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Exposition Park (Kansas City)

Coordinates: 39°05′41″N 94°33′03″W / 39.0947303°N 94.5507133°W / 39.0947303; -94.5507133
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Exposition Park
Map
LocationKansas City, Missouri, U.S.

Exposition Park is a former baseball ground located in Kansas City, Missouri, United States. The ground was home to the Kansas City Cowboys of the American Association for the 1888 and 1889 seasons.

It was located at 15th and Montgall from 1888 to 1902 in the 18th and Vine-Downtown East, Kansas City neighborhood.[1] It was on the grounds of the Kansas City exposition park which had opened in 1886 between 12th and 15th Street on Kansas Street—the center piece of which was an 80,000 square foot building modeled on The Crystal Palace until it was destroyed in 1901 in a fire that had occurred just a week after plans were announced to dismantle it.[2]

Exposition Park area in 1896

The exact location and orientation of the ballpark, per Sanborn maps, was East 15th Street (now Truman Avenue) (south, first base); the imaginary line of Montgall Avenue (west, third base) + Prospect Avenue (farther west); the imaginary line of East 14th Street + Exposition Driving Park (north, left field); buildings and Kansas Avenue (east, right field).

The first football game between Kansas and Missouri was played here on October 31, 1891 (Kansas beat Missouri 22-8 before a crowd of about 3,000).[3] Exposition Park also played host to a game between the Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals on October 15, 1892. Until 2023, this was the only time the National League rivals had met outside their respective cities.[4]

It was site of one of the first night games when the Kansas City Blues played the Sioux City Cornhuskers on August 28, 1894 --- an event in which the players dressed in costume.[5] The Cornhuskers were bought by Charles Comiskey following the 1894 season and eventually became the Chicago White Sox.

The stadium was also home to other Kansas City teams: the Kansas City Blues of the American Association and the Kansas City Maroons.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Kansas City Sports Stadiums".
  2. ^ Whitney, Carrie Westlake (1908). Kansas City, Missouri: Its History and Its People 1808-1908. S. J. Clarke publishing Company. p. 223. kansas city exposition fair 1872.
  3. ^ "Kansas City Sports Stadiums".
  4. ^ "2023 London Series FAQ: All your questions, answered". MLB.com.
  5. ^ "Night Baseball Exposition Park August 28, 1894 - on Newspapers.com". Archived from the original on 2016-08-19.

39°05′41″N 94°33′03″W / 39.0947303°N 94.5507133°W / 39.0947303; -94.5507133