The Grand National Rink was an outdoor skating rink located in the Brockton Village neighbourhood of Toronto, Ontario, Canada from 1896[1] to 1902.[2] At the time, it was the largest open-air rink in the city.[1][3] Its location is now the site of the McCormick Playground Arena at McCormick Park in the Little Portugal neighbourhood. 

Grand National Rink
Map
Address153 Brock Avenue
LocationToronto, Ontario
Coordinates43°38′47.1654″N 79°26′3.4106″W / 43.646434833°N 79.434280722°W / 43.646434833; -79.434280722
OwnerAndrew Wheeler Green
Opened1896
Closed1902

History edit

Business merchant Andrew Wheeler Green[4] owned the Grand National Rink[4][5] at 153 Brock Avenue,[6] south of Dundas Street. Opened in December 1896,[1] the north side of the grounds featured the ice rink and a heated bandstand.[7] Expansion plans began in March 1897 to add new amenities.[8] By May 1900, a new bandstand was constructed and the grounds featured a large fountain surrounded by evergreen trees.[9] A basketball court was added along with a race track for sprinting and distance running and an athletic field for jumping and vaulting.[10] One corner had a summertime outdoor roller skating rink[9][10] and an open-air hockey rink for the winter.[11]

Skating carnivals were held at the Grand National Rink[12][13][14] along with speed skating races that attracted crowds of up to 1,000 spectators.[15][16] In January 1902, the rink was awarded the bid by the Amateur Skating Association of Canada to hold the Ontario racing championships during the first week of February.[17] Event organizers expected the tournament to attract a wide array of speed skaters from across the country[17] and Green anticipated large attendance numbers.[18] However, its location was too distant from the city’s downtown to draw a big crowd[2] and the gathering became a local sporting event with a provincial name.[19] Green's incurred financial losses forced the closure of the Grand National Rink in 1902.[2]

Reopenings edit

The grounds of the Grand National Rink remained vacant until the end of 1907,[20] which was then followed by two brief reopenings.  

Royal Alexandra Rink edit

The north end of the Grand National Rink became the Royal Alexandra Rink, reopened as an outdoor hockey rink in January 1908[21] at 189 Brock Avenue.[22] Its secretary was Thomas Bert Andrew,[23] a hockey player with the Bank of Toronto Hockey Club in 1904[24][25][26] whose brother, William Herbert Andrew,[27] attended the coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra in 1902.[27] The last scheduled hockey game at the Royal Alexandra Rink was held in March 1908.[28] By April, the rink and its adjoining property became the grounds for a three-acre (1.2 ha) baseball field[29] with a large bleacher-seating area.[30]

Brock Avenue Rink edit

Toronto Marlboros treasurer Arthur Hillyard Birmingham[31] and his brother, team captain Herbert Frederick Birmingham,[31] organized a consortium of hockey players to bring the Toronto Professional Hockey Club, a predecessor of the Toronto Maple Leafs, over to the Eastern Canada Hockey Association (ECHA)[32][33][34] in response to the hockey club's withdrawal from the Ontario Professional Hockey League on November 19, 1909.[35] The Birmingham brothers telegraphed a proposal to the ECHA on November 24[33][34][36] about their plan to erect a large canvas roof over the site of the former Grand National Rink[36][37][38] and install wooden sideboards for a hockey rink by the end of 1909.[36] The cost to build the temporary structure with a seating capacity for 4,000 people[36] was CA$2,000.[36] Construction of a permanent hockey arena for the professional team was scheduled for the following year on the grounds of the baseball field.[34][36] The ECHA, which then became the Canadian Hockey Association (CHA), accepted the proposal on the condition that the new indoor arena had to be ready to house the Toronto club by the next summer.[39]

The former Royal Alexandra Rink became the Brock Avenue Rink, reopened in December 1909[40] at 189 Brock Avenue.[41] The ice rink featured amateur hockey games,[42] skating carnivals[43][44] and speed skating races.[45] When the CHA dissolved on January 15, 1910,[46][47] its hockey teams were transferred over to the National Hockey Association[46][47] and its agreement with the Birmingham brothers came to an end.[39] The last known skating event at the Brock Avenue Rink was held in March 1910[45] and the Mutual Street Arena in downtown Toronto became the first home arena of the Toronto Hockey Club and, subsequently, the Toronto Maple Leafs.[48]  

