Harman Patil (Editor)

Memorial Stadium (Terre Haute)

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Surface
  
FieldTurf

Opened
  
27 November 1924

Owner
  
Indiana State University

Broke ground
  
October 1, 1922

Phone
  
+1 812-237-3773

Renovated
  
1967

Location
  
3300 Wabash Avenue Terre Haute, IN 47803

Operator
  
Indiana State University

Capacity
  
12,764 (1996–present) 20,500 (1970–1995) 14,000 (1967–1969) 16,000 (1924–1966)

Construction cost
  
$450,000 ($5.59 million in 2017 dollars)

Address
  
567 N 5th St, Terre Haute, IN 47809, USA

Team
  
Indiana State Sycas football

Similar
  
Hulman Center, Hanson Field, Deming Park, Hancock Stadium, Saluki Stadium

Memorial Stadium is the current home of Indiana State University football in Terre Haute, Indiana, USA. Constructed in 1923–1924 by the City of Terre Haute to seat approximately 16,000 people, the facility's initial primary use was as the home of the Terre Haute Baseball Club, a.k.a. the Terre Haute Tots, a minor league team in the Three-I League; a Class B team. Class B is the equivalent of today's Class A baseball. The stadium was officially dedicated on May 4, 1925 and was universally hailed as the nation's finest minor league baseball stadium. Baseball commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis was present to throw out the first pitch of the season opening game between Terre Haute and the Peoria Tractors. The stadium and its grounds also were used for semi-pro, high school and college football and baseball, professional boxing, circuses, fireworks exhibitions, ice skating and miscellaneous conventions and other events.

Later tenants of Memorial Stadium were the Terre Haute Phillies, a farm club of the Philadelphia Phillies, and the Terre Haute Huts, which had a working agreement with the Detroit Tigers. Terre Haute's long association (since 1883) with professional baseball ended on July 3, 1956.

Renovations

In 1967, Indiana State University became the first university in the world to own and operate an outdoor artificial playing surface. The stadium, except for its outside wall and memorial arch, was razed in 1968–1969, and converted to a football stadium. The three-part renovation project included: the reorientation of the playing field from a north-south direction to its present east-west configuration; the installation of Astroturf; and the construction of some 4,500 bleacher seats on the north side of the field as well as the rebuilding of seats on the south side. The original arch still remains from the original structure. However, the bleacher seats, installed in 1967, were removed in the summer of 1996 and replaced by a landscaped hill which serves as a general admission section and a site for pregame tailgating for Sycamore fans. As a result, it has little resemblance to the majestic amphitheater constructed in the early Twenties. The field was upgraded in 2009 with a new FieldTurf playing surface, at a cost of $750,000.

Memorial Stadium, which has a current capacity of 12,764, also hosts the annual High School football game (previously the homecoming game) between Terre Haute rivals North-South as they play for the Victory Bell.

There are tentative plans to construct a new multi-purpose stadium on the Indiana State campus, three miles to the west. Memorial Stadium would likely then be razed, with the exception of the last portion of original Memorial Stadium, the Arch.

In June 2010, two practice fields were constructed to alleviate scheduling conflicts for practices and provide additional fields for Terre Haute-area youth football and high school programs.

References

Memorial Stadium (Terre Haute) Wikipedia