Hinkle Fieldhouse

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Hinkle Fieldhouse
Location 510 W 49th Street

Indianapolis, Indiana

Built 1928
Opened March 7, 1928
Renovated 1989
Owner Butler University
Construction cost $1,000,000
Architect Fermor Spencer Cannon
Tenants Butler Bulldogs (Horizon League) 1928 - Present
Capacity 10,757
Butler Fieldhouse
(U.S. National Historic Landmark)
Hinkle Fieldhouse (Indiana)
Hinkle Fieldhouse
Location: Indianapolis, Indiana
Coordinates: 39°50′36.29″N 86°10′2.42″W / 39.8434139, -86.1673389Coordinates: 39°50′36.29″N 86°10′2.42″W / 39.8434139, -86.1673389
Built/Founded: 1927
Architect: Cannon,Fermor S.
Added to NRHP: December 22, 1983
NRHP Reference#: 83003573 [1]
Governing body: Private

Hinkle Fieldhouse is a basketball arena located on the campus of Butler University in Indianapolis, Indiana. When it was built in 1928, it was the largest basketball arena in the United States, and it retained that distinction until the late 1950s. It is the sixth-oldest college basketball arena still in use, and was the inspiration for the design of Conseco Fieldhouse, home of the Indiana Pacers.

[edit] History

Hinkle Fieldhouse and the 36,000-seat Butler Bowl football stadium were two of the first buildings erected when the university moved to the Fairview campus. The facilities were promoted by a corporation of 41 Indianapolis businessmen who viewed it as a prize for the Circle City as well as for Butler. When Butler signed a lease with the Indiana High School Athletic Association allowing the high school state tournament to be played there, the corporation agreed to finance the building at a a cost of $1,000,000.

The court was reconfigured in 1933 from running east to west to run from north to south, as over half of the seats were at the ends of the court, when event viewing is typically better from the sides. Butler hosted the tourney from 1928 to 1971, except for 1943-1945, when the building housed the US Army Air Forces and US Navy as a barracks during World War II.

It was as host to annual high school basketball championship game that the fieldhouse was home to the Milan Miracle, the memorable 1954 victory of tiny Milan High School team over the much larger Muncie Central. The film Hoosiers, loosely based on that event, used Hinkle Fieldhouse and the memorable voice of original announcer Hilliard Gates in filming the climactic game of the popular movie.

A major $1.5 million facelift in 1989 reduced the seating capacity from 15,000 to 11,043, as well as renovating the main reception area, basketball offices, film rooms and team locker rooms. Hinkle Fieldhouse hosted the entire 1994 Horizon League men's basketball conference tournament as well as parts of the 2004 and 2008 Horizon League tournaments.

The fieldhouse was originally called Butler Fieldhouse, and was renamed in 1966 to honor Paul D. "Tony" Hinkle (1899 - 1992), who was basketball coach at Butler for 41 seasons ending in 1970. In 1983, it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

In 2006, to celebrate Butler University's 150th Anniversary, a documentary about Hinkle Fieldhouse was aired on ESPN entitled "Indiana's Basketball Cathedral".

[edit] Events

A panorama of the interior of Hinkle Fieldhouse, taken during the first half of a basketball game between the Butler Bulldogs and the University of Wisconsin Green Bay
A panorama of the interior of Hinkle Fieldhouse, taken during the first half of a basketball game between the Butler Bulldogs and the University of Wisconsin Green Bay

The Fieldhouse has served as host to U.S. presidents (Herbert Hoover, Dwight Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, George H.W. Bush, and Bill Clinton), Evangelist Billy Graham, Ice Shows, professional basketball teams, Olympic basketball trials, the first USSR-USA basketball game, all-star basketball games for the NBA, ABA and the East-West College All-Stars, national indoor track events, tennis matches of both Bill Tilden and Jack Kramer, national equestrian events, the Roller Derby, a six-day bicycle race, a three ring circus, as well as the volleyball matches during the 1987 Pan American Games. At 15,000 the volleyball match was the highest attended volleyball match ever held in the United States.

[edit] References

  1. ^ National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2006-03-15).