McCormick Park edit

The city of Toronto purchased the property of the former Grand National Rink for CA$34,000 in December 1910[49][50] for the purpose of establishing a playground.[49] The parcel of land became the McCormick Playground in 1911,[51] named in recognition of Mary Virginia McCormick, the daughter of American inventor Cyrus Hall McCormick[52][53] who lived in Toronto in 1908[54] and donated to the Toronto Playgrounds Association in 1910.[55][56][57] The McCormick Recreation Centre opened at the north end of the property in 1912[58][59] at 163 Brock Avenue.[60]

By 1963, the outdoor playground became known as McCormick Park.[61] A new McCormick Recreation Centre was opened in 1964[62][63] at 66 Sheridan Avenue,[64] located immediately east of the original building which itself became the site for the McCormick Playground Arena in 1972,[65] an indoor skating arena at 179 Brock Avenue.[65][66]

List of notable speed skaters edit

Notable athletes who skated at the Grand National Rink include the following:

  • Alice Louisa "Louie" Hern, Toronto women's skating champion in 1900 in the mile-long (1.6 km) mixed pairs[11][67][68] who married her skating partner in 1902.[69]
  • Frederick "Fred" James Robson, Canadian skating champion in the 220-yard (200 m) straightaways in 1900[80][81] and 1901[3][76][77][78] who later won speed skating world records in 1904[82] and 1911.[83]
  • Lot Roe, Ontario skating champion in the two-mile (3.2 km) and five-mile (8 km) races at the rink in 1902[84] who later won a speed skating world record in 1910.[85]
  • Lewis "Lou" Leslie Walker, Toronto men's skating champion in 1900 in the mile-long (1.6 km) mixed pairs with Hern[67][68] who later married her in 1902.[69]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "The Rinks". Toronto Evening Star. 22 December 1896. p. 2.
  2. ^ a b c "Comment on Current Sporting Topics". Toronto Daily Star. 13 December 1902. p. 15.
  3. ^ a b c "Skating Races New Year's Day". Toronto Daily Star. 28 December 1901. p. 6.
  4. ^ a b "Obituary". Milton Canadian Champion. 25 September 1930. p. 1.
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  6. ^ Toronto City Directory, 1898 (PDF). Toronto: Might Directory Company, Limited. 1898. pp. 110, 1462. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
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  8. ^ "Beyond the Subway". Toronto Evening Star. 30 March 1897. p. 2.
  9. ^ a b "Roller Polo in Toronto". Toronto Daily Star. 10 May 1900. p. 8.
  10. ^ a b "Grand National Sports". Toronto Daily Star. 30 May 1900. p. 8.
  11. ^ a b "Toronto Speed Skaters". Toronto Daily Star. 14 December 1900. p. 8.
  12. ^ "By the Way". Toronto Globe. 4 February 1897. p. 10.
  13. ^ "Cycle Chat". Toronto Globe. 22 December 1898. p. 10.
  14. ^ "Vanity Fair on Ice". Toronto Daily Star. 30 January 1901. p. 2.
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  16. ^ "Champion Robson Was Beaten Twice". Toronto Daily Star. 2 January 1901. p. 8.
  17. ^ a b "Skating Races Here in February". Toronto Daily Star. 13 January 1902. p. 3.
  18. ^ "To-Night's Championships". Toronto Daily Star. 6 February 1902. p. 8.
  19. ^ "The News of Sport". Toronto Globe. 10 February 1902. p. 8.
  20. ^ Toronto City Directory, 1907 (PDF). Toronto: Might Directories, Limited. 1907. p. 118. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
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  45. ^ a b "Jacobson Is a Good One". Toronto Daily Star. 5 March 1910. p. 25.
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  52. ^ "Miss McCormick, 80, of 'Oaklands,' Dies". Globe and Mail. 27 May 1941. p. 4.
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  68. ^ a b "Speediest Lady Skater". Toronto Daily Star. 7 February 1901. p. 8.
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  76. ^ a b "Toronto Skaters Came Home To-Day". Toronto Daily Star. 18 February 1901. p. 8.
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  78. ^ a b "Toronto Skaters Have No Excuses". Toronto Daily Star. 3 February 1902. p. 8.
  79. ^ "Larry Piper". Toronto Daily Star. 24 February 1908. p. 11.
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  85. ^ "Roe Skating Champion". New York Times. 30 January 1910. p. 1.