Both sets of the couple's parents ran concession stands at the rink and another man known as "Red" held the job of bouncer. Red was so adept on wheels, he skated backward the whole evening, swooping in to help skaters who fell by stomping his skates loudly so people would know to maneuver around them.
Regulars knew to expect well-dressed crowds and well-behaved skaters. Fonter didn't tolerate mischief in his rink, forcing skaters who broke the rules to sit in a wooden booth cordoned off with a rope and known as the penalty box.
Many skaters had their own indoor skates. They brought their skates to the rink in hard-sided cases. Those who didn't own skates rented them at the rink; white high-tops for the girls, and black, lower-cut styles for the guys.
Unlike many of the former roller rinks that people regularly write in to reminisce about, the Mill Bridge managed to stay open past roller skating's heyday of the 1940s, 50s and 60s. Fonter and his first wife separated, but the rink remained open. He and his second wife, Nancy, lived above the rink with their son.
But by 1990, skating crowds were nowhere near what they once were. Fonter, who struggled with Parkinson's disease, decided to close the rink and put the building up for sale.
On Mother's Day 1993, the roller rink building caught fire, going up quickly because of all the floor polishes still in its back room. The Fonter's had stopped insuring the building years earlier because they couldn't afford the premium. Fonter died in 1997.
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