played on fields in Mount Vernon.)  Additionally, varsity teams had to  practice in Mount Vernon.
The Board of  Education seems to have realized the gravity of the situation before the Town's  general population.  After years of trying to find, develop and support  facilities that were inadequate for the Town's varsity athletes, the Board of  Education came up with a plan that might seem surprising today.  The Board decided to  propose a bond issuance to support the construction of a massive sports complex  on the grounds of the Prospect Hill Elementary School in Pelham Manor.  
The proposal proved  to be a lightning rod.  Town residents split into two rival camps and the bond  referendum was easily defeated.  As one reference puts it, however, the defeat  of the referendum "paradoxically proved to be the springboard for eventual  success".  The School Board regrouped and made another effort.  
To its credit, the  Board decided to reach out to the entire community -- well beyond those  interested only in athletics.  The School Board developed a "Citizens' Advisory  Committee".  That Committee included  at least a handful of representatives of  each of the following Town organizations:  American Legion, Board of Trade, Boy  Scouts, Citizens' Committee, Daughters of the American Revolution, Girl Scouts,  Junior League, Junior Section of the Manor Club, League of Women Voters, Lions  Club, Manor Club, Men's Club, Parents Teachers Association (PTA), Pelham Manor  Association, Pelhamwood Association, Realty Board, Recreation Commission, the  School Board, School Board Executive Committee, Rotary Club, Town Board,  Representatives of the Public Schools, Members at Large, and others.  Members of  those groups, of course, reached out to family, friends and colleagues. 
With the weight of  so many members of the community behind it, the School Board offered another  bond proposal for vote on October 29, 1953.  The largest number of Pelham  taxpayers up to that time voted on the referendum and endorsed the bond proposal by an overwhelming 6 to 1 margin.  The referendum authorized $350,000  to develop an athletic complex out of an area once described as a "barren, hilly  strip of land with a 'field' which exuded rocks and broken glass -- a 'field'  which became a swamp after heavy rains".
For the next two  years, the School Board worked feverishly to plan and construct what was then  considered to be a world-class athletic facility.  Perhaps most importantly, thousands and thousands of hours of labor were donated -- free of charge -- by  Pelham citizens considered at the time to be true experts in their fields of  athletics, construction, bureaucratics, lobbying, finances, accounting and  more.  
The effort was  amazingly successful.  At the successful conclusion of the community's massive  project, the 16-1/2 acre facility included:  (1) a regulation, varsity football  field; (2) a regulation, quarter-mile cinder track plus facilities for field  events; (3) a standard baseball diamond; (4) a softball field; (5) four tennis  courts; (6) practice fields for football and other sports; (6) a "playfield for  smaller children"; (7) a 3-1/2 acre wooded picnic area; (8) a parking area; and  (9) a state-of-the-art field house. 
Labels: 1955, Board of Education, Glover Field, Parkway Field, Recreation, School Board, School Bond