
Notes after a busy Easter weekend:
If you happened to hear or read about a rookie getting a home run in his first major league at-bat on Opening Day last week, it was almost right.
Braden Shewmake, who was an All-American baseball player for Texas A&M, began his rookie season with the Chicago White Sox by making his first big league hit a home run. He did this against Detroit starter Kenta Maeda on Opening Day last Thursday at Detroit’s Comerica Park. On the first pitch.
But it wasn’t his first at-bat in the majors. In a “cup-of-coffee” stint in the major leagues last year with the Atlanta Braves, Shewmake, who was selected by the Braves with the 21st pick in the MLB draft in 2019, went 0-for-4.
Making this more interesting for Rapides Parish Journal readers, Shewmake, 26, is the son-in-law of Ashley Polk Hart, a native of Alexandria. Her sister, Kristi Polk Kaspar, related the local connections to me. A lifelong resident of Alexandria until 1991, Kristi and her husband, former Louisiana College basketball player Rod Kasper, moved in ’91 to Texas.
The 6-foot-4, 190-pound Shewmake, who made several fine fielding plays at shortstop on Opening Day, was born and raised in Wylie, Texas. Braden married Ashley’s daughter, Emily Bates. Braden and Emily met at A&M, where he was the stud player for the baseball team and she was a legendary player for the women’s soccer team.
Kristi, incidentally, is also the aunt of former LSU pitcher Alden Cartwright, who finished a three-year stint as a Tiger after a season-ending injury that required Tommy John surgery in 2016. …
Fast growing Lakeland, possible path for Alexandria?
We returned last week from a visit to Lakeland, Florida, which is in Polk County. Census data shows Polk County led the nation for new residents in 2023. A veteran realtor there says property taxes are generally more affordable there, and it’s an attractive, well-run, clean area with job opportunities and two colleges and many top-notch parks and beautiful lakes.
It’s also the home of spring training for the Detroit Tigers, and housing is more affordable than nearby Tampa or Orlando, where more job opportunities are.
True, the blessing of such attractiveness has also been a curse in that traffic, for example, can be horribly congested at times.
But it got me to wondering that possibilities for growth might exist in Alexandria that haven’t been fully explored. There was an area in Lakeland that languished and was forgotten by most Lakeland folks for nearly 40 years. A group of community developers and investors, led by the heiress to the Publix Grocery founder George Jenkins, got together to repurpose the historic site of the old railyards. The nearly century old railyard, once the largest in Florida, closed in the 1980s.
Carol Jenkins Barnett and her husband and others purchased the railyard and acquired more than a dozen adjoining properties. The group, with help from master planners and the word-renowned architectural and park planning group Sasaki, repurposed the 168 acres into beautiful Bonnet Spring Park, which opened in October of 2022.
It’s not a city park but a private investment for the public. In addition to that, the city’s parks and recreation and cultural arts department boasts more than 70 venues for activities ranging from pickleball to spray pads to zip lines. The City of Alexandria may be smaller than Lakeland, but it has room for growth. For example, it has only two venues for pickleball, with city tennis courts that could be designed to accommodate – and promote – perhaps the fastest-growing sport in America. …
Big league ’54 attraction, big day for a Cubbie from Boyce
Seventy years ago on this day in 1954, the Baltimore Orioles played the Chicago Cubs before almost 3,000 fans in a 2:30 p.m. exhibition game at Alexandria’s Bringhurst Field. The day before, the Orioles beat the Cubs, 6-1, in Shreveport. Ernie Banks, “Mister Cub,” was at shortstop for Chicago, and teammate Ralph Kiner belted a home run over the center field fence, but “the greatest applause of the day,” according to the Town Talk, went to Cubs pitcher Jim Willis, a Boyce native and former pitcher for the Alexandria Aces, when he went to the mound in relief in the sixth inning.














