Veterans Memorial Fieldhouse | |
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Location | 2590 5th Avenue Huntington, West Virginia 25703 |
Opened | 1950 |
Owner | Greater Huntington Park and Recreation District (pending transfer to Marshall University) |
Operator | Greater Huntington Park and Recreation District |
Capacity | 8,500 (6,500 for basketball) |
Tenants | |
St. Joseph Catholic High School basketball Marshall Thundering Herd basketball (NCAA) (1950–81) Huntington High School† basketball (1950–90) Huntington East High School† basketball (1950–90) Huntington Hornets (IHL) (1956–57) Huntington Heroes (AIFA) (2005–06) Huntington High School† basketball (2006–07) West Virginia Wild (CIFL) (was to begin in 2009) † Huntington East High School and the original Huntington High School were consolidated into the current Huntington High School in 1996. |
The Veterans Memorial Fieldhouse is a 8,500-seat (6,500 for basketball) multi-purpose arena in Huntington, West Virginia. It was built in 1950. Prior to the completion of the Huntington Civic Center (now known as Big Sandy Superstore Arena) in 1976, it was the only large arena in the city.
The Fieldhouse was the home of the Marshall University basketball teams until the completion of the Cam Henderson Center in 1981. It also hosted the West Virginia public high school championships on a rotating basis with Charleston and Morgantown between 1962 and 1970, and the state Catholic championships every year from 1950 until the public and Catholic leagues were merged in 1977.
The arena was home to the International Hockey League's short-lived Huntington Hornets for the league's 1956–57 season, which was not successful, as the team went 26–30–4 for the season.
It was the home of all high schools in the city until 1990 and was the home of St. Joseph Catholic High School until 2011. It was the home of the Huntington Heroes American Indoor Football League team in 2005-06 before they moved to Big Sandy Superstore Arena. In addition, the venue also hosts several high school athletic events, including wrestling and basketball matches.
In the aftermath of the November 14, 1970 Marshall University air tragedy, which claimed the lives of 75 Marshall University football team members, coaches, support staff, boosters and Southern Airways flight crew, the Fieldhouse was the site of a community memorial service on Sunday evening, November 15, 1970 that attracted an estimated 7,000 mourners to the arena.
Since the completion of the two more modern facilities, the Fieldhouse had been the home of smaller concert events. The facility was built in an era when boxing was more popular and thus was designed around that sport and remained an excellent venue for boxing and professional wrestling.
After Marshall moved out, the Fieldhouse started to fall into a state of disrepair. As of 2011, the aging struture was in need of significant roof repairs and interior renovations and had become a financial burden for its owner/operator, the Greater Huntington Park and Recreation District, which operates the arena at a financial loss annually.
In April, 2011, the Greater Huntington Park and Recreation District board voted unanimously to transfer the Veterans Memorial Fieldhouse property to Marshall University, which will redevelop the site as part of a $30 million athletic facilities project approved by the Marshall University Board of Governors. The only condition of the transfer was that the area be known as the "Veterans Memorial" area.
The Huntington Herald-Dispatch reported April 29, 2011 that Marshall University will spend $5.4 million on the Veterans Memorial Fieldhouse phase of the facilities project, which will include demolition of the 61-year old venue and construction of a new soccer stadium complex and veteran's memorial park on the site. To allow for the project, the university agreed to allow St. Joseph Catholic High School to move their home games to the Henderson Center.
After discussions with the park board, it was decided that the final event at the Fieldhouse would be held on February 29, 2012, after which contractors will begin demolition of the building.