Nova Scotia: Difference between revisions

From International Hockey Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 5: Line 5:
The "Halifax Rules" were published in 1943 by a Nova Scotia newspaper reporter named James Power, who was known colloquially as 'The Dean of Canadian Sports Reporters.' Power recorded the rules as related to him by Byron Weston who had become the president of the Dartmouth Amateur Athletic Association and who had played in the Halifax-Dartmouth area as early as the 1860s with teams from the area including native Mi'kmaq players. The rules are purported to have been used in the Halifax-Darmouth area prior to hockey being played in Montreal (starting in 1875), however no contemporary sources confirm this.  
The "Halifax Rules" were published in 1943 by a Nova Scotia newspaper reporter named James Power, who was known colloquially as 'The Dean of Canadian Sports Reporters.' Power recorded the rules as related to him by Byron Weston who had become the president of the Dartmouth Amateur Athletic Association and who had played in the Halifax-Dartmouth area as early as the 1860s with teams from the area including native Mi'kmaq players. The rules are purported to have been used in the Halifax-Darmouth area prior to hockey being played in Montreal (starting in 1875), however no contemporary sources confirm this.  


The Exhibition Rink, the first indoor rink in Nova Scotia, situated on Tower Road in Halifax, opened on January 5, 1880. By 1885, hockey was popular in both Halifax and Dartmouth (where a rink had opened in 1884). In January 1885, an ice polo team from St. John, New Brunswick, traveled to Halifax to play the local Wanderers team. The Dartmouth Chebuctos were regarded as champions of Nova Scotia every year from 1885-1894. The team was undefeated throughout the Maritimes from 1887-1894 and played exhibition games in Montreal in 1889. The Windsor Juniors won the first league to be arranged in the province, the Windsor Town League, in 1888-89. By 1900 the town competition had four teams vying for the Citizens Trophy. The Windsor Avonians won the trophy three years in a row from 1900-1902, thus earning it permanently. The Windsor Citizen’s Hockey Trophy was first handed out in 1903 to the Resolute Hockey Team. This cup was competed for until 1953.  
The Exhibition Rink, the first indoor rink in Nova Scotia, situated on Tower Road in Halifax, opened on January 5, 1880. The [[Halifax Wanderers]] were organized into a club in 1882.<ref>''Hockey: Canada's Royal Winter Game'', Arthur Farrell (1899)</ref> By 1885, hockey was popular in both Halifax and Dartmouth (where a rink had opened in 1884). In January 1885, an ice polo team from St. John, New Brunswick, traveled to Halifax to play the local Wanderers team. The Dartmouth Chebuctos were regarded as champions of Nova Scotia every year from 1885-1894. The team was undefeated throughout the Maritimes from 1887-1894 and played exhibition games in Montreal in 1889. The Windsor Juniors won the first league to be arranged in the province, the Windsor Town League, in 1888-89. By 1900 the town competition had four teams vying for the Citizens Trophy. The Windsor Avonians won the trophy three years in a row from 1900-1902, thus earning it permanently. The Windsor Citizen’s Hockey Trophy was first handed out in 1903 to the Resolute Hockey Team. This cup was competed for until 1953.  


The inaugural season of the [[Halifax City Hockey League]] took place in 1894, with the first game being played on February 10. Six teams played in the league - Dartmouth Chebuctos, Dartmouth Mutuals, Dalhousie University, Halifax Crescents, Halifax North West Arm, and Halifax Wanderers. Numerous other competitions sprung up in Halifax and its surrounding area (including bankers, college, intermediate, and junior leagues). The most interesting league to emerge was the [[Coloured Hockey League]], an all-black competition founded in Nova Scotia in 1895, which featured teams from across the Maritimes. The league remained active until 1930. With as many as a dozen teams, over 400 African Canadian players from across Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island participated in competition.
The inaugural season of the [[Halifax City Hockey League]] took place in 1894, with the first game being played on February 10. Six teams played in the league - Dartmouth Chebuctos, Dartmouth Mutuals, Dalhousie University, Halifax Crescents, Halifax North West Arm, and Halifax Wanderers. Numerous other competitions sprung up in Halifax and its surrounding area (including bankers, college, intermediate, and junior leagues). The most interesting league to emerge was the [[Coloured Hockey League]], an all-black competition founded in Nova Scotia in 1895, which featured teams from across the Maritimes. The league remained active until 1930. With as many as a dozen teams, over 400 African Canadian players from across Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island participated in competition.

