"Memorial" or "Home of The Lions" | |
Location | Frontage Road, Commerce, Texas, 75248 |
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Owner | Texas A&M University–Commerce |
Operator | Texas A&M University–Commerce |
Executive suites | 5 |
Capacity | 11,582 |
Record attendance | 9,629 (Vs West Texas A&M Buffaloes, 10/29/2016) |
Surface | FieldTurf (2006–present), Natural grass (1950–2006) |
Construction | |
Broke ground | September, 1949 |
Opened | September 23, 1950 |
Renovated | 1973, 1980, 1987, 1999, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2013 |
Expanded | 1973, 2009–2010 |
Construction cost | $ 325,000 (1950) (Costs would be roughly 4.25 Million dollars in 2010) |
Tenants | |
Texas A&M–Commerce Lions football (1950–present), Texas A&M–Commerce men's & women's track and field, Commerce High School Football(1960–present) |
Texas A&M University–Commerce Memorial Stadium is an athletic stadium located in Commerce, Texas. It is primarily used for American football, and is the home field of the Texas A&M University–Commerce Lions Football team, Texas A&M-Commerce Men's and Women's Track and Field, and the Commerce High School Tigers Football team of the Commerce Independent School District. Prior to 1996, the stadium was named "East Texas State Memorial Stadium." The stadium was built in honor of the 78 Texas A&M-Commerce alums and students who fought and died during World War II.
Memorial Stadium began as a project of the Ex-Students Association in the fall of 1945. The ESA and friends of the University raised a portion of the funds before the University itself received a state appropriation for the rest of the $300,000 to build the facility. Construction on the facility was started in the fall of 1949 and work continued quickly to have the stadium ready for the start of the 1950 season. The stadium was opened and dedicated on Sept. 23, 1950 with a game against regional rival the University of North Texas. The dedication ceremony featured U.S. Speaker of the House and Texas A&M Commerce alumnus Sam Rayburn and former Texas lieutenant governor Walter Woodul. General Douglas MacArthur, while not in attendance, wrote to then University President James Gee that "I am delighted and honored," to have his quotation affixed to the plaque honoring the Lions fallen comrades. That quote, also chiseled on the stadium at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, is a famous one:
"Upon the fields of friendly strife, are sown the seeds that, Upon other fields, on other days, will bear the fruits of victory."