Central Park was a baseball venue located in the Hill District of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from 1921–1925.
The ballpark served as the home of the Pittsburgh Keystones of the Negro National League.
Officially named Central Amusement Park, the field's construction was commissioned in 1920 by Keystones' owner Alexander M. Williams and was designed by the prominent African-American architect Louis Arnett Stuart Bellinger, who would later design Greenlee Field for the Pittsburgh Crawfords.
After the Keystones folded after their 1922 season, Williams lost his savings, and by 1924 he had sold the park to Sell Hall.
According to the Commission, the venue was seen as a local or regional interest rather than a national and the state already had several other markers commemorating the Negro leagues.