Forgotten History: How enslaved blacks invented the game of hockey


The Original Sixes
The first-ever pro hockey league, established in 1895, skated lineups and shifts of three forwards, two defensemen and a goalie. Every player was Black.
by Erica Ayala / @elindsay08/ nhl.com/kraken
February 12, 2021
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Fast, physical and innovative. These are the words used by newspaper reporters to describe the Colored Hockey League of the Maritimes established in 1895. Sixty-three years before Hockey Hall of Famer Willie O'Ree became the first Black player to suit up in the National Hockey League, dozens of all-Black teams competed on the ice in the Nova Scotia in the late 1800s, forming the first-ever professional hockey league, the CHLM.
In fact, modern staples of the game including the slapshot and a goaltender's butterfly technique can be traced to CHLM. Eddie Martin invented the slapshot technique playing for the Halifax Eureka in 1906. Henry "Braces" Franklyn was the first goalie to fall to the ice to cover a puck when the CHLM made it allowable in 1900. Other early 1900s leagues still ruled goaltenders had to remain standing during play and it was only when the NHL was established in 1917 that goalies were widely approved to leave their feet to make saves and cover the puck.
Martin and Franklyn were two among hundreds of CMHL players who were at most two generations removed from those of their family members who journeyed to freedom and established roots in Halifax. As part of the Kraken marking Black History Month, we spoke to historian and sportswriter Bob Dawson about the origins of Black hockey history and his hopes for future players of color.
Like many others, Dawson first learned about the Colored Hockey League from the 2004 book, "Black Ice: The Lost History Of The Colored Hockey League Of The Maritimes 1895-1925," written by historians George and Darrill Fosty. The siblings were researching the connection between New York and Nova Scotia by way of the Underground Railroad when they came across newspaper clippings about a collection of all-Black hockey teams. The brothers were intrigued and decided to pursue the leads.
"They visited Halifax, the Dartmouth area, and met and spoke with descendants of several CHLM players in the hockey league," Dawson said. "They reviewed the research and archives to pull together the information."
In 2006, Dawson reached out to congratulate the brothers on what he called a groundbreaking book. The three became quick friends and even founded and coordinated the Black Ice Hockey and Sports Hall of Fame Conference and Induction that same year, following up with more ceremonies in 2007 and 2008.
"The intent of the conference was to create a greater awareness within the Black community, but also in the broader hockey community, of the historical significance of the Colored Hockey League," said Dawson.
The CHLM was founded by Pastor James Borden, James A.R. Kinney, James Robinson Johnston and Henry Sylvester Williams. Each founder was known as an intellectual. Kinney was recognized at the first Black graduate from the Maritime Business College and Johnston was the first Black graduate from the Dalhousie University law school and known as the first Black Nova Scotian to graduate from college.
The Dartmouth Jubilees were the first CHLM team. Opponents emerged from already established baseball teams, such as the Africville Seasides and the Truro Victorias with players looking for a sport to play when weather wasn't, well, baseball weather. For members of Black communities like Africville, hockey wasn't just a chance for winter competition. It was a social event.
"The games were more than a hockey game," said Dawson, "it was like a celebration. To the point where these teams were outdrawing the white senior league teams. White teams were drawing between 300 to 500 people. The teams within the Colored Hockey League were drawing between 1,200 to 1,500 fans."
At a time when racism instructed so much of how Black people lived their lives, an all-Black hockey league served as a safe space. Focusing on faith and community, the organizers of the Colored Hockey League hoped the game could serve as an equalizer.
"They saw this as an opportunity to move up socially and climb up a social ladder and gain equal footing with the larger white community," said Darril Fosty in a 2008 short-form ESPN documentary.



