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Grainger Stadium

Grainger Stadium
Location 400 East Grainger Avenue
Kinston, North Carolina
Owner City of Kinston
Operator Kinston Indians
Capacity 4,100
Field size Right Field – 335 feet
Center Field – 395 feet
Left Field – 335 feet
Surface Grass
Construction
Opened 1949
Construction cost $170,000
($1.71 million in 2017 dollars)
Architect John J. Rowland
Tenants
Kinston Indians (CL) (1986–2011)
CAA Tournament (1995–1999)
C-USA Tournament (2002)
Down East Wood Ducks (CL) (from 2017)

Grainger Stadium is a sports venue located in Kinston, North Carolina. It is the home ballpark for the Down East Wood Ducks which will join the Carolina League starting in the 2017 season. Grainger was previously home to the Kinston Indians and all the professional Kinston baseball teams since 1949.

The stadium is located at 400 East Grainger Avenue in Kinston. The original structure was built by architect John J. Rowland in 1949 at a cost of one hundred seventy thousand dollars inclusive of everything except the land. One hundred fifty thousand dollars of the money was raised by bond issue. The stadium is owned by the city and leased by the team. A dedicatory plaque identifies the structure as "Municipal Stadium", but it has been called Grainger Stadium since it was first built. Recent ownership has begun to refer to it as "Historic Grainger Stadium" due to its age relative to other fields in the Carolina League. It is currently the second oldest stadium in the circuit. The name Grainger comes from the donor of half of the cost of the land on which it is situate, Jesse Willis Grainger. Located on Grainger Avenue, it was initially used by Grainger High School. Grainger is a prominent old family name in Greene and Lenoir Counties.

The field itself has dimensions of 335 feet down the left and right field lines, and 390 feet to straightaway center field. The Grainger Stadium field of play has been considered by many in baseball as one of the best in the country for its level. This is largely due to the efforts of two men, Lewis B. "Mac" McAvery and Tommy Walston. McAvery was the head groundskeeper from 1949 to his death in 1979. In honor of his accomplishments, the team established an annual award in his name to be given to the individual who has done the most to "preserve and enhance" professional baseball in Kinston. Walston was the head groundskeeper until the spring of 2008. He was honored with four Carolina League Groundskeeper of the Year awards as well as the Sportsturf Manager of the Year award for all of Class A baseball in 2003. Walston is also president and founder of the Eastern North Carolina Sportsturf Association.


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