Columbia Park (Altoona)

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Columbia Park
Columbiapark.jpg
Columbia Park (Altoona)
Location Altoona, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 40°29′36″N78°24′36″W / 40.49333°N 78.41000°W / 40.49333; -78.41000
SurfaceGrass
Opened1884
Tenants
Altoona Mountain Citys (1884) (UA)

Columbia Park was a baseball field in Altoona, Pennsylvania, which was the home field for the Altoona Mountain Citys of the Union Association (UA) during the league's only season in 1884. [1]

The longest UA game by innings played was played on May 27, 1884, in Columbia Park, with the Mountain Citys beating the Baltimore Monumentals by a score of 3–2 in 13 innings. [2]

The ballpark, which was also sometimes called Fourth Avenue Grounds, was located at Lower Sixth Street, Fourth Avenue, and Mill Run Road. [3]

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The Kansas City Cowboys were a baseball team in the Union Association during its only season, 1884. Referred to as the "Cowboys" mostly by historians, they had no official nickname during their short life and were most frequently referred to by local press of the day as the "Unions" and by the press of other cities as the "Kaycees". They were the first professional baseball team to represent Kansas City as well as the city's first major league team. Their home field was called Athletic Park.

Tinker Park is the name of a former baseball ground located in Indianapolis, Indiana. The ground was the primary home of the Indianapolis Hoosiers baseball club of the National League from 1887 to 1889, and also of the Indianapolis Blues of the American Association in 1884.

Athletic Park was a baseball park in Kansas City, Missouri. It was the home field for the Kansas City Cowboys/Unions of the UA in the last part of the 1884 season, after transferring from Altoona, PA.

References

  1. "Columbia Park in Altoona, PA". Retrosheet, Inc. Retrieved 2009-04-20.
  2. "Appendix 5: Longest major league extra inning games by league" (PDF). sabr.org. Society For American Baseball Research. Retrieved 2009-04-20.
  3. Michael Benson, Ballparks of North America (McFarland Publishing, 1989), pp. 5–6.