Miles Field
Encyclopedia
Miles Field was a professional baseball stadium based in Medford, Oregon
Medford, Oregon
Medford is a city in Jackson County, Oregon, United States. As of the 2010 US Census, the city had a total population of 74,907 and a metropolitan area population of 207,010, making the Medford MSA the 4th largest metro area in Oregon...

 that played host to high school baseball, American Legion
American Legion
The American Legion is a mutual-aid organization of veterans of the United States armed forces chartered by the United States Congress. It was founded to benefit those veterans who served during a wartime period as defined by Congress...

 baseball and professional minor league baseball
Minor league baseball
Minor league baseball is a hierarchy of professional baseball leagues in the Americas that compete at levels below Major League Baseball and provide opportunities for player development. All of the minor leagues are operated as independent businesses...

 from 1948 to 2004. The pro teams that played at this facility included the Medford Nuggets/Rogues
Medford Rogues
The Medford Rogues were a professional minor league baseball team that played in the Class-C Far West League from 1950 to 1951...

 of the Far West League
Far West League
The Far West League was a "Class C" league in Minor League Baseball that had eight teams and operated from 1948-1951.-Cities represented:*Eugene, OR – Eugene Larks *Klamath Falls, OR – Klamath Falls Gems...

 in 1948-1951 and three Northwest League
Northwest League
The Northwest League of Professional Baseball is a Class A-Short Season minor baseball league. The league is the descendant of the Western International League which ran as a class B league from 1937-1951 and class A from 1952-1954...

 teams, the Medford Giants
Medford Giants
The Medford Giants were a professional minor league baseball team based in Medford, Oregon, and played in the Northwest League from 1967 to 1968. They won the league championship in 1967. They were a short-season single-A affiliate of the San Francisco Giants and played their home games at Miles...

 from 1967 to 1968, the Rogue Valley Dodgers from 1969 to 1971, the Medford/Southern Oregon A's/Southern Oregon Timberjacks
Southern Oregon Timberjacks
The Southern Oregon Timberjacks were a minor league baseball team based in Medford, Oregon. The team played in the short-season single-A Northwest League from 1979 to 1999 and were an affiliate of the Oakland Athletics...

 franchise from 1979 to 1999. It was previously known as Jackson & Perkins Gardens at Miles Field during the mid to late 1990s because of the ballpark's relationship with Bear Creek Corporation, now the Harry & David Corporation.

History

In 1951, former player Claude "Shorty" Miles worked behind the scenes to help get a new baseball park built in Medford because of his unbridaled passion for the sport. A suspicious fire destroyed the structure, but it was quickly rebuilt. The stadium was originally known as the Jackson County Baseball Park when it first opened. Eight months after Shorty Miles died in 1968, Jackson County Baseball Park was rededicated as Miles Field.

Demise of the stadium

In 1999, the Timberjacks left Medford and relocated to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, leaving the city without a pro baseball franchise. After many years of the field's continued use by high school and American Legion teams, and despite efforts to both raise funds to remodel the stadium and to bring in a new team to play there, it was torn down in 2004 to make way for a controversial new Wal-Mart Super Center, expected to open in 2010 or 2011. Two years later, Harry & David Field was constructed just down the street from the old Miles Field site. Under an agreement between the venue and the city of Medford, that field was built to accommodate youth baseball, high school baseball and American Legion baseball, but not a professional team.

To this day, the Miles Field site remains empty and unoccupied due to the legal battle over the site with involves the Medford City Council, Wal-Mart and the Medford Citizens for Responsible Development. On June 4, 2009, the Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals ruled to block the project temporarily until a traffic study is prepared. The city council plans to appeal that ruling. Despite the MCRD's best efforts to block construction, the Oregon Supreme Court ruled in favor of Walmart on November 18, 2010 and the new Supercenter got the go-ahead to be built. The court overturned a decision by the state's Land Use Board of Appeals to do a traffic study.

External links

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