Haugen Park

Haugen Park (branded as 811 DigSafe City: Home of Haugen Park for sponsorship reasons) is a baseball stadium located in the suburb of. Since 1997, it has served as the home ballpark to the St. Louis Browns of Major League Baseball (MLB). The Browns moved 42 minutes away from (then known as the Trans World Dome), which served as their interim home ballpark from 1994-1996 in-between St. Louis Ballpark and Haugen Park.

The stadium is sometimes nicknamed "The Ballpark on the Prairie" due to it's location in the midst of rural farmland.

History
The park was built on former farmland in, 41 minutes outside. The stadium was named after the team's original owner, Timothy Haugen Sr., who founded the revived Browns as an expansion team in 1975. It is part of a development currently named 811 DigSafe City (which the Common Ground Alliance's 811 campaign acquired the naming rights to in 2016).

2005
On May 21, 2005, during a game against the Boston Red Sox, a stray cat ran into the stadium and ran around the playing field. Animal Control was called in and captured the cat, who was later adopted by the Browns' Hansje De Jager and named "Haugen Jr.". After Haugen Jr. died of natural causes in 2011, Hansje adopted one of Haugen Jr's "grandchildren", naming her Haugen Jr. II.

Map
https://www.scribblemaps.com/create/#/id=Gp3nLbLh_Y&lat=38.80297668&lng=-90.91528141&z=16&t=hybrid