Lt. Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Memorial Skating Rink
History
Opening
The Lt. Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Memorial Skating Centre rink opened in 1957 as an open-air skating rink. It was built with funds from the Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. foundation, which made the name fitting. In 1960, the rink was extended in length from 185 to 215 feet, with its official 85 foot hockey width. At the time, this made it the second largest in the northeastern United States, behind one in West Point, New York. This was alright for skating during calm weather, but it was impossible to skate during a storm. Early skaters even had to shovel the ice after a snowfall. This led to it being enclosed in 1965.
Although the rink was enclosed, it was open to the outside warm air. This led to fog forming on some nights. It was also unable to be used during the summer, a thing that most modern rinks do not have to do. This shortcomings led to replacement plans.
For many years, the rink was home to Barnstable High School's after prom celebration. The rink was used until 2008 when it was temporarily relocated to the high school because of the demolition of the rink.
Replacement
In the early 2000s, there were plans to replace the rink with one rink next door in the Hyannis Youth and Community Center. The original plans for the center consisted of one rink and an adjacent youth center. The plan was eventually scrapped and new plans incorporated the usage of two rinks, one gymnasium, a youth center, and a raised jogging track around the gymnasium.
Closing
The rink held its last public skate on March 22, 2009. This brought to an end 52 years of skating at the rink. The rink was eventually torn down, with a marker was placed in the spot of the former rink's center ice. One of the rinks will carry on the name of Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr., while the other was posthumously named after Patrick Butler, a local resident who was deeply involved in the project.
See also
References
- ^ Gold, Robert (March 23, 2009). "Kennedy Memorial Rink's farewell party". Cape Cod Online. Archived from the original on March 25, 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-02.
- ^ Patriot Staff (12 November 2010). "Early Files 11-12-10". The Barnstable Patriot. Retrieved 1 January 2011.