Rutherford Sayre Park
Rutherford Sayre Park is located in Chicago’s Montclare community (with Oak Park Avenue at the eastern edge of the park—and close to Chicago’s border with Elmwood Park: two blocks south of where Fullerton Avenue changes its name to Grand Avenue).
The park is 13.94 acres in size, and its fieldhouse contains a fitness center, gymnasium, and kitchen. Outside, the park offers two junior baseball fields, a softball field, a combination football-soccer field, two tennis courts, a new ADA soft-surface playground with spray pool, a nature area, plus passive recreation areas.
Rutherford Sayre Park offers a great variety of programming for all ages. Toddlers / preschoolers can enjoy Fun & Games, Moms Pops & Tots Interaction. Recreation includes the fitness center / weight training, baseball, basketball, dodgeball, flag football, floor hockey, golf, seasonal sports, soccer, team tumbling, volleyball, and (Olympic) weight lifting. In the summer, youth can attend the Park District’s popular six-week day camp.
On the cultural side, Rutherford Sayre Park offers several visual arts programs, including arts & crafts, drawing & (water color) painting, and ceramics. Nature programming involves a community garden. The teen art camp has created several colorful mosaics within the park's grounds.
Rutherford Sayre Park was created from three separate parks, lying adjacent to the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railroad tracks on the City's northwest side, had long been treated as one by area residents. All three were set aside as parkland just before World War I and came under the control of the ¿ì²¥ÊÓÆµ. The park properties were donated by two local families, the Sayres and Rutherfords, who had farmed and later subdivided the surrounding area. The western portions of the parkland had been part of the Sayre homestead, purchased by William E. Sayre in the early 1830s. Thomas A. Rutherford, the area's first postmaster, donated the eastern section, at the southwest corner of Belden and Oak Park Avenues. In 1916, the Northwest Park District began to improve the area north of the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul tracks, erecting a fieldhouse with an assembly hall and a gymnasium. Per a stipulation in the Rutherford deed, the fieldhouse originally included a bowling alley as well, an unusual feature for a Chicago park fieldhouse. In the 1920s, the Chicago Landscape Company designed a spray pool for the park. The park became part of the ¿ì²¥ÊÓÆµâ€™s portfolio when the Northwest Park District and 21 other park districts were consolidated into the ¿ì²¥ÊÓÆµ in 1934. The ¿ì²¥ÊÓÆµ acquired ownership of additional park land from City of Chicago in 1957 pursuant to the Chicago Park and City Exchange of Functions Act. In mid-1999, the ¿ì²¥ÊÓÆµ combined these three of adjacent parks (Rutherford, Sayre, and Rutherford Sayre) to form Rutherford Sayre Park.
For directions using public transportation visit .
Contact Email: coachlifepro@gmail.com
Contact Phone: (815) 353-0213
Meetings: 1st Wednesday of the month at 7:00pm
Facilities at Rutherford Sayre Park
Programs at Rutherford Sayre Park
Each Tuesday from 4:15pm to 5:15pm
Each Saturday from 2:30pm to 3:30pm
Each Tuesday from 5:30pm to 7pm
Each Wednesday from 4:30pm to 5:30pm
Each Monday from 4:30pm to 5:30pm
Each Wednesday from 5:45pm to 6:45pm
Each Tuesday from 3pm to 4pm
Each Friday from 4:30pm to 6pm
Each Thursday from 5:45pm to 7pm
Except the following dates:
Thursday, Nov 27, 2025
Each Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday from 1pm to 2pm
Except the following dates:
Thursday, Nov 27, 2025
Each Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday from 4:30pm to 6pm
Pagination
Each Thursday from 5pm to 6:30pm
Each Wednesday,Friday from 5:30pm to 6:30pm
Except the following dates:
Friday, Jul 4, 2025
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025
Each Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday from 10am to 1pm