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Seals Stadium

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Seals Stadium
Location San Francisco, California
Opened April 7, 1931
Closed September 20, 1959
Capacity 16,000 (1931)
18,500 (1946)
22,900 (1958)
Owned By ??????
Architect:

??????

Dimensions:

Left

Left-Center

Center
Right-Center

Right


340 ft. (1931), 365 ft. (1958), 361 ft. (1959)
375 ft. (1958), 364 ft. (1959)
400 ft. (1931), 410 ft. (1958), 400 ft. (1959)
397 ft. (1958)
385 ft. (1931), 365 ft. (1940), 355 ft. (1958), 350 ft. (1959)

Seals Stadium was a baseball stadium that stood in San Francisco, California from 1931-1959. The stadium was originally built with three dressing rooms - one for the visiting team, and one for each of the minor league home teams, the San Francisco Seals and the San Francisco Missions. The latter team left in 1938, becoming the Hollywood Stars.

The stadium initially consisted of an uncovered grandstand stretching from foul pole to foul pole and an uncovered bleacher section in right field. A separate uncovered bleacher section was added in left field in 1958 when the San Francisco Giants moved to the city in 1958, staying at Seals Stadium for two years while Candlestick Park was under construction.

The stadium was demolished in November, 1959. Many of the seats and the light stanchions were reused at Cheney Stadium in Tacoma, Washington. A Safeway grocery store now stands on the site. Rumor has it that the employees occasionally see the ghosts of former Seals players walking down the aisles late at night.