Midway Stadium

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Midway Stadium

Location 1771 Energy Park Drive
St. Paul, Minnesota 55108
Opened 1982
Owner City of St. Paul
Operator St. Paul Parks and Recreation
Construction cost $3 million USD
Former names
Municipal Stadium (1982-1993)
Tenants
Hamline University (1982-present)
St. Paul Saints (1993-present)
Capacity
2,100 (1982-1993)
5,000 (1993-1995)
6,069 (1995-present)
Dimensions
Left Field: 320 ft
Center Field: 400 ft
Right Field: 320 ft

Midway Stadium is the name of two different minor league baseball parks in Saint Paul, Minnesota, one now demolished and the other still in active use. The name derives from the location of the stadium in St. Paul's Midway area, so named because it's roughly halfway between the downtowns of Minneapolis and Saint Paul.

The first Midway Stadium was the home of the St. Paul Saints of the American Association from 1957-1960. It was located at 1000 North Snelling Avenue, on the east side of that street. It was built with just a small uncovered and presumably expandable grandstand. It was intended to compete with Metropolitan Stadium for attracting a major league baseball team, but the already-larger capacity of "The Met" doomed Midway Stadium. It was abandoned for professional baseball once the Twins arrived in 1961 and displaced both the Saints and the Minneapolis Millers. It was used for minor events and as a Minnesota Vikings practice field for the next 20 years, and finally demolished in 1981 to make way for the Energy Park. That development, with all new streets and various buildings, rubbed out any trace of the ballpark's existence.

The scoreboard at Midway Stadium
The scoreboard at Midway Stadium

The second Midway Stadium was built in 1982 at roughly half the size of its namesake. It is located at 1711 Energy Park Drive. That's on the north side of that road, just west of Snelling, complemented by the Burlington Northern tracks to the north just beyond left field. Thus it is about a mile west of the first Midway Stadium site. The ballpark started out in life as Municipal Stadium. It was and is the home of Hamline University's baseball team. Despite it's baseball configurations, some small private schools in St. Paul play football games at Midway in the fall. When Mike Veeck and Bill Murray revived the Saints and also the independent Northern League in 1993, they set up shop there, at the soon-rechristened Midway Stadium.

The Saints' slogan is "Fun Is Good" and Mike Veeck has proudly declared that Midway Stadium is "The ugliest ballpark in America!" Mike's late father, Bill Veeck, Jr. is a well known baseball owner and counts one of his accomplishments as planting the ivy at Wrigley Field.

First Midway Stadium

  • Seating Capacity - 10,250
  • Left Field - 321 ft.
  • Center Field - 410 ft.
  • Right Field - 321 ft.

Second Midway Stadium

  • Seating Capacity - 6,069
  • Left Field - 320 ft.
  • Center Field - 400 ft.
  • Right Field - 320 ft.

  • Anderson, David (ed.) (1993). Before the Dome: Baseball in Minnesota When the Grass Was Real. Minneapolis: Nodin Press. ISBN 0-931714-50-8. 
  • Benson, Michael (1989). Ballparks of North America: A Comprehensive Historical Reference to Baseball Grounds, Yards, and Stadiums, 1845 to Present. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland. ISBN 0-89950-367-5. 
  • Lowry, Philip J. (1992). Green Cathedrals: The Ultimate Celebration of All 271 Major League and Negro League Ballparks Past and Present. Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-201-56777-6. 
  • Thornley, Stew (1988). On to Nicollet: The Glory and Fame of the Minneapolis Millers. Minneapolis: Nodin Press. ISBN 0-931714-33-8. 

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