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Clemens Field

Clemens Field
Clemens Field NRHP 08000807 Marion County, MO.jpg
Clemens Field is located in Missouri
Clemens Field
Clemens Field
Address 403 Warren Barrett Drive
Location Hannibal, Missouri, United States
Coordinates 39°42′18″N 91°21′35″W / 39.70500°N 91.35972°W / 39.70500; -91.35972Coordinates: 39°42′18″N 91°21′35″W / 39.70500°N 91.35972°W / 39.70500; -91.35972
Public transit
Clemens Field
Location 401 Collier, Hannibal, Missouri
Area 9.9 acres (4.0 ha)
Built 1939 (1939)
Architectural style baseball diamond
NRHP Reference # 08000807
Added to NRHP August 26, 2008
Owner City of Hannibal
Operator Clemens Field Management
Genre(s) Sporting events
Capacity 2500
Field size (LF-CF-RF): 328-303-308
Surface Grass
Scoreboard Yes
Construction
Built 1936-1938
Opened 1939 (1939)
Renovated 2008
Expanded 2008
Construction cost $100,000 ($40,0000 Works Project Administration grant)
$3.3 Million renovation in 2008
Tenants
Central Association
Hannibal Pilots (1947–48)
Mississippi–Ohio Valley League
Hannibal Stags (1952)
Hannibal Cardinals (1953–1954)
Hannibal Citizens (1955)
Prospect League
Hannibal Cavemen (2009-present)

Clemens Field is a baseball stadium located at the south end of downtown Hannibal, Missouri, United States.

The stadium was named for author Samuel Clemens (who wrote under the name Mark Twain), a Hannibal resident. Built in 1938 to replace the first field that was destroyed by fire, Clemens Field has served as a site for minor league baseball teams. The ballpark underwent extensive renovations in 2008, and is currently used by the Hannibal Cavemen of the collegiate summer Prospect League.

Clemens Field was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.

First erected in 1924, the original Clemens Field facility was destroyed by fire on August 14, 1936. The replacement stadium was built as a Works Project Administration project in 1936-38. The park is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The park has a limestone wall around the entire perimeter and a grandstand behind home plate. The same plans were used for Carson Park, a ballpark in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, which is also on the National Register.

Clemens Field tenants include the Hannibal Citizens (1955); Hannibal Cardinals (1953–1954); Hannibal Stags (1952) and Hannibal Pilots (1947–48) of the Mississippi–Ohio Valley League (1952–1955) and Central Association (1947–1948), the two leagues that simply changed names and were the direct predecessors of the Midwest League. Hannibal teams were affiliates of the St. Louis Cardinals (1953–1954) and St. Louis Browns (1947).


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