Katy Park Explained

Stadium Name:Katy Park
Nickname:Kirksey Park
Coordinates:31.5525°N -97.1306°W
Built:January - March 1905
Renovated:June 1930
July 1953
Demolished:1965
Surface:Grass
Tenants:Waco Tigers (Texas League) (1905)
Waco Navigators (Texas League) (1906-1919)
Waco Indians (Texas Association) (1923-1924)
Waco Cubs (Texas League) (1925-1930)
Waco Cubs (Dixie League) (1933)
Waco Dons (Big State League) (1947)
Waco Pirates (Big State League) (1948-1953)
Waco Pirates (Big State League) (1954-1956)
Seating Capacity:4000[1]
Acreage:2.989
Scoreboard:Hand-operated

Katy Park was a baseball park located in Waco, Texas, and was used by many minor league baseball teams as well as the Baylor Bears for a short time.

Significant moments

Location

The ballpark was located at the corner of Eighth Street and Webster Avenue. It was razed for a junkyard. The Katy Field site is now Katy Ballpark and comprises one of many locations within Magnolia Market at the Silos. The building that houses Magnolia Press Coffee Company is located almost directly on the spot where Katy Field's fence stood in deepest center field.[8]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. News: Drebinger. John. Ruth Idol in Texas as Yanks Win, 13-3. New York Times. 5 April 1929.
  2. Web site: Waco History Project: Did You Know?.
  3. http://web3.unt.edu/news/print.cfm?story=7195
  4. Web site: Minor League Baseball: History: Top 100 Teams . 2009-05-31 . 2009-01-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090106005349/http://web.minorleaguebaseball.com/milb/history/top100.jsp?idx=25 . dead .
  5. Web site: Del Pratt | Society for American Baseball Research.
  6. Book: Baseball in Dallas. 9780738532820. Chris Holaday. J.. Presswood. Mark. 2004. Dover Publications.
  7. Web site: Baylor Faculty, Alums Recall 'Deadliest Tornado in Texas History'. 2003-05-08.
  8. Diagram of Katy Field, cited in footnotes at Cottonseed Clark biography