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Conrad Park was the home of spring training games during the 1940s and 1950s, as well as the home of the DeLand Red Hats of the Florida State League. Melching Field opened on February 12, 1999, where a crowd of 2,874 saw the Stetson Hatters defeat the University of Louisville 4–3.
Conrad City Hall is a site on the National Register of Historic Places located in Conrad, Montana. It was added to the Register on February 1, 1980. [1] The building is the oldest government building surviving in Pondera County, and it is still used as the City Hall. It was built at instigation of a women's club, the Conrad Woman's Club. It was ...
Conrad is a city in and the county seat of Pondera County, Montana, United States. [3] The population was 2,318 at the 2020 census . [ 4 ] Each June, the Whoop Up Days, a town wide celebration that includes a parade and rodeo, takes place in Conrad.
DeLand teams played at Conrad Park. The ballpark was also home of several other clubs, notably the Sun Caps and the Suns, the Stetson University Hatters, and the Daytona Cubs. The original Conrad Park was razed in 1998 and the site today is home to Melching Field at Conrad Park.
The Grant–Kohrs Ranch National Historic Site, created in 1972, commemorates the Western cattle industry from its 1850s inception through recent times. The original ranch was established in 1862 by a Canadian fur trader, Johnny Grant, at Cottonwood Creek, Montana (future site of Deer Lodge, Montana), along the banks of the Clark Fork river.
Conrad Louis Wirth (December 1, 1899 – July 25, 1993) was an American landscape architect, conservationist, and park service administrator. He was the longest-serving director of the National Park Service (NPS), serving from 1951 to 1964.
The ballpark, originally known as City Island Ball Park, opened in 1914. It consisted of a baseball field and a set of wooden bleachers. The present day grandstand and press box were built in 1962. [3] It is the home of the Daytona Tortugas and the Bethune–Cookman Wildcats. The Daytona Tortugas were founded in 1993.
J. P. Small Memorial Stadium is a baseball park in Jacksonville, Florida.It is located in the Durkeeville community in northwest Jacksonville. Constructed in 1912 and rebuilt in 1936, it was the city's first municipal recreation field, and served as its primary baseball park before the construction of Wolfson Park in 1954.