"The ultimate goal being that one day, Blacks will be equal and sport will be the catalyst for that to occur."
Over its first 15 years, the CHLM had difficulty keeping afloat. The league folded in 1911 and was temporarily revived in 1925 before closing down during the 1930s.
The CHLM was particular doomed by a proposed expanded rail service to Halifax in 1906. Black community members, including league organizer Johnston attempted to stop the annexation of the land. Court battles led to political battles which led to businesses taking sides in favor of the government.
"[The CHLM] angered these railroad barons," George Fosty said in the 2016 documentary, "Soul on Ice: Past, Present and Future." "What you started to see is efforts to deny blacks a livelihood."
Newspapers and especially rink owners started to squeeze Africville's Black community and, with it, the CHLM. For decades, Africville struggled before its land area was bulldozed to the ground in 1970. Forty years later, Halifax issued an official apology for the forcible relocation and rebuilt a church structure that now serves as a museum.
From the 1930s to O'Ree NHL debut in 1958, one might assume Black players didn't exist or weren't capable or both.
"There were some bizarre theories that were embraced and espoused with respect to Blacks having weak ankles," explained Dawson. "That [Blacks} had an aversion to the cold. They didn't have the intelligence or the skills not only to play the game, but to organize the game. And so consequently, that kind of thinking went on to pervade throughout the evolution and development of hockey."
Since linking up with the Fostys, Dawson has been committed to reclaiming and honoring the history of the Colored Hockey League. In 2016, he began a campaign to honor the CHLM on a Canadian Stamp. Three years later, the stamp was approved and was officially released last January for the 125th Anniversary of the league.



During Black History Month last season, the Ottawa Senators invited descendants of CHLM players to participate in an honorary puck drop alongside O'Ree. The Senators hosted a commemorative game honoring the CHLM. Dawson is thrilled the Colored Hockey League of the Maritimes is being remembered. He is optimistic other NHL teams and the league will take more bold steps towards equality and inclusion.
"With respect to Black History Month and beyond, I plan to, again with my colleagues at Black Ottawa History, approach teams to become more involved to take positive action with respect to the kinds of initiatives that the NHL publicly announced last September," said Dawson.
Dawson said he would like to see NHL teams embrace the International Decade of People of African Descent (IDPAD) as laid forth by the United Nations. Without question, Dawson and the Fostys have initiated a greater awareness of the Colored Hockey League of the Maritimes. Yet, Dawson believes the NHL can more permanently memorialize the pioneers of modern hockey.
"I think for me, for them to do the league justice," Dawson said, "wouldn't it be nice to have a trophy or plaque or something honoring the Colored Hockey League for its contributions?"
 
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The All-Black League That Invented Hockey As We Know It
JASPER HUTSON
12:51 PM EST on Mar 9, 2022
Striker-Indigo Publishing

