Followers

Saturday, March 8, 2025

Henry J. Fitzpatrick Ice Rink

For many years, playing ice hockey on a full-size surface in Holyoke was limited to the outdoor rink at Mackenzie Stadium. Portable boards were erected late in the autumn, and the rink was flooded with water during the cold winter months to form and maintain an ice surface. A mild winter would severely limit or negate skating activity.

In 1970, an opportunity arose to build an indoor ice arena with refrigeration installed to ensure ice throughout the season. The state had plans to construct Interstate 391, and city land was necessary for the project. The state would build and manage a $1.1 million indoor ice rink in exchange for the land loss.

The low bidder for the contract was D. A. Sullivan & Sons, Inc. of Northampton. A Groundbreaking Ceremony was held on January 17, 1972. 

The Henry J. Fitzpatrick Skating Rink was dedicated and opened on December 22, 1972. Boston Bruins star hockey player Bobby Orr was the guest speaker at a banquet that evening to raise funds for the newly formed Holyoke Youth Hockey Association. 

The Fitzpatrick Arena is a public ice skating facility managed by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Department of Conservation and Recreation. It is used for public skating, figure skating, sled hockey, and ice hockey.

Sources of news articles and information:

Newspapers.com (paid subscription): Citations: Holyoke (Massachusetts) Transcript-Telegram; publication dates are shown.

Holyoke Public Library, Holyoke, Massachusetts, City Directories.

Registry of Deeds, Hampden County, Springfield, Massachusetts.




        Ice hockey in Holyoke was played outdoors until the Henry J. Fitzpatrick Ice Rink was built.









































Holyoke Ten Pin Lanes

On April 7, 1960, Frank H. Cataldo, principal of the Holyoke Shopping Center on South Street, announced that additional stores and a bowling alley would be added to the plaza land. The bowling alley would be located on the north side of Davis Street, separate from the plaza itself.

A private opening of the bowling center occurred on September 29, 1960.

On October 25, 1960, Civil Engineer William Pharmer prepared a Site Survey for property owned by C and K Realty Corp., Frank H. Cataldo, President. The property was bordered by Davis St. (now Parenteau Dr.), Elm St. (segment now discontinued), Ross Ave. (now discontinued), and Maple Street. 

The survey aimed to segment a portion of the land for constructing a ten-pin bowling alley and 250-car parking area, which Mr. Cataldo planned to build on the northern portion of the property. The land was purchased from Kenneth Seyffer on March 22, 1957. The southern portion of the property would not be part of the lease arrangement with the bowling facility operators.

The Holyoke Ten Pin Lanes bowling center opened privately on September 29, 1960. The facility had 50 lanes, a restaurant, snack bar, nursery, free babysitting service, a pro shop, lockers, and meeting rooms. Popular in its day, S&H Green Stamps were given for various purchases.

In 1961, plans were announced by Frank H Cataldo that the shopping plaza would be extended from the Hadley Falls Trust Co. bank branch to the Holyoke Ten Pin Lanes beyond Davis Street. A Medical Center would be built on the southwest side of the bowling center. The project did not materialize.

Two years after its opening, on October 17, 1962, explosions and a fire leveled the bowling center. On December 6, 1962, it was announced that the center would be rebuilt for ten-pin and candlepin bowling, but this did not occur.

In April 1963, the rubble was cleared, and the property remained vacant until 1972. 

In June 1970, the Carlson Construction Company of Cochituate, MA, commenced grading the area for a planned 60,000-square-foot discount chain store. However, the work was stopped because the city was involved in land-taking issues with the state that would impact the store site.

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts Department of Environmental Management acquired the entire property by eminent domain on January 6, 1971, to construct an indoor hockey rink, which opened in December 1972.

Sources of news articles and information:

Newspapers.com (paid subscription): Citations: Holyoke (Massachusetts) Transcript-Telegram; publication dates are shown.

Holyoke Public Library, Holyoke, Massachusetts, City Directories.

Registry of Deeds, Hampden County, Springfield, Massachusetts.

