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Lexington Park

Coordinates:44°57′15″N93°08′56″W / 44.954078°N 93.14886°W /44.954078; -93.14886
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Baseball park in St. Paul, Minnesota
For the community in Maryland, seeLexington Park, Maryland.
Lexington Park
Map
Interactive map of Lexington Park
Full nameLexington Park
LocationSt. Paul, Minnesota
Coordinates44°57′15″N93°08′56″W / 44.954078°N 93.14886°W /44.954078; -93.14886
OwnerSt. Paul Saints (1897–1956)
Field sizeLF 315; CF 470; RF 365
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Built1897; 1916
Closed1956
Demolished1950s

Lexington Park was the name of a formerminor league baseball park inSt. Paul, Minnesota. It was the home of theSt. Paul Saints from 1897 through 1956, when it was replaced by the first version ofMidway Stadium.

Lexington Park was commissioned by baseball ownerCharlie Comiskey to serve as home for hisSt. Paul SaintsWestern League baseball franchise. In late 1899 the league changed its name to theAmerican League in an ultimately successful bid to gainmajor league status. While theSaints were initially a member of that league, Comiskey moved his team toChicago prior toOpening Day 1900 (where they still exist today as theChicago White Sox). As such, the ballpark holds at least the technical distinction of being the original home to a currentAmerican League franchise—even if, admittedly, the league wasn't major at the time, and not a single major league game was ever played there.

Comiskey continued to own the ballpark for another decade or so (leasing it out to a replacementAmerican Association club), until finally selling it to local interests in 1909.

It was on the block bounded by Lexington Parkway, University Avenue, Fuller and Dunlap. Home plate was originally in the southwest corner of the block. Following a fire in November, 1915, a steel and concrete grandstand was built with the plate repositioned to the northwest corner. Lights were installed in 1937. The first night game was played on July 15, with the Saints hosting the arch-rivalMinneapolis Millers. The teams played again the next night, atNicollet Park's first night game.

The six-decades-old ballpark did not quite go out in a wave of euphoria the way its Twin Cities cousin Nicollet Park did, but the Saints did manage to defeat the Minneapolis Millers in the final game.

Although demolished in the 1950s, elements of the park remain in existence to this day. A significant segment of the southwestern foundation can still be seen by the knowledgeable observer, and as late as the 1990s a grocery store on the site (since demolished) preserved the location of Lexington's home plate with a distinctively-shaped commemorative floor tile.

The area is currently being redeveloped. AnAldi grocery store is one of the most recent additions to the site. According to Stew Thornley's 2006 book, a plaque that had once been affixed to the grocery store is now reinstated, at the TCF Bank branch building.

References

[edit]
  • Baseball in Minnesota: The Definitive History, Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2006, byStew Thornley.
  • Before the Dome, Nodin Press, 1993, edited by David Anderson.
  • On to Nicollet: The Glory and Fame of the Minneapolis Millers, Nodin Press, 1988, byStew Thornley.
  • Ballparks of North America, McFarland & Company, 1989, by Michael Benson.
  • Green Cathedrals, SABR, 1986, and Addison-Wesley, 1992, by Phil Lowry.

External links

[edit]
Former stadiums of the National Football League
Early era:
19201940
Post-war and
pre-merger era:
19411969
Current era:
1970–present
Stadiums
used by
NFL teams
temporarily

†= Team's stadium under construction or refurbishment at time
1 = A team used the stadium when their permanent stadium was unable to be used as a result of damage.

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