Picture in your mind what hockey looked like at the turn of the 20th century. What, where, and who do you see? Set your mental image in Canada, if you haven’t already, as the game had yet to spread much below the border. You probably imagine a less formal affair, games played on ponds and small rinks and not in packed arenas. The sticks are wooden, the players padless and without helmets; the sport itself is slower and more methodical, and any contact is incidental. And when you picture organized hockey’s earliest players, they’re probably white.
A group of Black Canadian intellectuals and churchmen of the time looked at the sport, and saw the same thing, and decided that simply because things were the way they were, that wasn’t how they had to be. So they started their own league, the Coloured Hockey League of the Maritimes, which existed just long enough to invent much of what’s best about the modern game—before it was killed off by white business interests. As a result of its short lifespan, the CHL doesn’t get a prominent place in most tellings of hockey’s story, but its legacy is undeniable.
The Canada of the late 19th century had a much smaller black population than it does now (21,400 as of the 1881 census; nearly 2.2 million in 2016), after which the loosening of immigration restrictions in the 1960s paved the way for many more Caribbeans and Africans to call Canada home. Before that, the bulk of the black population in Canada came from the United States. Many were formerly enslaved persons who found refuge in British Canada, which had outlawed slavery decades before the United States.
But just because Canadian authorities welcomed those who had escaped bondage did not mean they viewed them as equals. It wasn’t out of altruism that British authorities in Canada first began offering sanctuary. There was a certain level of opportunism behind the invitation: a desire both to attract cheap labor and to harm America’s economy. Sometimes these refugees were given land grants, but not in the fertile plains of Saskatchewan nor the industrial heartland in Ontario. Instead, they were essentially pushed to the periphery of the Dominion, often forced to settle in the less productive Maritime provinces of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island. Halifax, the largest city in the region, became a population and cultural center for Black Canadians.
The Maritimes, while not offering particularly good farmland, proved to be fertile ground for a burgeoning intelligentsia, a group of people who sought equality for black people, not just in Canada, but in the whole of the British empire. Their goals went beyond legal equity, instead seeking a more tangible social respect from their new countrymen. Hockey was seen by these organizers as a way to prove and thus obtain black equality. After all, then as much as now, the idea of hockey as a white man’s sport was pervasive. So, in 1895, they formed the Coloured Hockey League of the Maritimes, the world’s first all-black ice hockey league.
The most famous of these founders was a Trinidadian teacher named Henry Sylvester Williams. He’d come to Halifax to study law and quickly became active in local politics. His advocacy eventually had him run out of Canada by the white establishment. Later in his life he would move to England where he became one of the first persons of African descent to hold elected office, as well as organizing the first Pan-African Conference. The other founders were businessman James A. R. Kinney, pastor James Borden, and attorney James Jonston.
They shared several values, among them an admiration for American civil rights leader Booker T. Washington. It was Washington’s belief that segregation afforded those of African descent an opportunity to prove black excellence, and this philosophy was a major influence on the creation of the CHL. What better way to speak to Canadians in a language they understood than on the ice?
All the founders were Baptists, and their faith influenced the way they structured the league. Each team was to be affiliated with a different congregation, which reveals another purpose of the league: to get young men to come to church.
A common saying among historians is that the CHL had “no rules except for the Bible.” It’s difficult to pin down exactly what that meant, although in practical terms it meant that penalties weren’t often called and goaltenders were allowed to drop to their knees, an illegal move in other leagues. One might assume that a heavily Christian sports league, deeply intertwined with community churches, would be sterile and cautious, but accounts show just the opposite.
One, from the Acadian Recorder, describes play during a fierce rivalry matchup between the Halifax Eurekas and the Dartmouth Jubilees:
“The players were bunched most of the time and did not seem to worry much as to whether it was the [puck] or an opponent’s shins that was struck… Players knocked down were left to get out of a melee as best they could.”
Play was frenetic, with an emphasis on counterattack. Skaters had no bones about slamming into each other, which would have looked strange to hockey fans back then. To that point, hockey had been a slow and calculated game, one that prioritized keeping possession of the puck. The CHL, on the other hand, embraced hockey’s potential as a contact sport.
Partially and at least at first, this may have been because many of the players simply weren’t very good at hockey. Some were experienced skaters, and many of them elite athletes: Jack T. Mills, captain of the West End Rangers, once held a speedskating record of 18 miles in 50 minutes. But by and large, they were baseball players who viewed hockey as a way to stay employed and in-shape over the winter. While they had played informal hockey games before, this was their first taste of professional matches. Many of them quickly developed a love for the game, and it wasn’t long before they began to master it. Charter member teams of the CHL played numerous exhibitions against established white teams, and occasionally the CHL teams would win. The typical response from the all-white teams was a vow never to play them again.
