Two sports were the initial users of the rink,
Ice skating and
curling. In 1888, the Caledonian Hockey Club was formed and the rink was first used for ice hockey. As the popularity of ice hockey grew, the rink became the primary site of ice hockey in Toronto. 1892 and later Ontario ice hockey championship were played at the rink. Toronto's first professional ice hockey team, the
Toronto Professional Hockey Club, began play there in 1906. When ice was not present, the building was used for other purposes.
Boxing was another sport held at the Rink. Fights were held from 1900 until 1902.
Rube Ferns defeated
Jack Bennett on May 24, 1900 to win a World
Welterweight title fight. Ferns would fight Matty Matthews a year later at the rink in another 142 lb. title fight. In June 1886, a large choral festival of over 1,000 performers, 100-piece orchestra, children's choir, plus soloists was held at the rink. Church gatherings in the 1880s attracted up to 4,000 persons. In 1906, the rink building was the site of one of the first displays of motor cars in Toronto. Over worth of automobiles were shown. By the 1910s, the
seating capacity for spectators was not sufficient, and the
Arena Gardens complex was built on the Mutual Street site. In 1937, the Arena Gardens was renamed the Mutual Street Arena. In 1962, curling would return to the site, when curling sheets were installed at the Arena, which was no longer used for ice hockey. The Arena, by then known as 'The Terrace', was demolished in 1989 with residential highrise and Arena Gardens park on the site. File:Caledonian Skating and Curling Club - Interior.jpg|Interior File:Caledonian-now-open-1875.jpg|Opening announcement ==References==