Kiger Stadium Explained

Kiger Stadium
Location:Crest Street, Altamont, Oregon, US
Broke Ground:1947
Opened:1948
Surface:Natural grass
Capacity:2,878
Dimensions:(LF) 325'
(CF) 385'
(RF) 325'
Tenants:Klamath Falls Gems (1948-1951)
Klamath Falls Gems (2011–2018)
Oregon Tech Owls

Kiger Stadium is a baseball stadium in the Altamont area of Klamath Falls, Oregon, United States.

Construction began in late 1947 at the Crest Street site of Kiger Stadium, with a goal of opening in Spring 1948 for the Class D Klamath Falls Gems, the Far West League farm team of the Philadelphia Phillies. The stadium was built by Klamath Baseball, Inc. and paid for by the sale of stock to local citizens. The opening, and the original Gems, were a huge success, as the team led the league in attendance in three of the four years they were in the League, and won the Far West League's final Championship before the league folded after the 1951 season.

Since those days, the venerable stadium has stood against weather and other obstacles to become one of only two remaining all-wood stadiums in North America. Historic Kiger Stadium has hosted thousands of amateur baseball games, from Little League through American Legion through a semi-pro incarnation of the Gems, through the years. In 1968 the ballpark hosted the Babe Ruth World Series, and in 1970 the American Legion Championships.

For a time in the 1950s, Kiger Stadium was even turned into an auto racing track.[1] Through the years Kiger has seen it all, and in 2011 welcomed the new Klamath Falls Gems of the West Coast League. The Gems gave Klamath Basin families another reason to visit Kiger Stadium, and the success of the Gems and the WCL were to have brought many improvements to Kiger without losing the charm of the original park. (The Gems last played in the Great West League.)

In 2014 the Klamath Falls Gems, had planned minor improvements to Kiger Stadium, such as making the restrooms ADA accessible, and painting the outfield wall, the stadium facades, and stadium bleachers.[2]

Names that played at Kiger Stadium

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: klamathfallsgems.com. www.klamathfallsgems.com. 2014-04-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20140501225855/http://klamathfallsgems.com/kiger-stadium/kiger-history. 2014-05-01. dead.
  2. Web site: klamathfallsgems.com. www.klamathfallsgems.com. 2014-04-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20140501232028/http://klamathfallsgems.com/news/press-releases. 2014-05-01. dead.
  3. Web site: 1948 Klamath Falls Gems Statistics. Baseball-Reference.com.
  4. Web site: 1950 Klamath Falls Gems Statistics. Baseball-Reference.com.
  5. Web site: 1951 Klamath Falls Gems Statistics. Baseball-Reference.com.