Barron Stadium

Barron Stadium

Barron Stadium
Location 301 West 3rd Street, Rome, Georgia, 30165
Coordinates 34°15′25″N 85°10′37″W / 34.257013°N 85.17698232°W / 34.257013; -85.17698232Coordinates: 34°15′25″N 85°10′37″W / 34.257013°N 85.17698232°W / 34.257013; -85.17698232
Owner City of Rome
Operator Rome City Schools
Capacity 6,500
Surface AstroTurf[1]
Construction
Broke ground 1924
Tenants
Shorter University (NCAA)
Rome High School (GHSA)

Barron Stadium is a 6,500-seat football field and track & field stadium in Rome, Georgia. It is home to the Shorter University Hawks and Rome High School Wolves football teams.

The stadium hosted the NAIA Football National Championship from 2008-2013. The facility hosted the NCCAA Victory Bowl and NCCAA track championships for the first time in 2013. Shorter University has contracts to host the preceding events through 2015.

Barron Stadium is owned and operated by the Rome-Floyd Parks and Recreation Authority (RFPRA), a city-county partnership, which charges Shorter University $7,500 to host its home football games there as part of a three-year, $321,000 usage deal that includes football, track & field, other sports, events, and the school's commencement exercises. Rome High School pays $5,000 per game for its home football games. The RFPRA provides staffing for athletic events and pays for facility maintenance.[2]

The athletic field is over 100 years old, originally known as Hamilton Field. Dating to 1924, the stadium was renamed Barron Stadium in 1925 for local businessman William F. Barron, who helped acquire the property.[3] Barron's father founded the Rome Coca-Cola bottling plant in 1901.[4] Lights were installed by 1937, and the school district turned over operation of the facility to the city recreation department in 1957.[5] Renovations occurred in 1967 and 2008, and a new press box was built in 2001.[3] In 2010, Barron received $3.4 million in upgrades that included a new artificial turf field, an NCAA-certified track, and a new scoreboard, plus expanded locker room, press and seating facilities.[2]

In its early days, the field hosted local prep teams like the Rome Hilltoppers and Darlington Lakesiders. Barron hosted football state championship wins for local East Rome High School in 1977 and 1978, and for West Rome High School in 1983 and 1985. The last crosstown rivalry football game between the schools was played at Barron in 1991 before they were consolidated into one high school. State football championship games were also held at Barron Stadium in 1953, 1954, 1969, 1971, 1972, and 1974. The stadium began hosting Shorter College football in 2005, the program's inaugural season.[6]

A proposed relocation of the facility in 2005 was scuttled after talks between local developers and the city broke down. Developers wanted to turn the 14-acre Barron Stadium area into a multi-use development with homes, offices, and retail. The athletic facilities would have been relocated to a new location adjacent to Rome's minor-league baseball park, State Mutual Stadium, with the new complex consisting of a new football stadium, track, gymnastics center, aquatic center, and other buildings.[7] Although an initial agreement was entered into by the developers and the city, cost estimates and a short timeline for development eventually derailed the project.[8] Other problems during the project discussions included the timeline for debt retirement of bonds that would have been issued from a newly created tax-allocation district and reimbursements to Floyd County under the proposed city/county agreement.[9]

On September 7, 2013, Barron Stadium hosted the first football game in school history for Berry College. Berry College was defeated 37-0 by Maryville College in front of a standing room only crowd of 6,700. The final Berry College football game of the 2013 season was also played at Barron Stadium. All 2014 Berry College home football games were played at Barron Stadium before the team began playing at their newly constructed on-campus stadium, Valhalla, at the beginning of the 2015 season.

The track at Barron Stadium is named the John Maddox Track after a local track standout and 1932 Summer Olympics hopeful who successfully lobbied the city for a better municipal track facility and helped found the Rome News Relays, a major local track & field event. In 1971, the track at Barron was named after Maddox following his sudden death the previous year.[10][11][12] Maddox was the grandson of local judge and U.S. Rep. John W. Maddox.[13]

There are also tennis courts located at the stadium complex.[14]

GHSA Football Championship Game Results at Barron Stadium

December 10, 1953 (Class B) Model 25, Ocilla 19[15]

December 10, 1954 (Class A) Jesup 26, Rockmart 6[16]

December 6, 1969 (Class C) Savannah Country Day 16, Adairsville 0[17]

November 19, 1971 (Class C) Mount de Sales 28, Adairsville 14[18]

December 8, 1972 (Class B) Southeast Bulloch 12, Adairsville 9[19]

December 14, 1974 (Class AA) Americus 6, West Rome 3[20]

December 10, 1977 (Class A) East Rome 35, Early County 7[21]

December 10, 1983 (Class AA) West Rome 35, Dooly County 0[22]

December 14, 1985 (Class AA) West Rome 28, Washington-Wilkes 10[23]

December 20, 1986 (Class A) Lincoln County 7, East Rome 6[24]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Barron Stadium.
  1. "Barron Stadium gets AstroTurf". Polk Fish-Wrap. July 30, 2010. Archived from the original on April 26, 2014. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  2. 1 2 "Shorter will pay RFPRA more to use Barron Stadium". Rome News-Tribune. September 22, 2012. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  3. 1 2 2009 Shorter Hawks Football Media Guide (PDF). p. 60.
  4. "Rome Coca Cola Bottling Co. breaks ground for new plant". Rome News-Tribune. December 8, 1974. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  5. "Rome City Schools receive textbooks from state, acquire athletic fields, launch band programs". Rome News-Tribune. August 6, 1976. Retrieved May 10, 2014.
  6. Jeff Gable (November 13, 2005). "Lasting memories". Rome News-Tribune. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  7. Alan Riquelmy (March 13, 2005). "Stadium talks move forward". Rome News-Tribune. p. 1A.
  8. Alan Riqelmy (January 12, 2006). "City of Rome ends West Third agreement". The Cedartown Standard. p. 4B. Retrieved May 10, 2014.
  9. Alan Riquelmy (December 4, 2005). "Numbers holding up W. 3rd deal". Rome News-Tribune. Retrieved May 10, 2014.
  10. Darrell Black (April 16, 1981). "Maddox ran to Olympic trials". Rome News-Tribune. p. 1-B. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  11. "Maddox ran to Olympic trials". Rome News-Tribune. July 7, 1996. p. 28. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  12. "John Maddox, Sr.". Rome Floyd Parks and Recreation Authority. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  13. Mike Cheatham (June 23, 2005). "Rome brothers blazed path across Georgia in 1930s". Darlington School.
  14. "Stadium & Fields". Rome Floyd Parks and Recreation Authority. Retrieved May 10, 2014.
  15. http://ghsfha.org/statechamps.php?aChampID=24
  16. http://ghsfha.org/statechamps.php?aChampID=27
  17. http://ghsfha.org/statechamps.php?aChampID=106
  18. http://ghsfha.org/statechamps.php?aChampID=116
  19. http://ghsfha.org/statechamps.php?aChampID=120
  20. http://ghsfha.org/statechamps.php?aChampID=126
  21. http://ghsfha.org/statechamps.php?aChampID=139
  22. http://ghsfha.org/statechamps.php?aChampID=164
  23. http://ghsfha.org/statechamps.php?aChampID=172
  24. http://ghsfha.org/statechamps.php?aChampID=177
Events and tenants
Preceded by
Jim Carroll Stadium
Host of the NAIA Football National Championship
2008-2013
Succeeded by
incumbent
Preceded by
Francis Field
Host of the NCCAA Victory Bowl
2013
Succeeded by
incumbent
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