The Auditorium held its final event on October 1, 1967; a concert by Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians. Connaught Park, later known as Hippodrome d'Aylmer, was a thoroughbred, steeplechase and harness racing track, later having a casino and live betting parlor, that operated from 1913 until 2009. Coming off a Stanley Cup Championship in 1923, they had won three cups in the previous four seasons. Gerard won the Stanley Cup in four consecutive years from 1920 to 1923, and was the first player to win the Cup four years in a row. TD Place Arena, originally the Ottawa Civic Centre, is an indoor arena located in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, seating 9,500. The arena was demolished in 1967 and replaced at that location by the YMCA-YWCA building (180 Argyle Avenue). After the Senators folded in 1954, attributed to the rise of televised ice hockey matches, the junior Ottawa-Hull Canadiens played in the Auditorium. Ottawa Mayor J. E. Stanley Lewis proclaimed the station "officially on the air". The site was sold in 2009 for a housing development. He ended his career coaching the St. Louis Eagles in 1934, before retiring due to the same throat issue that had ended his playing career.

The arena was demolished in 1967 and replaced at that location by the YMCA-YWCA building (180 Argyle Avenue). It was built in 1923 with a 10,000-person capacity (seated and standing) to be the home arena of the NHL's Ottawa Senators by the Ottawa Auditorium Limited, a consortium controlled by T. Franklin Ahearn and Senators' owners Edgar Dey and Tommy Gorman.

The club, which was officially the Ottawa Hockey Club, was known by several nicknames, including the Generals in the 1890s, the Silver Seven from 1903 to 1907 and the Senators dating from 1908. From 1912 until 1931, with the opening of Maple Leaf Gardens, it was the premier site of ice hockey in Toronto, being home to teams from the National Hockey Association (NHA), the National Hockey League (NHL), the Ontario Hockey Association (OHA) and the International Hockey League (IHL).

By 1930, the Auditorium was losing money as the Ottawa Senators losses increased. modifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata. An arena is an enclosed area, often circular or oval-shaped, designed to showcase theatre, musical performances, or sporting events.

It was the primary site of amateur and professional ice hockey in Montreal until 1918. The sticks would be used by NHL players, and one exists from the 1934 All-Star Game. Ottawa borders Gatineau, Quebec; the two form the core of the Ottawa–Gatineau census metropolitan area (CMA) and the National Capital Region (NCR). The club won the Allan Cup Canadian amateur championship in 1949. The Senators won the series by three games to two in the best-of-five game series.

After 1934, the NHL franchise relocated to St. Louis, Missouri, and the Ottawa Senators became a senior amateur team, first playing in the Quebec Amateur Hockey Association's 'Montreal Group.' Vous pouvez partager vos connaissances en l’améliorant (comment ?)

The club would play in the National Hockey Association and the National Hockey League.

The April 13 game at the Auditorium was the last Stanley Cup finals game in Ottawa until the June 2, 2007, game played at Scotiabank Place between the modern Senators and the Anaheim Ducks. A global power city, New York City has been described as the cultural, financial, and media capital of the world, and exerts a significant impact upon commerce, entertainment, research, technology, education, politics, tourism, art, fashion, and sports. Today, Ottawa hockey clubs are represented in all age brackets, in both men's and women's, in amateur and professional. The Glebe Community Association uses the latter definition. Its replacement, the Ottawa Civic Centre (arena) opened in 1967.

Auditorium in 1953. The Ottawa Civic Centre opened in December 1967. Among the performers known to have performed there: Ottawa radio station CFRA's first broadcast was from the auditorium on May 3, 1947 with a concert by Percy Faith and his 40 piece Orchestra, and a 60 voice choir to an audience of more than 10,000 people. It is located just south of Ottawa's downtown area in the Capital Ward with its northern border being demarcated by Highway 417, the Queensway.
selon les recommandations des projets correspondants. By 1930, the Auditorium was losing money as the Ottawa Senators losses increased.

In 1934, the Ottawa Auditorium, owners of the Ottawa Hockey Association decided it could no longer operate the Senators of the National Hockey League in Ottawa due to mounting financial losses. The Stanley Cup is the championship trophy awarded annually to the National Hockey League (NHL) playoff winner. In 1920, the team moved to Hamilton, Ontario and became the Hamilton Tigers. While it was the first team in New York City, it was eclipsed by the second, the New York Rangers, which arrived in 1926 under the ownership of the Amerks' landlord, Madison Square Garden. Ottawa ice hockey clubs date back to the first decade of recorded organized ice hockey play.

Edgar Ernest Dey was an early amateur and professional ice hockey player, who may have been involved in the first trade involving professional hockey players, and an athlete in canoeing.

It is home to the nation's capital city, Ottawa, and the nation's most populous city, Toronto, which is also Ontario's provincial capital.

Mutual Street Arena, initially called Arena Gardens or just the Arena, was an ice hockey arena and sports and entertainment venue in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The city's fast pace has inspired the term New York minute. Construit principalement pour le hockey sur glace, il était également utilisé pour des manifestations sportives et des concerts. The arena hosted games of the 1931 and 1958 Memorial Cup Canadian men's junior ice hockey championship finals. Gorman sold his share to Ahearn, picking up ownership of the Connaught race track in Aylmer, Quebec. The first NHL game held there was played on December 26, 1923 between Ottawa and the Montreal Canadiens, before 8300 fans, in which Howie Morenz scored his first NHL goal. Edward George Gerard was a Canadian professional ice hockey player, coach, and manager. He was a canoeing champion of Canada. [3]. The Maroons then defeated the defending Stanley Cup champion Victoria Cougars of the newly renamed Western Hockey League three games to one in a best-of-five series to win their first Stanley Cup.

Après le déménagement des Sénateurs à Saint-Louis en 1934, l'arena accueille les Sénateurs d'Ottawa, équipe amateur qui évolue dans la Ligue de hockey senior du Québec puis les Canadiens de Hull-Ottawa de l'Eastern Professional Hockey League. I was there. He and his brothers Frank Edgar Dey and William Ernest Dey built the various Dey's Arenas where the Senators played until 1922–23.

With temporary seating and standing room it can hold 10,585. The franchise was still a drain on the Auditorium and was folded by the NHL in 1935. Gerard also coached the New York Americans for two seasons between 1930 and 1932, before returning to the Maroons for two more seasons. As of 2011, the area's population was 11,184.

They were the third expansion team in the history of the National Hockey League (NHL) and the second to play in the United States.

The entire Stanley family supported the sport, the sons and daughters all playing and promoting the game. Built primarily for ice hockey, the arena was also used for sports events, assemblies and musical concer
It is composed of a large open space surrounded on most or all sides by tiered seating for spectators, and may be covered by a roof. Based in St. Louis, Missouri, the Eagles played for only one year, the 1934–35 NHL season. The Senators won the 1927 Stanley Cup in the Auditorium, the decisive game on April 13, 1927 against the Boston Bruins. [9], On April 3, 1957 Elvis Presley performed two shows.