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The year 1904 is now regarded as the start of the sport of ice skating in
Australia with the opening of the first artificial ice skating rink, the
Glaciarium, at 91 Hindley Street, Adelaide, South Australia, on Tuesday,
September 6th, 1904, as reported in the Adelaide Advertiser. This building
is still in use today. After many uses and several changes over the years
it is the current home of the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra and can be viewed
on their website.
Prior to this date there was some activity regarding ice skating in
Australia. This mainly involved developing the ways and means to create a
sustainable ice surface. In the Nationals Archives of Australia there is
correspondence and patent applications regarding this. The earliest dates
back to 1866 regarding an invention for a roller and ice skate from
Tasmania. This was followed in 1888 and 1896 with correspondence about
inventions for ice skating surfaces. There has been some mention of an ice
rink in Pitt Street, Sydney, New South Wales, in the 1880's but as yet no
concrete evidence of it.
Mr. Dunbar Poole, a Scot, arrived in Adelaide around 1903 to find a group of
like minded people interested in ice skating. They opened the rink in
Hindley Street in a building formerly used as a cyclorama with the
refrigeration being piped many metres from an ice works down the street. It
lasted for a few years and was mentioned in the social pages of an Adelaide
newspaper in September 1905. The evening described took the form of a gala
fancy dress party with all the participants taking great care and attention
to detail with their costumes, many being very topical of the day. A
photograph believed to be taken on this occasion is held in the State
Library of South Australia.
Later, when the Adelaide rink closed, the parts were taken to Melbourne
where Mr. Newman Reid ran the now Melbourne Glaciarium for many years. It
suffered a slight set back in 1917 when it was consumed by fire as was
recorded by the newsreel of the day. When rebuilt it continued on until the
mid 1950's, eventually closing in 1957.
Over the years there have been several Glaciaria, these being in Adelaide,
Melbourne, Hobart, and two in Sydney. The original Glaciarium was an early
artificial rink in London in the nineteenth century.

The National Ice Skating Association of Australia was founded in the year
1911. One of its objects of association was: "the furtherance of the art of
skating with the view of attaining the highest proficiency amongst the
skaters at the Glaciarium in Australia." Despite the wide-ranging objective,
skating at the Sydney Glaciarium remained for years the province of the
Sydney Ice Skating Club, established a few years later, and this was the
figure skating organisation in New South Wales. The two bodies operated
within their own States until 1930, when, following negotiations, their
names were changed to National Ice Skating Association of Australia
(Victoria) and National Ice Skating Association of Australia (New South
Wales). On 12 June, 1931 a formal agreement was signed between the two State
organisations to set up :The Council of the National Ice skating Association
of Australia." The objects of the new Association were, amongst others: "to
advise State Associations on all matters appertaining to standards and
judging of figure skating on ice; to hold Australian Championships in figure
skating in all its branches; to approve of the results of tests judged by
state Judges."
The new Association did indeed establish Australian Championships, and these
were conducted from 1931 onwards, alternatively in Victoria and New South
Wales. In 1932, the Association became a member of the International Skating
Union, the body controlling figure skating throughout the world. It was, in
fact, one of the earliest members apart from the acknowledged European
skating nations. No real steps were taken towards the object of approving
tests, and each State continued to operate with its rules, differing in
detail from the other, and made to suit local opinion and requirements.
During the 1939-45 war, there was little activity in figure skating, but in
1947 Australia was one of the remaining 13 members of the International
Skating Union (ISU) to be represented at the first post-war Congress; the
membership of many others having lapsed due to the changes in political
boundaries following the war. In 1947, the first Australian competitor took
part in a World Figure Skating Championship, and over the next twenty years,
there was a steadily increasing number of Australians participating, in a
small way, in international competitions, and a few in World Championships.
In the early 1960s, skating rinks were established in both Queensland and
South Australia, and both States sought membership of the National
Association. Up to this time, the National Association had functioned
largely as an administrative body, meeting once a year, and directing its
activities towards conducting National Championships, and to retaining
international affiliation. It had not been, in any real sense, an
independent body but, in 1970, it had become apparent that there was a great
need for uniformity of rules to resolve existing differences in opinion and
practice between States. Greater communication between States, and the
exchange of officials, and competitors, made uniformity essential. As a
result, a new agreement was entered into in 1970 between Victoria and New
South Wales, the two original State members of the Association. First
Queensland, and then South Australia became members, and a new and updated
constitution was adopted, setting out as some of its primary objects the
establishment of uniform regulations for figure skating throughout
Australia. There was an immediate move to introduce these uniform
regulations, and to establish the National Association as an independent and
technically competent body which would truly regulate the sport in
Australia.
In the years since 1970, the National Ice Skating Association has assumed
responsibility in all areas of figure skating. It has established national
tests of proficiency; it has prepared and adopted rules governing all
aspects of figure skating; it has promoted the regular participation of
Australians in international competitions, World Championships and Olympic
Winter Games. It has also sent officials to and qualified judges for
international competitions in all disciplines of the sport, the Olympic
Winter Games, and for ISU Championships, again in all disciplines of the
sport.
As a federal body set up by the States, the members of the Association are
the State Associations. The Council is generally composed of nineteen
representatives, three each from the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), New
South Wales (NSW), Queensland (QLD), South Australia (SA), Victoria (VIC)
and Western Australia (WA), and one from Tasmania (TAS) as a limited member.
There have been several revisions of the Constitution, the latest
being in April 2004.
During the 1997 Australian Figure Skating Championships, August 2 -
9, in Sydney, National Delegates voted to change the name of the
Association to Ice Skating Australia Incorporated. |