BOSTON — Older than Fenway Park, older than both Boston Gardens, older than the Bruins and Celtics and the NBA and NHL, too.
Matthews Arena will be closing its doors this week after more than a century of hosting the biggest names not just in sports but also politics, music and culture. Now owned by Northeastern University, the 115-year-old barn will say goodbye when the Huskies play Beanpot rival Boston University in hockey on Saturday night. It will be replaced by a multipurpose arena and recreation center on the same site.
''It'll be bigger and greater," Northeastern and Hockey Hall of Famer David Poile said in an recent interview with The Associated Press. "But for those of us that were lucky enough to play there, we'll always have those memories.''
The building that opened as Boston Arena on April 16, 1910, served as the original home of the Boston Bruins, and also hosted the first Celtics game, too — giving birth to the team's iconic parquet floor.
Along the way it hosted both President Roosevelts, along with William Howard Taft and Herbert Hoover and future presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy. Aviators Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart were feted there. Concerts featured Marvin Gay, the Supremes, Chubby Checker, Jerry Lee Lewis, Shirley Jones, Bob Dylan, Phish and Ludacris.
But mostly, it was, as the promotional materials billed it, ''The largest, most complete and most elaborate temple erected for the devotees of sport in the world.'' Even as the paint peeled and the bricks began to crumble, it remained a no less historic destination than its more famous Boston brethren on Lansdowne and Causeway Streets.
''I like to be in places where men were men and basketball was basketball instead of what we have sometimes now,'' said Michigan State basketball coach Tom Izzo, who brought the Spartans to play Northeastern in 2015 — a rare visit from a top team to the home of a mid-major opponent.
''In those places … you dove for a loose ball on the sidelines and you'd land in the fans," said Izzo, who also made it a point to visit the Palestra in Philadelphia. ''I like to get to every place that I've never been to that has history; and those two were high on my list. I've been to Cameron (Indoor Stadium at Duke) and others, but that was a special treat that night.''