Revision as of 20:55, 5 March 2020

The location of the province in Canada.

Nova Scotia is one of three Maritime provinces in Canada. It has a population of about 950,000 and its capital is Halifax.

History of hockey in Nova Scotia

The "Halifax Rules" were published in 1943 by a Nova Scotia newspaper reporter named James Power, who was known colloquially as 'The Dean of Canadian Sports Reporters.' Power recorded the rules as related to him by Byron Weston who had become the president of the Dartmouth Amateur Athletic Association and who had played in the Halifax-Dartmouth area as early as the 1860s with teams from the area including native Mi'kmaq players. The rules are purported to have been used in the Halifax-Darmouth area prior to hockey being played in Montreal (starting in 1875), however no contemporary sources confirm this.

The Exhibition Rink, the first indoor rink in Nova Scotia, situated on Tower Road in Halifax, opened on January 5, 1880. The Halifax Wanderers were organized into a club in 1882.[1] By 1885, hockey was popular in both Halifax and Dartmouth (where a rink had opened in 1884). In January 1885, an ice polo team from St. John, New Brunswick, traveled to Halifax to play the local Wanderers team. The Dartmouth Chebuctos were regarded as champions of Nova Scotia every year from 1885-1894. The team was undefeated throughout the Maritimes from 1887-1894 and played exhibition games in Montreal in 1889. The Windsor Juniors won the first league to be arranged in the province, the Windsor Town League, in 1888-89. By 1900 the town competition had four teams vying for the Citizens Trophy. The Windsor Avonians won the trophy three years in a row from 1900-1902, thus earning it permanently. The Windsor Citizen’s Hockey Trophy was first handed out in 1903 to the Resolute Hockey Team. This cup was competed for until 1953.

The inaugural season of the Halifax City Hockey League took place in 1894, with the first game being played on February 10. Six teams played in the league - Dartmouth Chebuctos, Dartmouth Mutuals, Dalhousie University, Halifax Crescents, Halifax North West Arm, and Halifax Wanderers. Numerous other competitions sprung up in Halifax and its surrounding area (including bankers, college, intermediate, and junior leagues). The most interesting league to emerge was the Coloured Hockey League, an all-black competition founded in Nova Scotia in 1895, which featured teams from across the Maritimes. The league remained active until 1930. With as many as a dozen teams, over 400 African Canadian players from across Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island participated in competition.

The first Maritime Championship for the Starr Trophy was held in 1905. It had previously been awarded to the Halifax City League champions from 1897-1903, and the Nova Scotia provincial champion in 1904. The trophy was won permanently by the Moncton Victorias from New Brunswick after they claimed three straight Maritime titles from 1907-1909. A new trophy, known as the Starr Shield, was put up for competition in 1910. In 1923, the Charlottetown Abegweits of Prince Edward Island won it for the third time, earning it for good. Another Starr Shield was then made in 1924.

The Halifax Crescents became the first team from Nova Scotia to challenge for the Stanley Cup in 1900. The same year, the Amherst Ramblers were said to have been league champions of Cape Breton and Nova Scotia.[2] The Cape Breton Hockey League, which initially featured teams from Sydney and North Sydney, was underway by 1901. It expanded to Glace Bay by 1905. There was also an Antigonish-Pictou County League. The province-wide Nova Scotia Hockey League was established for the 1903-04 season. The Amherst Ramblers, New Glasgow HC, Windsor HC, Truro Colts, and two teams from Halifax (Crescents and Wanderers) made up the league. The New Glasgow Cubs challenged for the Stanley Cup in 1906. The Western Nova Scotia Senior Hockey League was played from 1905-1914. The South Shore Hockey League featuring teams from Lunenberg, Bridgewater, and Liverpool was contested in 1912-13.