Contemporary sources on the league are surprisingly easy to find. Historians George and Darril Fosty have pored over local newspapers and strung together entire seasons’ worth of scores and statistics. We can gain a fairly comprehensive picture of the league from these sources, and the evidence leads to a perhaps surprising conclusion: The CHL helped invent hockey as we know it.
It was a fertile setup for innovation. Sports thrive in environments where there is no “right way” to play the game. With fewer rules than the established leagues of the time, and operating outside of any tradition for how hockey was supposed to look, the CHL was a place players could experiment. Eddie Martin of the Halifax Eurekas was the first hockey player to ever perform a slapshot, probably repurposing his baseball swing for the ice. His teammate George Tolliver invented the flying body check, according to the Acadian Recorder, and was still playing for the team into his 40s. A third Eureka, Henry Franklyn, may have been the first person to play the goalkeeper position as we know it today, not remaining on his skates but instead squatting and lunging. He was three feet and six inches tall.
Most of the CHL’s teams came from Halifax or nearby towns like Africville or New Glasgow. They tended to play a short year, as they were unable to get ice time until after the white teams had finished their season; this often resulted in something more like a tournament than a true league schedule. More than 12 teams played in the league at various points, but it isn’t always clear from the records which teams participated in any particular season. However, what we do know is that nine out of the first 12 championships were won by the powerhouse Eurekas.
The book Black Ice by the Fostys reveals the personal histories of some of the men who played in CHL. At least eight former players volunteered for the No. 2 Construction Battalion, an all-Black unit in the Canadian Expeditionary Force during World War I. Several claimed “Marooner” ancestry, after a group of Jamaican rebels who were exiled to Canada. And while the Halifax Diamonds, forever in the Eurekas’ shadow, never won a CHL championship, they were the 1921 Provincial Baseball Coloured Champions.
It’s difficult to understand how fully the league fell out of the public consciousness. Even descendants of CHL players have been surprised to learn how influential their forefathers were in the development of Canada’s national sport. Much easier to figure out is why the league went out of business.
Most sports league failures can be attributed to some combination of managerial incompetence, over-expansion, or waning public interest. The CHL had none of these issues. A decade into its existence it was still selling out arenas across Nova Scotia with a popular, unique brand of fast-paced and action-packed hockey. No, what killed the league was politics.
One of the most important locations in Black Canadian history is a place called Africville. On the outskirts of Halifax, it was home to generations of working-class Black Canadians who found themselves priced out of, and unwelcome in, the city they’d helped build. In 1905, the city of Halifax decided that it needed a new railroad. Local business leaders and politicians were enthusiastic for the project and hailed it as an opportunity for progress and prosperity in their city. And they wanted to lay tracks right down the middle of Africville.
By this time, league co-founder James Kinney was more or less acting as commissioner of the CHL. He had also amassed some political power, which he used to successfully fight against an attempt at segregating schools in Halifax. He threw his entire weight behind stopping the railroad. He demanded that the people of Africville had the right to their land, to their homes, to a say on what went on in their patch of the world.
But Kinney couldn’t stop a moving train. The denizens of Africville couldn’t prove their rights to their land in court, with the land grants in many cases going back more than a century and no paperwork to back it up. The houses came down, the tracks were laid, and before the wounds could even heal, a belching steam engine chugged through the middle of the town as a reminder that progress doesn’t benefit everyone.
In response to Kinney and other local black leaders’ attempts to derail their passion project, Nova Scotian businessmen went scorched earth on the CHL. They refused to have anything more to do with the league, refusing to allow any mention of it in newspapers and banning its teams from renting rinks. The league tried to soldier on, playing games out on rural frozen ponds for a time, but the blacklisting proved a death blow, reducing the CHL to little more than just another rec league, playing matches far away from the once-adoring crowds in the cities that had housed them. It’s not entirely clear when the last CHL game was played, though the last mention of the original incarnation appears just before the outbreak of World War I. There were at least two attempts at reviving the league in the ensuing decades, but neither came close to the original in ingenuity or popularity.
The CHL’s founders may have been only partially right when they believed the league could be a showcase for black excellence. They were correct in that it would force white people to pay attention. What they did not foresee was white teams refusing to share the ice with superior black teams, or white business leaders systemically starving the league out of existence when its leaders dared to stick up for their community, or the larger hockey world happily cannibalizing the CHL’s innovations then consigning it to the forgotten dustbin of history. Black excellence was largely viewed, it turned out, as a threat. You can decide for yourself if that’s changed in the last hundred years.
The injustice done to Africville wouldn’t be the last. In the 1960s, the entire population of the town was forcibly removed and their homes demolished to make way for industrial development: more displacement in the name of progress. In 2010, the city of Halifax issued an apology; to this day, the Africville Museum keeps alive the community’s memory. The Coloured Hockey League of the Maritimes has no such shrine.
 
