Chicago Coliseum
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The Chicago Coliseum was a large building in Chicago, Illinois that served as a sports arena, convention center, and exhibition hall over the course of its history. It hosted a number of political conventions, including the 1912 Republican National Convention.
The Coliseum was built on Wabash Avenue, near the corner of 16th Street, by candy manufacturer Charles Gunther, in 1899. It took the place of the transplanted Libby Prison, a warehouse turned Civil War prison that Gunter had shipped, brick by brick, from its original site in Richmond, Virginia, in 1889, and operated as a Civil War museum.
Gunter preserved part of Libby's facade, leading to the misconception that the Coliseum itself had once housed Union prisoners of war. In fact, the only penitents to "serve time" within the Coliseum's walls were hockey players sentenced to the penalty box.
The Coliseum hosted the Chicago Blackhawks of the NHL from 1926-1929 with a seating capacity of 6,000. It was also the home of the Chicago Cardinals (later renamed Chicago Americans) of the American Hockey Association 1926-27 and the Chicago Shamrocks of the American Hockey Association 1931-32. In June 1928, fight promoter Paddy Harmon announced plans to construct Chicago Stadium, with the Blackhawks as the marquee tenants.
As the 1928-29 NHL season approached, the Stadium was not yet ready, and Hawks owner Major Frederic McLaughlin had had a falling out with Harmon. Consequently, the Blackhawks arranged to continue playing at the Coliseum. However, they could only get ice time through January 1929; they played the remainder of their "home" games in Detroit and in Fort Erie, Ontario, across the Niagara River from Buffalo.
The Hawks were back at the Coliseum as the 1929-30 season opened, but negotiations with the Stadium resumed in the fall of 1929 after Harmon was deposed as head of the Chicago Stadium Corporation. In December 1929, they began play at the Stadium.
In 1932, another dispute led the Hawks to return temporarily to the Coliseum, for their first three home games of the 1932-33 campaign. On November 21, the Blackhawks defeated the Montreal Canadiens, 2-1, in their final game on Coliseum ice. Canadiens superstar Howie Morenz was the last player to score an NHL goal at the Coliseum, assisted by Aurel Joliat and Johnny Gagnon, at 7:06 of the second period.
With the Blackhawks gone, and the Depression on, use of the arena was limited. In 1935, promoter Leo Seltzer, drawing on the Depression-era popularity of roller skating, conceived the idea of a Roller Derby. in 1935, he staged the world's first Roller Derby at the arena. The event drew more then 20,000 people.
The arena was re-furbished in 1961 for use by the Chicago Packers, an expansion NBA team. Among the improvements was an increase of the seating capacity to 7000. The Packers would change their name to the Zephyrs in 1962. In 1963 they moved to Baltimore and once again renamed the team to the Bullets. Today they are known as the Washington Wizards. The NBA would return to Chicago with the Bulls expansion team in 1966, but the Bulls opted to use the Chicago Stadium as their home court, so the Coliseum remained without a major tenant.
The arena stood for a number of years after the Packers left, serving rock concerts, and protests during the 1968 Democratic Convention. Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), the radical antiwar organization, held their last national convention at the Coliseum in June 1969. It was demolished in 1982. Part of the Libby facade was given to the Chicago Historical Society. Coliseum Park, in the 1400 block of South Wabash, commemorates this historic structure.
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