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Madison Square Garden has been the name of four arenas in New York City, United
States. The first two were located at Madison Square, thus the name. Subsequently a new Garden was built at 50th Street and
8th Avenue, and the current Garden is sited, on top of Pennsylvania Station at 33rd Street and 7th Avenue.
The Garden is best known for the New York Knicks (basketball) and New York
Rangers (ice hockey), professional sports teams that play their home
matches in the arena. It is also the location of the circus when it comes to New York
City, and almost any other kind of indoor activities that draw large audiences. It is also known for its place in the history of
boxing. Many of boxing's most important fights were held at the Madison Square Garden,
including many of Joe Louis, the Roberto Duran-Ken Buchanan affair, and the first
Joe Frazier-Muhammad
Ali bout. Before promoters such as Don King and Bob Arum moved boxing to Las Vegas, the Madison
Square Garden was considered the Mecca of boxing.
It was originally built for the sport of track cycling, which is still
remembered in the name of the Madison event, which was first
conducted in the Madison Square Garden.
William Henry Vanderbilt officially renamed
Gilmore's Garden (by which it was previously officially known, having originally been dubbed the "Monster Hippodrome" in 1866 by
P.T. Barnum) to Madison Square Garden and reopened the facility to the public
on May 30, 1879 at 26th Street and Madison Avenue. The second Madison Square Garden, designed by Stanford White, who would later be killed there, opened at this site in
1890 and remained until the third Garden opened in 1925. On February 11, 1968
Madison Square Garden III closed and Madison Square Garden IV opened.
Notable Firsts at the Garden
Notable other events at the Garden
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