Buffalo Stadium

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Buffalo Stadium was a minor league stadium primarily used by the Texas League Houston Buffaloes from 1928 through 1961. The Buffaloes were a farm team of the Major League St. Louis Cardinals and provided many great ballplayers to the Cardinals' success in 1930s and 1940s. The arrival of the National League Houston Colt .45s in 1962 brought an end to minor league baseball in Houston. It also went by the names of Buff Stadium and later Busch Stadium. It was bounded by Leeland, St. Bernard (present-day Cullen), Coyle, and Milby streets in the East End [1]. The railroad tracks leading to Union Station, site of the Houston Astros' current ballpark, ran behind the centerfield wall. Near the University of Houston, the stadium was also home to the Houston Cougars baseball team from the 1940's until the 1960's when it was demolished.

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[edit] Features

Buffalo Stadium was named after the Buffalo Bayou, which divides Houston. The ballpark was very similar in many different ways to the first stadium of the later Colt .45s. First of all, it favored pitchers, wind blew in from right field, and it was outdoors with high humidity. At the time, it was a state-of-the-art minor league facility at a cost of $400,000; there was a Spanish-style tiled-roof entryway with large pictures of buffaloes on the adobe wall and in the late 1950s, ladies' rooms became air-conditioned. [2] The stadium opened on April 11, 1928, the same year as Clark Field in Austin, with a 7-5 win over the Waco Cubs as well as an infamous cushion fight. [3]

[edit] Miscellaneous

It was the home of the Negro American League Houston Eagles from 1949 to 1950. Many future Cardinals such as Dizzy and Daffy Dean, Enos Slaughter, Pepper Martin, "Ducky" Medwick, and Tex Carleton and many others played for the Houston Buffs. Two large black buffaloes stood on both sides of the left-center field scoreboard facing each other. Originally, outfield distances were 344 feet (105 m) to left field, 430 feet (130 m) to center field, and 344 feet (105 m) to right field and capacity accommodated 12,000. In 1938, outfield dimensions were slightly modified to 345 feet (105 m) to left, 440 feet (130 m) to center, and 325 feet (99 m) to right while capacity increased to 14,000. The heights of outfield fences varied: left and right field fences were 12 feet (3.7 m) high, left-center scoreboard was 24 feet (7.3 m) high, and the center field fence was 18 feet (5.5 m) high. Before Buff Stadium, the team played at West End Park from 1907 until 1927; Buff Stadium was built on the East End of Houston. [4] Home plate's specific location is commemorated by a plague in the Houston Sports Hall of Fame, which makes up part of the Fingers Furniture Store.

Before Buffalo Stadium, Texas League games in Houston were played in West End Park, which was built in 1905. [5] West End Park was located at the north corner of Bagby and Jefferson on the southwest edge of downtown. [6]

[edit] See Also

[edit] Sources

  • "Green Cathedrals," Philip J. Lowry, c.2006

[edit] References