Welcome to the Stadium Hotel Network! Progressive Field is located in Cleveland, Ohio and is home to the Cleveland Indians. The major-league baseball season has always been defined by the sport's history, great fans, team competition, and state-of-the-art stadiums! Now you can conveniently book hotels and accommodations near your team's home field!
Stadium Hotel Network offers great rates on over 50 hotels near Progressive Field. All of our hotels have been approved by AAA and the Mobile Travel Guide, the authorities in hotel inspection. All hotels offer a generous savings off of regular hotel rack rates. For baseball fans there's no better place to book a hotel near the big game! Check the map below for locations.
Holiday Inn Express Hotel & Suites Cleveland Downtown Take a step back in time as you enter this 19th century historic Guardian Bank Building converted into one of the finest Cleveland hotels. The Holiday Inn Express Hotel & Suites Cleveland - Downtown is located in downtown Cleveland's financial district between E. 9th St and E. 6th St on Euclid Ave. We are within walking distance from Cleveland's main attractions including: LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers Q Arena, Cleveland Browns Stadium, , Warehouse District…..more
Cleveland began in 1796 when surveyor Moses Cleaveland picked his townsite on Lake Erie. Only three of his malaria-ridden group agreed to remain. The town grew slowly until the late 1820s, when New York finished its Erie Canal and Ohio decided to build a canal of its own. By 1832 the Ohio and Erie Canal was completed, and Cleveland, the northern terminus, had already doubled its population. Over the next 10 years the town grew by almost 500 percent. The city also acquired a trimmer name for its bright new future. Because the editor of a newspaper called The Cleveland Gazette and Commercial Register had to drop a letter from his masthead for it to fit across the page, he chose the first "a" in Cleaveland to be expendable.
During the 1800s, Cleveland was an important stop on the Underground Railroad. The city's port provided a route to freedom across the Canadian border for slaves fleeing the South. With the canal came Cleveland's first wave of immigrants, the backbone of its labor force. The city grew quickly from a bustling port to a shipping and industrial giant. The Civil War briefly halted the city's progress, but the subsequent demand for iron spurred new growth. Fortunes were made in shipping coal, limestone and iron ore, in manufacturing steel and iron, and in communications, railroads and oil. Between 1910-1920 Cleveland was the country's second largest center for automobile production and also ranked close to New York as one of the country's leading centers for ready-to-wear clothing production.