Location | 11th Avenue & 14th Street Lewiston, Idaho |
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Coordinates | 46°24′32″N 117°00′40″W / 46.409°N 117.011°WCoordinates: 46°24′32″N 117°00′40″W / 46.409°N 117.011°W |
Owner | Lewiston School District |
Capacity | 3,500 (baseball) |
Field size |
Left Field – 335 ft (102 m) Center Field – 411 ft (125 m) Right Field – 308 ft (94 m) |
Surface | Natural grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 1934 |
Opened | November 12, 1934 83 years ago |
Tenants | |
Lewiston High School 1934–present Lewiston Broncs (NWL) 1955–1974 Lewiston Broncs (WIL) 1952–1954 Lewiston Indians (Pio. L.) 1939 Lewiston Indians (WIL) 1937 |
Bengal Field is an outdoor athletic stadium in the western United States, in Lewiston, Idaho. Opened 83 years ago in 1934 as a multi-sport athletic field, it is currently the football stadium for Lewiston High School, located a few blocks to the northwest. The natural grass field runs conventionally north-south, with the main grandstand on the west sideline. The elevation of the field is approximately 860 feet (260 m) above sea level.
It was formerly a minor league baseball park, the home field of the Lewiston Broncs from 1952 through 1974. The Broncs were in the Western International League (WIL) for the first three seasons and the Northwest League (NWL) for the following two decades, which changed to short-season play in 1966.
Bengal Field also hosted the Lewiston Indians for two seasons, one in the Class B WIL in 1937, and in the Class C Pioneer League in 1939. The first night game at the park was the opening game in 1937 on April 27. The WIL franchise moved northwest to Bellingham for the 1938 season, and the Pioneer League team was moved to Idaho Falls in eastern Idaho in 1940, closer to the rest of the league.
The baseball diamond at Bengal Field had an unorthodox southwest alignment, with the setting sun in right field; the recommended orientation (home plate to center field) is east-northeast. Owned by the school district, the ballpark was also the home field for high school and American Legion baseball. It hosted the American Legion World Series in 1973.