Day Five
June 18
After driving most of the day on Saturday,
we arrived at Omaha on Sunday to experience the College
World Series first hand. When you can combine a historic ballpark with a major baseball event in an area filled with other
historic attractions you’ve got a top baseball destination. The Omaha, Nebraska/Council Bluffs, Iowa, area with Omaha’s Rosenblatt Stadium, the College
World Series, Lewis and Clark sites and proximity to more historic sites belongs on the Magical Baseball History Tour.
Finished in October, 1948, Rosenblatt Stadium has hosted the College World Series since 1950. Though it has been expanded
in a patchwork fashion over the years to a capacity of 24,000, it still retains the flavor of a 1940s era ballpark. Rosenblatt
Stadium is also home to the Omaha
Royals of the Pacific
Coast League.
Rosenblatt Stadium is a neighborhood park, even though it is just off Interstate 80. At CWS time
it is surrounded by vendors set up on the lawns of homes and businesses surrounding the park. A baseball fan fest, similar
but much smaller than the fest for the Major League Baseball All-Star Game, takes place in one of the stadium parking lots.
Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo is right next to Rosenblatt Stadium and rated a “gem” in the AAA Tour Book. The Old Market area
in downtown Omaha offers a variety of shops and eateries in restored historic buildings. President Gerald Ford was born in
this area in 1913.
We avoided the interstate for most of the drive from St. Louis to Omaha. State routes got us to
the Missouri capital of Jefferson City. From there, we traveled north up to the interstate and took it past Kansas City (including
Kauffman Stadium)
into Kansas, then proceeded north, mostly on state routes, to our lodging near Percival, Iowa, about 40 miles south of Omaha.
Lewis and Clark were in the Omaha/Council Bluffs area on July 27, 1804. Lewis and Clark sites in the area include the
Lewis and Clark Monument Park in Council Bluffs. Our lodging in Percival was just east of the Iowa/Nebraska border and Nebraska
City’s Missouri River Basin Lewis & Clark Interpretive Trail & Visitor Center.
We were sufficiently taken with the
atmosphere at the College Baseball World Series to alter our plans and spend an extra day in the area. In two days we saw
four games and all eight of the teams to reach Omaha. General admission tickets and more expensive seats seemed to be in good
supply from scalpers for the early games of the CWS.
We upgraded general admission seats to reserve seats for two games,
but found the general admission area of the left and right field bleachers to be almost as good. Best of all was the baseball
and the baseball atmosphere. As it should be, the CWS is the pinnacle of college baseball. It’s a great showcase for the college
game.
Day Eight June
21
From Omaha north to Bismarck our emphasis was on the Lewis and Clark experience. Lewis
and Clark and baseball collide at Sioux City, Iowa, where the Sioux
City Explorers of the American
Association play at Lewis
& Clark Park. One of the newer parks in the new AA, Lewis & Clark Park is just minutes away from the Sergeant Floyd Monument
that honors the only member of the Corps of Discovery to die on the journey. The historic site includes a 100 foot tall monument
and an outstanding view of the Missouri River and downtown Sioux City to the north.
Along the river in the downtown
area is the newer Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center and the older Sergeant Floyd Riverboat Welcome Center and Museum. The
Interpretive Center is one of the best we’ve yet seen on the Lewis and Clark Trail and a major expansion of the center is
in the works. Both attractions are a short drive from the Historic Fourth Street section of downtown Sioux City.
We
spent Monday evening to Thursday driving north with stops in the Dakota capitals of Pierre (South Dakota) and Bismarck (North
Dakota). Both capital cities have outstanding heritage centers that effectively present the history of the areas.
From
Bismarck, we departed the Lewis and Clark Trail and drove east to Fargo where baseball would take center stage again.