The area of the leased Holyoke Ten-Pin Lanes is bordered in red.








































































Friday, March 7, 2025

Holyoke Shopping Center (South Street Shopping Center)

Frank Cataldo was born in Somerville, MA, in 1910 and raised in Lynn. Early in his career, he managed the Clinton Meat Markets and owned Cataldo Market in Lynn. He later served as a Meat Supervisor for the Stop & Shop Companies and purchased the Holyoke City Market on High St. in 1949. In May 1953, he launched a more significant venture: Holyoke's first shopping plaza, anchored by his grocery store. 

On August 2, 1954, Holyoke Water Power Company (HWP) sold to Frank H. Cataldo the triangle-shaped property bounded by South, Elm, and Davis St. (now Parenteau Drive). The property was known as the Baldwin tract. Two additional parcels were purchased from Kenneth Seyffer and HWP on the north side of Davis St., bounded by Elm, Ross Ave., Maple and South St.

Holyoke businesses designed, constructed, and completed Mr. Cataldo's grocery store, Food Mart. The architect was Frederick Franz, the building contractor was Daniel O'Connell Sons, the electrical contractor was Beaulieu Electric Co., the air conditioning was provided by Holyoke Supply Co., and the refrigeration was provided by Tropp Engineering Co. 

The Holyoke Shopping Center, also known as the South Street Shopping Center or the Food Mart Shopping Center, was the city's first shopping plaza.

A groundbreaking for the shopping center occurred on March 17, 1955. The first two buildings would house the Food Mart grocery store and Hadley Falls Trust Co. The parking lot would accommodate 600 cars with additional parking for 400 on an adjacent lot.

The Food Mart grocery store opened on November 16, 1955, and an estimated 18,000 shoppers visited. Over 6,000 sales were registered that day.

The grand opening celebration of the Holyoke Shopping Center took place on March 20, 1957. At the time, six businesses had opened. This included Food Mart, S&H Green Stamps, Liggett-Rexall Drugs, F. W. Woolworth Co., Friendly Ice Cream and Hadley Falls Trust Co.

Holyoke Ten Pin Lanes was constructed on the north side of Davis Street in 1960. It was destroyed by fire in 1962. Fitzpatrick Arena and its parking area now occupy the site.

In November 1961, plans to expand the plaza across Davis Street were announced. Food Mart would double its size and update to the latest market innovations. The grocery store would relocate to the plaza's center, with more convenient parking. A three-story medical center would be built west of Holyoke Ten Pin Lanes, with retailers on the ground level. The plan and a similar concept advanced in 1963 did not materialize. The pictures below show artists' renderings of both plans.

In 1963, Food Mart increased its store size by 4,500 square feet to almost 15,000 square feet.

By 1964, the  Holyoke City Directory (and a news article) listed the following had leased space in the shopping plaza:

Holyoke Savings Bank
Prescription Center Pharmacy
Montgomery Ward & Co
F. W. Woolworth Department Store
Mass. Division of Unemployment 
Zal's Clothing
Sperry and Hutchinson Co ( S&H Trading Stamps)
Friendly Ice Cream
Food Mart
Safe Deposit Box & Trust Co.
Sherwin Williams Paint Store
Laundercenter
Kofsky's Shoes

In 1968, Food Mart entered merger discussions with Waldbaum's. The newly named Waldbaum's Foodmart would continue to operate as an independent division of the parent company. During early 1993, the grocery store moved from the Holyoke Shopping Center to the K-Mart Plaza on Northampton Street. Five years later, in 1998, Food Mart closed its doors.

As this post was written in 2025, Frank Cataldo's vision of creating a shopping center lives on 70 years after the opening of his Food Mart grocery store and Holyoke Shopping Center. 

Sources of news articles and information:

Newspapers.com (paid subscription): Citations: Holyoke (Massachusetts) Transcript-Telegram; publication dates are shown.

Holyoke Public Library, Holyoke, Massachusetts, City Directories.

Registry of Deeds, Hampden County, Springfield, Massachusetts.




















































































Main Pharmacy

I had the pleasure of working in a pharmacy with a soda fountain during my high school and college years; however, it was never one that ser...