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State Field

1893 establishments in Louisiana1924 disestablishments in LouisianaAmerican football venues in Baton Rouge, LouisianaBaseball venues in Baton Rouge, LouisianaBasketball venues in Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Baton Rouge, Louisiana building and structure stubsBaton Rouge, Louisiana sport stubsDefunct college baseball venues in the United StatesDefunct college basketball venues in the United StatesDefunct college football venuesDemolished sports venues in LouisianaLSU Tigers baseball venuesLSU Tigers football venuesLSU Tigers men's basketball venuesLouisiana sports venue stubsSports venues completed in 1893
LSU Old State Field 1922
LSU Old State Field 1922

State Field was the home stadium of the Louisiana State University Tigers football team prior to 1924. The field was built on the old downtown campus of LSU. It was located east of the Pentagon Barracks and at the site of the current Louisiana State Capitol Building. Prior to construction of State Field, football games were played on an area called the parade grounds which was located south of the Pentagon Barracks and west of Hill Memorial Library and George Peabody Hall. The field, known on the campus simply as the "athletic field", was later moved to a site with bleachers that was north of the campus' experimental garden, and next to the old armory building. The field was also used for LSU's baseball and basketball teams.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article State Field (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

State Field
North 3rd Street, Baton Rouge Capitol Park Complex (Downtown Development District)

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 30.454461111111 ° E -91.188908333333 °
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North 3rd Street 799
70802 Baton Rouge, Capitol Park Complex (Downtown Development District)
Louisiana, United States
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LSU Old State Field 1922
LSU Old State Field 1922
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Assassination of Huey Long
Assassination of Huey Long

On September 8, 1935, United States senator and former Louisiana governor Huey Long was fatally shot at the Louisiana State Capitol in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Long was an extremely popular and influential politician at the time, and his death eliminated a possible 1936 presidential bid against incumbent Franklin D. Roosevelt. Long was at the capitol to pass a redistricting bill to oust Judge Benjamin Henry Pavy, an opposition state judge. Shortly after passing the bill, Long was ambushed in a hallway by Carl Weiss, Pavy's son-in-law. According to the most widely accepted version of events, Weiss shot Long in the chest, and Long's bodyguards shot Weiss, killing him instantly. There remains some controversy over whether Weiss actually shot Long, with an alternative theory claiming he was shot by his bodyguard(s) by accident during the fight and another was that Weiss instead punched Long, who was then killed in the crossfire when his bodyguards opened fire on Weiss. Long was rushed to the Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center, where emergency surgery failed to stop internal bleeding. He was pronounced dead at 4:10 a.m. on September 10, 31 hours after being shot. Over 200,000 people attended Long's funeral. His remains were buried on the grounds of the Louisiana State Capitol, which he had constructed. A statue of Long by Charles Keck was erected on his grave in 1940. Without Long as its leader, his Share Our Wealth movement collapsed, clearing the way for Roosevelt to be re-elected to the White House in a landslide. Long and Robert F. Kennedy of New York (in 1968) are the only two sitting United States senators to be assassinated.