The McAlester Rockets played at Jeff Lee Stadium. It is known today as Hook Eales Stadium, after the site was purchased by McAlester public schools from the city of McAlester. The site of a regional Works Project Administration office, a WPA project to build an armory and Jeff Lee Pool were completed in 1936, with Jeff Lee Stadium opening in 1937. The Rockets drew between 40,000 and 63,000 every season, except for the 23,000 in their final season of 1956. Today, Hook Eales stadium is utilized by McAlester Buffaoles high school sports teams. It is located at 1261 North 6th Street, McAlester, Oklahoma. Previous McAlester teams played at venues of several different names. When professional baseball first arrived in the area, although the team was identified as being from South McAlester, its games were played in the nearby town of Krebs. This venue was called Krebs Park. A 1905 city directory locates the league park along the interurban railway in Krebs, which followed a roadbed that is now Electric Avenue. A fairground for early editions of the Pittsburg County Fair was also located there. After the town of South McAlester merged into McAlester in 1906, the team name changed from "South McAlester" to "McAlester" and the playing field moved from Krebs to an area on the south side of McAlester that would eventually become the new county fairgrounds. The new field was called League Park. The new League Park was located at the southern terminus of the Second Ward streetcar line. By 1910, the county fairgrounds had also been relocated to this site. Prior to hosting the fairgrounds, the site, located on the southeast corner of South Avenue and South 11th Street, had been home to the McAlester Driving Association Park. Fans accessing the ballpark by streetcar disembarked at the terminal station located at Seneca Avenue and South 11th, then walked approximately one block south to the fairgrounds along South Avenue. In 1915 a new Western Association ballpark was built on the McAlester end of the streetcar line, which was referred to as Interurban Park. When professional baseball returned in 1922, another new grandstand was built on the same fairgrounds site, which could be accessed either by streetcar or by automobile along a newly-paved stretch of Seneca Avenue from South 6th to the terminal station at South 11th.
Notable alumni
Whitey Herzog 1949-1950
inductee Whitey Herzog played his first professional season for the McAlester Rockets in 1949. Herzog hit.279 with 0 home runs and 111 hits in 96 games. He played for the Rockets again in 1950, hitting.351, with 161 hits and 4 home runs. It is said that Dorrell Herzog received his nickname "Whitey" while playing for McAlester.