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advertising and publicity, helped increase attendance, but also required the Chiefs to play in more away games. As added incentive for fans to attend their games, schedules of play were arranged for the 1973-1974 season to give maximum home play to teams that had a traditional adversary relationship. The league was successful and attendance between 1973 and 1975 increased to an overall average of 900 per game. End-of-season league play-offs were standing room only. But involvement in the league, which was never formalized enough to support and enforce the schedules (i.e., no penalty for missed games, forfeitures), also created additional expenses for all the teams. The league folded as teams withdrew due to financial hardships.
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team. However, during their existence many of their rostered players had some minor professional experience. The
Knights engaged in strictly invitational hockey games, usually paying expenses of the opposing team so they would play in Rome. This was gradually expanded over the years to include teams from as far away as Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and the Canadian province of Ontario.
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The arena is located at 500 West
Embargo Street, co-located with the municipal pool, a community facility open from June through early September. It includes a standard-size recreational swimming pool, two water play slides, and a bathhouse with restrooms, meeting the recreational swimming needs
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During the 1972–1973 season, the Chiefs' general manager met with managers of opposing teams, and they decided to form the
Northeastern United States Hockey League. This was composed of teams from upstate New York, parts of Massachusetts, and northern New Jersey. League play, coupled with increased
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For six years, until 1971, the
Knights played ice hockey by invitation; that is, inviting teams from the surrounding area to Rome's John F. Kennedy Arena. The Knights were not part of any formal league at this time, nor were they affiliated with a National Hockey League (NHL) or professional hockey
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The Copper City Chiefs semi-professional hockey team was established in 1963 and folded at the end of the 1988 season. The team played in the
Kennedy Arena when it opened in 1964. During the 1960s they played in a league of cities in the state of New York. In the 1970s they played in a league of
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The Rome Copper City Chiefs continued to play invitational games and increased their following in and around central New York. In 1971 the
Clinton Comets folded. This brought more professional players to the Chiefs and added to the increased attendance at their games. A new general manager took
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from 800 to 1,200. Other improvements included a longer ice rink; new boards, glass, and safety net; new bleachers across the back end of the arena; four new locker rooms; upgrades to locker rooms; and an enhanced heating and lighting system. Improvements were also made to the warming room and
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During their 25 years of existence, supporter participation fluctuated, peaking during 1973-1975. Those seasons showed average game attendances of approximately 900. After the 1975 season, participation gradually declined, culminating in the 1984-1985 season's average attendance of 250.
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The Rome Copper City Chiefs were organized in 1963 under their original name of the Rome
Knights, an unchartered recreational organization which was begun to provide athletic recreation in the form of ice hockey to adults who had played minor professional or college ice hockey.
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of the
Eastern Hockey League, a professional farm team for the New York Rangers of the NHL. The presence of former Clinton Comets, along with the Knights' physical style of play, stimulated the general population's interest in attending Rome Knights hockey games.
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The arena is a regional facility, used primarily for ice hockey and figure skating from
October through March. The primary users are the Ford Stanwix Hockey Association (non-profit youth hockey organization), Rome Free Academy,
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The arena and pool are served by a large parking lot off of Jay and
Embargo Streets with space for more than 150 vehicles. A smaller lot on the arena's west side is used primarily by employees and hockey officials.
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In 1971 the Rome Knights changed their name to the Copper City Chiefs. Rome is referred to as the Copper City, after the Revere Manufacturing Plant that once produced copperware in the city through the 1970s.
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One of the city's most popular venues, it was originally constructed in 1963, opened in 1964, and renovated in 2008. The 1,200-seat facility hosts numerous
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control of the team and instituted a publicity campaign to further increase game attendance and provide further incentives for local business sponsorship.
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teams from New England states and New York. In the 1980s, the team played against Senior A, Senior B, and Intermediate Level teams from Ontario, Canada.
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concession area, to allow for more and better off-season use of the facility, including usage by teens and seniors.
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In the middle 1960s, interest in the Knights ice hockey team increased, primarily as an overflow from the
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franchise, but the team folded before the season. During the 2010–2011 season, it was home to the
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After an almost $ 3.5 million renovation, Kennedy Arena was officially dedicated on January 30, 2009.
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and ice hockey events, as well as learn-to-skate programs for youths; it is home ice for the
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The shell of the building remains relatively unchanged from its original construction in 1963.
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during the league's failed 2007–2008 season, the arena would have been home to the
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David Adams, interview conducted by Robert Kirchner, Rome, New York, 2 June 1985.
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Ron Sweeney, interview conducted by Robert Kirchner, Rome, New York, 21 May 1985.
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200 ft × 85 ft (61 m × 26 m) (
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106:Learn how and when to remove this message
607:Sports venues in Oneida County, New York
622:1964 establishments in New York (state)
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559:J. F. Kennedy Arena Renovation Project
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23:. For other uses, see
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419:Federal Hockey League
209:500 W. Embargo Street
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248:43.2196°N 75.4636°W
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564:2007-08-21 at the
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226:Coordinates
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601:Categories
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239:75°27′49″W
236:43°13′11″N
62:verifiable
264:Elevation
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417:of the
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378:The
370:IBLA
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