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Eye on History: Blacks overcame bias to play hockey in Nova Scotia
  • By Staff
  • Feb 1, 2015
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When most people think of black sports figures, images of football or basketball players come to mind. The fact is that blacks have excelled in various sports in the United States and beyond. One of them is hockey.
The book, “Black Ice: The Lost History of the Colored Hockey League of the Maritimes, 1895-1925,” gives a clear picture of the contributions of the black hockey players of Nova Scotia, one of the three maritime provinces in Canada. The book was written by brothers George and Darril Fosty, after seven years of research. The cover features a photo of these dynamic hockey players.
The book presents a fascinating look into the world of hockey played by some of the most skilled athletes ever to play the game. These were the sons and grandsons of runaway American slaves who escaped along the Underground Railroad. The black hockey players of this early era had one thing in common with modern-day blacks in the sport – they had to overcome racial prejudice.

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Author Cecil Harris, in his 2004 book, “Breaking the Ice: The Black Experience in Professional Hockey,” wrote: “To every black man determined to make a way in professional hockey, self-respect has always mattered more. Facing abuse that is verbal, physical or psychological because of the color of their skin has been an unfortunate reality for almost all of them. How black players dealt with that reality, and continue to deal with it, is what makes each one unique.”


Blacks had to prove themselves on the ice. Some believed they could not skate because their ankles were too weak; they could not stand the cold; and they lacked the intelligence to play the game of hockey. A similar thought was held when blacks attempted to fly planes. Such thinking has persisted all the way back to the Civil War, when it was believed that blacks did not have the courage or skill to fight. History shows that black soldiers not only had the courage but fought valiantly in all of the wars of our country, winning numerous medals of honor along the way.


The black hockey players of Nova Scotia defied the odds and made history in Canada. They persevered because of their love of the game. These early players instilled community pride, purpose, teamwork and dedication. “Black Ice” called it “the first black pride sports movement in history.”
This early hockey league was created by black Baptist ministers as a means to increase male attendance in their churches, where women were the dominant members. This turned out to be a master plan because it gave black males the chance of a lifetime to prove their skills on the ice. It was complex in its design. The game book was full of the code words and oral history of the Underground Railroad. The game was integrated with religion and used as a means of social mobility.



One of the reasons their story was not fully told was because many of the newspapers ignored the men. Much of this was due to racism. The black players were innovative and had a unique style of playing hockey and many of their moves were copied by others with no credit given to them.

The names of these forgotten heroes must be resurrected along with those of the modern-day players. Their history must be told to black youth and others who would like to play hockey. “Black Ice,” which pays tribute to these men, is a fascinating read. The following is a partial list of these early players:
John Cassidy: born March 14, 1878. Years played: 1899 to 1904. Position: mainly a defenseman.

James Carvery: born Feb. 19, 1879. Years played: 1899 to 1922. Positions: forward and center. Known as the fastest man on the ice.
James E. Dixon: born June 3, 1882. Years played: 1898 to 1922. Positions: point, goal and left wing.

Wallace Dixon: born Aug. 6, 1879. Position: forward. Years played: 1899 to 1904. He served in World War I.

James Paris: born Aug. 20, 1871. Years played: 1899 to 1900. Position: point and goal.
James Paris Jr.: born July 8, 1895. Year played: 1922. Position: defense and wing. He served in World War I.

Eva M. Doyle has been a columnist for 36 years at the Criterion newspaper, where this article originally appeared. It is the first of four parts.
 
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Black Heritage And Professional Hockey, a story



*The Registry affirms Black contributions in the sport of professional hockey on this date.

The National Hockey League (NHL) did not integrate until 1958, but it claims that it never had any restrictions. The NHL points to the involvement of Black athletes in many levels of organized amateur and professional hockey since the past century. Until the 1970s Hockey players were taken largely from Canada, a country whose Black population was very small. The NHL, strongly rooted in Canada, claims that it shared the Canadian tradition of open-mindedness on matters of race, and if there ever were black hockey players good enough to play in the NHL, they would get their chance.

Canada's entire Black population in the 1950s was just over one-tenth of one percent of the national total. There were only 120 NHL jobs and if all players were Canadian, the entire black population of Canada would have been a single candidate along with four other contenders for one statistical position. In the mid-1960s, the six-team NHL had only one non-Canadian (Boston Bruin Tommy Williams from Duluth, Minnesota.) The background of NHL players has changed dramatically in the last 20 years, not necessarily helping the chances of Black athletes due to the influx of players from American colleges, Russia, Sweden, the Czech Republic, and other European countries. The United States has had a historically larger Black community and these have not been hockey breeding grounds.

