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Smith_Rink Latitude and Longitude:

41°23′03″N 73°57′44″W / 41.3843°N 73.9622°W / 41.3843; -73.9622
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Smith Rink
Location698 Mills Road, West Point, New York 10996
Coordinates 41°23′03″N 73°57′44″W / 41.3843°N 73.9622°W / 41.3843; -73.9622
Owner United States Military Academy
OperatorUnited States Military Academy
Construction
Opened1930 (93–94 years ago)
Closed1985 (38–39 years ago)
Demolished1986 (37–38 years ago)
Tenants
Army ice hockey 1930–1985

The Smith Rink was an outdoor ice rink on the campus of the United States Military Academy in West Point, New York. The rink served as the home for the Army ice hockey program for 55 years and was the last outdoor venue used for Division I hockey when the program was downgraded in 1973.

History

Because West Point was too far away from many of the existing rinks at the time, Army's ice hockey team required a rink of their own. The Academy built the Smith Rink for the program after almost 30 years in operation, only the third permanent on-campus venue in the country (after the Hobey Baker Memorial Rink and the Davis Rink). The facility cost approximately $120,000 to construct [1] and the team would use the Smith Rink as its home for the next 55 years.

In the 1960s, as a member of ECAC Hockey, Army remained in the upper division when the conference was split in two despite not having an indoor arena, one of the league requirements for being considered a major program. In 1973, however, the NCAA introduced numerical classifications for all sports and as a result Army dropped down to ECAC 2 for the remainder of the decade. In 1980 Army returned to Division I, but played a partial Division II schedule until 1985 when the indoor Tate Rink was completed and Army could again compete on equal footing with their contemporaries.

The Smith Rink was demolished less than one year after the team played its last game and the space is now occupied by the Herbert Alumni Center. [2]

References

  1. ^ "SEXTET OUTSKATES ARMY TEAM 10 TO 0". The Harvard Crimson. January 12, 1931. Retrieved April 22, 2021.
  2. ^ "Assembly, Volume 45". Google Books. 1986. Retrieved April 13, 2020.