Richmond Ice Rink

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Richmond Ice Rink
Richmond Ice Rink.jpg
Location Sports Drome
Clevedon Road, Twickenham, London Borough of Richmond upon Thames
Opened 1928
Closed 1992
Demolished 1992
Owner
Tenants Richmond Hawks (1934-1937)
Oxford University (1934-1935)
Richmond Redwings (1937-1938)
Earls Court Marlboroughs (1948-1949)
Richmond Ambassadors (1950-1962)
Richmond Flyers (1976-1991)
Capacity 1,250 (seated)
2,500 (total.cap)
Dimensions 200 ft x 81 ft

Richmond Ice Rink was an ice rink at Clevedon Road,[1] Twickenham, formerly in Middlesex and now in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. When it opened, in 1928, it had the longest ice surface in any indoor rink in the world[1] and it soon became the premier rink in London.[2][3] The rink closed in 1992 and the building was demolished.

History

The site

Richmond Ice Rink in a sense replaced a roller-skating rink at a very similar location.[3] This had been built before the First World War on Cambridge Road, East Twickenham, part of the lands of the historic Cambridge House owned by the poet Richard Owen Cambridge and his son Archdeacon George Cambridge. The disused rink was bought in 1914 by the French industrialist Charles Pelabon for use as a munitions factory. He built four or five more workshops over the extensive site, and one of the last was the red-brick riverside building of 1915 which later became Richmond Ice Rink. From 1914-15 about 6,000 Belgian refugees, some of them injured soldiers, settled in the Twickenham and Richmond area after the Germans invaded their country and most of the bread-winners became workers at the factory.

The new rink

After the war almost all the Belgian refugees returned home, but Charles Pelabon continued to use the site for general engineering until 1924. He then sold it to Charles Langdon, who had developed the ice rink at Hammersmith.[1] He converted the factory into an ice rink which opened on 18 December 1928. All the skating clubs that had previously been based at the ice-rinks at Hammersmith and Earl's Court transferred to Richmond, making it the premier rink in London.[2]

When it opened in 1928 the ice surface (286 ft long by 80 ft wide) was the longest in any indoor rink in the world.[1] However, it was shortened to 200 feet in 1935.[1]

Joachim von Ribbentrop, appointed German Ambassador to Britain in 1936, bought a house next door to the ice rink; his hobby was ice dancing and he reputedly spent his evenings skating and socialising at the rink. He was appointed German foreign minister in 1938 and was later executed for war crimes following the Nuremberg Trials in 1946.[2]

At the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 the rink was ordered to close but the American Embassy persuaded the British Government to allow it to reopen as many American servicemen had skated and played ice hockey at the rink.[1]

The first ice hockey game at the rink was played on December 26, 1928. In a challenge match, United Services defeated Blaine Sexton's Team, 4-3. Richmond Ice Rink was the home ice for numerous ice hockey teams. Richmond Flyers which played at premier league level in the British Hockey League was perhaps the most successful, under then coach Alec Goldstone.

Closure and demolition

The rink was sold in 1978 to a property developer, who kept it running until 1987, when it was bought by another property company, the London and Edinburgh Trust,[4] then chaired by John Beckwith and his brother Peter,[5] who intended to develop the site for luxury housing. The planning consent stipulated that the company had to construct a new rink on an alternative site in the borough. In 1989, Richmond upon Thames Council accepted £2.5 million[4] as compensation and withdrew this condition.

In 1992, the rink closed and the building was demolished. No replacement rink has been built.[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 The London Borough of Richmond upon Thames Local Studies Volunteer Support Group (2013). The Building of a Borough. London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, 59–61. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "Richmond Ice Rink: From "leisure centre" to luxury apartments in Twickenham". Twickenham Museum. http://www.twickenham-museum.org.uk/detail.asp?ContentID=336. Retrieved 29 March 2013. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 "'The best ice rink in the world'", Richmond and Twickenham Times, 19 August 2005. Retrieved on 28 April 2013. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 Gareth A Davies. "Ice Skating: Richmond quintet find new homes have replaced their old haunt", The Daily Telegraph, 14 February 2002. Retrieved on 28 April 2013. 
  5. Chris Blackhurst. "Tory fund-raiser blamed for loss of town ice rink", The Independent on Sunday, 28 July 1996. Retrieved on 28 April 2013. 
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