Other sports such as basketball, football, and baseball offered better infrastructure and more apparent opportunities. Without race as a factor, hockey's initial time of overall appeal began in the 1890s when what was an unsophisticated game rapidly got organized and got promotional support. At the same time, however, the number of Blacks in Canada was plunging due to the return of many former slaves to the United States. A population that numbered over 60,000 (nearly two percent of the national total) prior to the American Civil War had tumbled to just over 16,000 by 1911, amounting to one-fifth of one percent of the country's total. Despite this, Blacks that remained played the game, an early indicator that they felt themselves to be a part of this emerging identity of their country and sport.

The Colored Hockey League of the Maritimes formed in 1895 included teams from Afrieville (the Seasides), Dartmouth (the Jubilees), Halifax (the Eurekas), Truro (the Victorias), and Amherst (the Royals). It was a Nova Scotia-based league and Prince Edward Island where Black talent flourished. It had an all-Black team featuring five members of the Mills family and two others that played all-white teams on the island and black teams in Nova Scotia. Exhibitions by Black hockey teams in Nova Scotia ran well into the 1920s and their playing innovations included a rule allowing the goalie to fall to the ice to block a shot before such a rule entered the NHL rule book.

In 1899, Hipple "Hippo" Galloway, of Alder Street in Dunnville, Ontario, played for the Woodstock team in the Central Ontario Hockey Association. Galloway was not alone. Charley Lightfoot of the Stratford team was a second Black player in the league and one of the better players in the Central Ontario Hockey Association. Still, this was during the darkest era of Jim Crow legislation, the imposed segregation in America. Despite Canada's more liberal heritage, the appalling repeat of the American model led to Galloway’s banishment that summer from an Ontario baseball league because an American import objected to his presence.

Galloway left Canada to barnstorm with a Black baseball team. At the same time, a Colored Hockey League was formed in Atlantic Canada, similar to the Negro Baseball Leagues in the United States. It is unclear whether players were forced to develop a separate organization because of racial exclusion or if they felt, the need for their own association to retain a community identity.

Nova Scotia had the size and closeness of a Black population to support an effective hockey league and so powerful was the symbol of hockey to the Canadian experience that Black children were unwavering in their desire to play the game. In the first two decades of the 20th century Fred "Bud" Kelly was one of the best Black hockey players. Kelly claimed that his first pair of skates were two whiskey flasks that he found on his father's farm and tied to a pair of shoes. Gliding across the snow gave him his first taste of skating. In 1916 Kelly was a member of Selke's seven-man 118th Battalion hockey team from London, Ontario, which played at the intermediate level of the Ontario Hockey Association. While a member of Peterborough's OHA senior team, the manager of the NHL's Toronto St. Pats (later the Maple Leafs) scouted him.

In a game against Toronto Varsity, Kelly flubbed a breakaway opportunity deliberately set up to see if Kelly could put the puck in the net. "I was so flabbergasted by the fact that neither defense-man even laid a glove on me that I just stopped and let the puck roll off my stick," Kelly recalled. The St. Pats never contacted him. Kelly believed that race did not play a part in his lost opportunity and in fact, suggested that so-called amateur hockey held better rewards than the NHL. Small-town entrepreneurs would make payments under the table and find players jobs in the off-season. Kelly worked as a chauffeur for the McClary family in London, a position he held for a half-century.

It has been disputed that the absence in the 1930s and 1940s of a Black hockey player on the superstar level of baseball players such as Satchel Paige or Josh Gibson counters any notion that the NHL practiced discriminatory hiring. The experience of at least one player challenges that theory. In what is now the North York portion of what is now known as the megacity of Toronto, the best Black player of his era, Herb Carnegie, played pond hockey with his brother Ossie. In the early 1930s, he entered his first organized hockey competition at Lansing Public School. Carnegie advanced through the tough high school circuit and played junior hockey, practicing regularly at Maple Leaf Gardens.

Carnegie was something special; a great skater and goal scorer who won most valuable player awards in the superior Quebec Senior League, from which an eventual teammate, Jean Beliveau, graduated, as did NHL legends Doug Harvey and Jacques Plante. Also, in 1947 the New York Rangers invited him to their camp but Carnegie had to negotiate his way through the Ranger farm system before being offered a contract to play just below the NHL. The Rangers may have been imitating baseball's Brooklyn Dodgers, who had Jackie Robinson play a year of the minor-league ball before his Brooklyn debut. They were not prepared to offer Carnegie a big-league start and he opted to return to Quebec where the pay was better.

