Photos Courtesy of Stadium Vagabond
Fair Grounds Field in Shreveport, Louisiana, is crumbling. It was the home of minor league baseball for decades but has been left filthy and coated with bat droppings. Last month, Shreveport Mayor Tom Arceneaux signed a contract to demolish the stadium, signaling the death knell for the 38-year-old stadium.
According to the Shreveport-Bossier City Advocate, the cost to tear it down is $334,000, much less than any plans to revitalize the deteriorating structure. It would have been razed two years ago if not for a lawsuit filed by the Friends of Fair Grounds Field. They were concerned about the possibility of hazardous bat guano with nearby residents. A cauldron of bats made the ballpark home and covered it with droppings, creating dust that contains microscopic spores that can cause histoplasmosis.
The not-for-profit group had plans to convert it to a year-round stadium for youth and community activities, but the plans were deemed too expensive by Arceneaux. It was a big risk to turn the former ballpark into a space for youth sports. There was also a plan with REV Entertainment to revitalize the entire fairgrounds property with an entertainment complex with a multipurpose stadium, restaurants, a hotel, and possible housing options.
Photos Courtesy of Stadium Vagabond
Fair Grounds Field opened in 1986 as the home of the Shreveport Captains of the Texas League. The Captains were the Double-A affiliate of the San Francisco Giants. The ballpark held 5,300, and 183,560 people came through the turnstiles, including 7,213 people on opening night. The design of the stadium was very much for its time, with two large concrete stands down each baseline and the press and covered luxury boxes directly behind home plate. Within a few years, this design of a baseball stadium would be obsolete in the minor leagues.
The team changed its name to the Swamp Dragons in the final two seasons before being sold to Mandalay Entertainment and renamed the Frisco Rough Riders in 2003. They drew 59,316 and 24,560, respectively, in the last two years. Baseball continued with the Shreveport Sports of the independent Central Baseball League, later renamed the Shreveport-Bossier Captains in 2009. However, the second version of the Captains relocated to Laredo, Texas, after the 2011 season.
Photos Courtesy of Stadium Vagabond
There were plans to bring a summer collegiate baseball team to the ballpark in 2012, but those plans never materialized. The ballpark was left to rot and fall in squalid conditions after plans floated around on what to do with the structure. However, like many other ballparks, the best option is to knock it down.
Many have splendid memories of attending games, and others are sad to see them go. There are no plans to build a modern ballpark or to bring a professional or summer collegiate baseball team to Shreveport in the foreseeable future. Any opportunity to save Fair Grounds Field is now moot; it is quickly crumbling down by wreckage crews. Then again, it has slowly been crumbling down for over a decade.
Photos Courtesy of Stadium Vagabond
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Follow all of Marc’s stadium journeys on Twitter @ballparkhunter and his YouTube channel. Email at Marc.Viquez@stadiumjourney.com
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