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History of Paramount Iceland

Until unified as the
City of Paramount in 1948, the area was known as
Hynes and Clearwater, two neighboring communities.
Because of a Union Pacific rail station in Hynes, it
became an important shipping center in the 1930's.
The Hynes hay market became a world leader and the
largest receiving point for hay in the world.
The dairy business
flourished in the area as many Dutch families
emigrated to Hynes-Clearwater and the neighboring
towns of Artesia and Bellflower shortly after World
War I. When Iceland was built, it had a strong
following from the Dutch community with their
skating backgrounds and the speed skating club they
formed in the early 1940's at Iceland, the Demorra
Club, produced many champions.
Frank and his
brother, Lawrence Zamboni, had an ice manufacturing
plant in Hynes in the 1930's but with the advent of
refrigerators, they decided to build an ice skating
rink to replace the potential loss in their ice
business. Frank's inventiveness became evident when
he started experimenting with a refrigerated ice
floor very different from the normal type composed
of a grid work of steel piping beneath the ice.
Frank's idea was to create a flatter and smoother
ice sheet by circulating the salt brine in large
flat tanks covering the entire area of the ice
floor. The tanks would be only one-half inch thick
and a series of them would extend from one side of
the rink to the other, all tied together with large
pipes serving as manifolds. Frank built a test
floor next to the Zamboni Bros. ice plant and
because it proved successful, he and Lawrence, with
their cousin Pete Zamboni, built Iceland in 1939
using Frank's concept. Frank obtained a patent on
his unique idea in 1944. (U. S. patent No.
2,411,919). Iceland became well known for the level
quality of its ice surface because Frank had
eliminated the rippling that often occurred with
pipe floors. The steel tank ice floor served
Iceland well until it was replaced by a conventional
plastic pipe grid in 1977.
Also unusual at
Paramount Iceland was the fact that its
refrigeration plant was separated from the rink by
California Avenue. The rink was built on the east
side of the street while the Zamboni Bros. ice plant
continued operating on the west side of the street.
The refrigeration compressors functioned at the ice
plant and ammonia refrigerant was piped beneath
California Avenue to a large brine tank on the rink
side. This system worked fine until 1976 when the
ice plant burned down and it was decided to rebuild
the freezing plant adjacent to the rink. In spite
of the fire, no ice time was lost because a trailer
mounted refrigeration unit owned by the Ice Capades
happened to be in the Los Angeles area. Frank
borrowed it and plugged it into his system while he
built a new freezing plant.
Since 1940, Iceland
has been a practice facility for many well-known
skaters including Sonja Henie, Richard Dwyer, Peggy
Fleming and Robbie Robertson, just to name a few.
Many of its skaters have represented Iceland's
skating clubs in National, World, and Olympic
competitions. The Arctic Blades Figure Skating Club
members
have excelled and won medals for many years and
tragically the Club was also represented by five of
its members in 1961 when an airplane crash claimed
the entire United States World Team in Brussels
Belgium. The DeMorra Speed Skating Club has also
had exceptional skaters in National and
International events. Bill Disney won a Silver
Medal in the 500 meter event at the 1960 Winter
Olympics and many members have won medals in other
competitions.
Iceland has gone
through many renovations since its opening in 1940
and while it celebrated its 60th birthday in 2000,
its appearance is modern and its amenities are
designed to appeal to today's customers.
Paramount Iceland has
what may be the only pipe organ currently playing
regularly in any ice skating arena in the country.
The Wurlitzer organ was first installed in 1941.
The organ itself is believed to have been built in
the 1920's.
Truman
Welch was the original organist at Paramount Iceland
and oversaw the various installations and moves made
to the organ. He later became manager of Iceland,
in addition to his musical role, and remained in
this capacity until he passed away in 1968.
Although he was proficient with both the piano and
the Wurlitzer pipe organ, his affinity was for the
pipe organ. In college, Truman played the pipe
organ in various theaters around the Los Angeles
area. Truman's amazing ability to create musical
energy brought a special atmosphere to Iceland. His
beautiful music enhanced the experience for
countless skaters and he is especially remembered
for his wonderful sense of timing and humor.
The "organ" itself
was moved two times in the rink. The first organ
loft containing the instruments was in a building at
the back end of the rink. It had pipes in that area
and the console was near the rink entrance, 200 feet
away. This complicated playing the organ as the
sound reaching the organist was delayed. It was
difficult to maintain the multitude of control wires
between the distant locations. Often, the cables
(which were covered in cotton back in those days)
connecting the console and the pipes shorted out
from the condensation. The original two manual was
apparently a model 210 ten rank organ and is now in
possession of Truman's son, Gary Welch.
To overcome this, the
organ loft was moved to the entrance end next to the
console room. During this move, it received its
second console and grew from 10 ranks to 14 ranks.
In the configuration, the acoustic quality was a
faulty, as the sound was coming from corner of the
rink dome. To enhance the sound, Frank Zamboni and
Truman focused on the far end of the arena. They
decided to build a completely new structure away
from the rink entrance and split the organ's various
instruments into two lofts on either side of the
console for a stereo effect. For this last move,
the third console was placed between the lofts on a
turntable so the organist could rotate his position
in relation to the ice surface. The third console
and relays came to Iceland from the Fox Theatre in
San Jose, California. The swell shades (flaps which
control the intensity of the organ's output to the
arena) came from the L.A. Paramount Theater, which
has since been demolished.
In
preparation for a musical presentation in June of
2005 to the American Theatre Organ Society during
the organization's 50th annual convention in Los
Angeles, the organ was extensively restored.
Many thanks to Peter
Crotty, Larry Grundy and others who contributed
countless hours to preservation, restoration and
enhancement of this magnificent instrument.
(More
on Truman Welch)
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