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Salt Lake hosted two teams in the 1900 Independent Utah-Idaho Intermountain League, the Rio Grande Rios and Short Line Shorts. [1] [2] They were followed by the Salt Lake City White Wings in the 1901 Class D Inter-Mountain League, a team in the 1902 Utah State League and the Salt Lake City Elders (1903-1904)/Salt Lake Fruit Pickers (1905) of the Pacific National League.
The team previously played its home games at Smith's Ballpark in Salt Lake City from its opening in 1994 until the end of the 2024 season. Formerly known as the Salt Lake Buzz from 1994 to 2000 and the Salt Lake Stingers from 2001 to 2005, the team adopted the Bees moniker in 2006. Since their inception in 1994, they have been a part of the PCL ...
Salt Lake City Bees [d] Salt Lake City Gulls: Salt Lake City: Utah: 1958 1984 [25] Dugdale Field: Seattle Indians: Seattle: Washington: 1919 1932 [26] Ewing Field: Mission Wolves [e] Sacramento Wolves San Francisco Seals: San Francisco: California: 1914 1914 [27] Fairgrounds Park: Spokane Indians: Spokane: Washington: 1958 1982 [28] First ...
Salt Lake Bees 2025-future The Ballpark at America First Square is a baseball stadium under construction in South Jordan, Utah , United States, which is scheduled to open in spring 2025. [ 3 ] It will be the home of the Triple-A Salt Lake Bees of the Pacific Coast League .
Smith's Ballpark (formerly known as Franklin Quest Field, later Franklin Covey Field, [8] and more recently Spring Mobile Ballpark) is a baseball park in Salt Lake City, Utah. It was the home field of the minor league Salt Lake Bees of the Pacific Coast League and the collegiate Utah Utes of the Big 12 Conference.
From 1903 through 1957, the Los Angeles Angels, a PCL team, were one of the mainstays of the Pacific Coast League, winning the PCL pennant 12 times. The Angels, along with the Portland Beavers, Oakland Oaks, Sacramento Solons, San Francisco Seals, and Seattle Indians were charter members of the Pacific Coast League which was founded in 1903.
Derks Field was a minor league baseball park in the Western United States, located in Salt Lake City, Utah.It was the home field of the Salt Lake Bees, Angels, and Gulls of the Pacific Coast League, Bees, Giants, and Trappers of the Pioneer Baseball League, and the Salt Lake Sting of the American Professional Soccer League.
The team was sold to Utah businessman Bill "Hardpan" Lane and moved to Salt Lake City for the 1915 season. They played as the Salt Lake City Bees for the next 11 seasons until Lane moved the team to Los Angeles for the 1926 season. Originally they were known as the Hollywood Bees, but soon changed their name to the Hollywood Stars.