The first openly professional games in Nova Scotia were played in February 1910, when the Truro Colts and Halifax Crescents of the NSHL declared themselves professional. The North Sydney Victorias also turned pro, and faced the Crescents for the Nova Scotia Professional Championship, which the latter team won, 2-games-to-one. The Amherst Ramblers defeated an amateur Crescents team 17-0 for the amateur Nova Scotia Championship. Given the turmoil and watered down state of amateur hockey in the province, the Starr Trophy trustees rejected all Nova Scotia team's challenges for the cup in 1910. The Nova Scotia and Cape Breton leagues both folded in 1911, unable to keep up with the professional squads.

Teams from Nova Scotia stocked the Interprovincial Professional Hockey League (1910-11), Maritime Professional Hockey League from (1911-1914), and the Eastern Professional Hockey League (1914-15). The Sydney Millionaires made Nova Scotia's third Stanley Cup challenge in 1913. The Cape Breton Hockey League was contested from 1915-1922, and was replaced by the Cape Breton County Professional Hockey League, which lasted only a single season, for 1922-23.

The first intercollegiate hockey competition in the Maritimes was the Hewson Cup, which was first played in 1906 and featured teams from New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. It was succeeded by the Intercollegiate Hockey League in 1909 and the Maritime Intercollegiate Athletic Association (now Atlantic University Sport) in 1920. Nova Scotia competed for the first Maritime Senior Championship (for the Starr Shield) in 1921, and the Junior Championship in 1932.

Overview

Teams
Minor Pro (AHL)
Cape Breton Oilers (1988-1996)
Nova Scotia Voyageurs (1971-1984)
Nova Scotia Oilers (1984-1988)
Halifax Citadels (1988-1993)
Major Junior (QMJHL)
Cape Breton Screaming Eagles (1997-)
Halifax Mooseheads (1994-)
Stanley Cup Challenge Era
Halifax Crescents
New Glasgow Cubs
Sydney Millionaires
University (AUS)
Acadia Axemen (1919-)
St. Francis Xavier X-Men (1919-)
Dalhousie Tigers (1920-)
Saint Mary's Huskies (1930-)
Cape Breton Capers (1988-1995)

Leagues
Junior A
Maritime Junior A Hockey League (1976-)
Maritime Junior Hockey League (1968-1971)
Maritime Junior Championship (1932-1970)
Junior B
Nova Scotia Junior Hockey League (1967-)
Metro Valley Junior Hockey League (1967-1977)
Junior C
Nova Scotia Junior C Hockey League (2000-)
Senior
Maritimes Senior Championship (1921-1967)
Maritimes Intermediate Championship (1932-1968)
Nova Scotia Senior Hockey League (1982-1995)
Early Professional
Interprovincial Professional Hockey League (1910-1911)
Maritime Professional Hockey League (1911-1914)
Eastern Professional Hockey League (1914-1915)

League, regional and national championships

Championship Times won Description
Calder Cup 4 American Hockey League champion
President's Cup 1 Quebec Major Junior Hockey League champion
Memorial Cup 1 Canadian Major-Junior national champion
Allan Cup 3 Canadian senior national champion
Fred Page Cup 2 Eastern Canada Junior "A" regional championship
Royal Bank Cup 1 Canadian Junior "A" national champion
Don Johnson Cup 12 Atlantic Canada Jr B champion
Maritime-Hockey North Championship 2 Regional Junior "C" Champion
University Cup 4 CIS national men's university champion

References

  1. Hockey: Canada's Royal Winter Game, Arthur Farrell (1899)
  2. Frank Brown - Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame


Canadian Provinces
Flag of Alberta.png Alberta - Flag of British Columbia.png British Columbia - Flag of Manitoba.png Manitoba - Flag of Newfoundland.png Newfoundland and Labrador - Flag of New Brunswick.png New Brunswick
Flag of Nova Scotia.png Nova Scotia - Flag of Ontario.png Ontario - Flag of Prince Edward Island.png Prince Edward Island - Flag of Quebec.png Quebec - Flag of Saskatchewan.png Saskatchewan
Territories: Flag of the Northwest Territories.png Northwest Territories - Flag of Nunavut.png Nunavut - Flag of Yukon.png Yukon