Emeralds game in July 2004
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Location | 2077 Willamette Street, Eugene, Oregon, U.S. |
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Coordinates | 44°02′13″N 123°05′28″W / 44.037°N 123.091°WCoordinates: 44°02′13″N 123°05′28″W / 44.037°N 123.091°W |
Owner | Eugene School District |
Capacity | 6,800 |
Surface | Natural grass |
Construction | |
Opened | October 28, 1938 79 years ago |
Closed | September 4, 2009 |
Construction cost | $18,000 |
Architect | Works Progress Administration (WPA) |
Tenants | |
South Eugene High School |
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Eugene Civic Stadium
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Formerly listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places
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Location | 2077 Willamette Street, Eugene, Oregon |
Built | 1938, 79 years ago |
NRHP Reference # | 08000183 |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP | October 6, 2008 |
Removed from NRHP | March 8, 2016 |
South Eugene High School
Eugene Emeralds
Pacific Coast League (AAA), 1969–1973
Northwest League (A), 1974–2009
Civic Stadium was an outdoor athletic stadium in the western United States, located in Eugene, Oregon. For most of its history it was owned by the Eugene School District. Opened in 1938, the stadium was destroyed by fire in 2015 on June 29.
Civic Stadium, located near East 20th Avenue and Willamette Street, adjacent to South Eugene High School, had a seating capacity of 6,800. Built 79 years ago in 1938 through a public-private partnership between the Eugene Area Chamber of Commerce, Eugene School District 4J, and the federal Works Progress Administration (WPA); the property had been owned by the school district from its construction until spring 2015. In October 2008, Civic Stadium was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Originally built for high school football and baseball, in 1969 it became the home of the Eugene Emeralds minor league baseball team, which previously played at the privately owned Bethel Park (north of Roosevelt Boulevard (44°03′52″N 123°08′43″W / 44.0644°N 123.1454°W); its outfield is present-day Lark Park). The Emeralds moved up to the Pacific Coast League (AAA) in 1969 and needed a larger venue. After five seasons in the PCL, they returned to the Class A Northwest League in 1974 and played in the stadium through 2009. (High school football moved to the University of Oregon's Autzen Stadium in 1969, following the installation of artificial turf.) Before the departure of the Emeralds in 2009, Civic Stadium was one of the ten oldest active minor league baseball facilities in the United States.