In this big-league contract business and racial failure, the NHL lost a historic opportunity to place itself as the one major league that had never discriminated. In some ways, it was only a matter of time before a Black player made the NHL. The NHL's black pioneer debuted in the city whose American League baseball team was the last to hire a Black player. Both occurred around the same time. Willie O'Ree, nicknamed "King of the Near Miss" played his first game for the Boston Bruins on Jan. 18, 1958. The near-miss label described his inability to score goals despite his great speed, which presented him with more opportunities than most hockey players.

While playing O’Ree said: "They've called me the Jackie Robinson of hockey, and I'm aware of being the first, and of the responsibilities, but I'm also aware that there have not been, and are not many colored players able to play hockey, that there has never been the discrimination in this game there was in baseball, and that I didn't face any of the very real problems Robinson had to face." O'Ree did talk about a damaged right eye which restricted his playing ability and, more seriously, ugly incidents such as a racial taunting and butt-ending in the mouth from a Chicago Black Hawks player. It resulted in a fight and a vicious reaction from Chicago fans that were shocked that a Black man would retaliate.

Other Black players of O'Ree's era included Arthur Dorrington, a Canadian who signed with the Atlantic City Seagulls of the Eastern Amateur League in 1950, and O'Ree's Los Angeles teammate Stan Maxwell, the only other Black player in organized hockey in the early 1960s. Below the surface of NHL recognition were players like John Utendale. He played flanking Mark Messier's father Doug on the junior Edmonton Oil Kings, who went to the Western Canada finals in 1957. He later attended and played for the University of British Columbia. Another pioneer hockey player, Windsor resident George "Kirk" Scott, was later memorialized in the International Afro-American Sports Hall of Fame.

Scott, who attended Patterson Collegiate in Windsor in the late 1950s, was an acknowledged "rink rat" at the city arena who often came to school in need of rest. He played Junior B hockey in the Windsor area. The contemporary scene Mike Marson, who played 196 NHL games beginning in 1974, was the first of the contemporary black hockey players to enter the League following a long hiatus after O'Ree's career.

He recalled playing in Chicago where he was probably the only black person in the entire arena of 20,000 people: "A lot of people have never been faced with that type of difficulty or awareness. They miss the whole concept of what it's like to be the minority in a situation like that and the psychological setup you have to put yourself through going out on the ice night after night and the opposing teams are calling you whatever, and the guys are spitting in your face and then you’re dealing with whatever goes on in the dressing room with your teammates."

Tony McKegney, with nearly 350 NHL regular season and playoff goals, including a 40-goal season in 1987-88 with the St. Louis Blues, was the first bona fide star of African-Canadian background. Born in Montreal, he was adopted by a family in Sarnia at the age of one and learned to play in the local system. "Sometimes I would wonder why I was trying to be a pro player when there were none to look up to. I'm proud of the fact that I was the first Black to establish myself in the NHL (first appearing in 1978). Now there are a few. I hope that helps youngsters who need someone to emulate."

Val James made his NHL debut for the Buffalo Sabres in 1981. He became the first native-born African American to play in the NHL when he debuted with the Sabres.

A very successful Black hockey player was Grant Fuhr from Spruce Grove, Alberta, the No. 1 goalie for much of the Edmonton Oilers Stanley Cup dynasty years of the 1980s when their superstar lineup included Wayne Gretzky, Mark Messier, Paul Coffey, and Jari Kurri. It was a dazzling young team with great unity. Gretzky could recall no instances of explicit racism on or off the ice and that Black-white issues were raised only in the context of dressing room solidarity. Fuhr was the first Black to have his name on the Stanley Cup. Though Fuhr's career was broken up by a suspension in the fall of 1990 after he admitted to substance abuse, it resumed productively with Toronto, St. Louis, and Calgary before his retirement following the 1999-2000 season.

Late in 1988–89, Dirk Graham was named team captain of the Chicago Blackhawks, the first Black team captain in the National Hockey League.

Other significant Black personalities have included John Paris from Windsor, Nova Scotia, the first Black head coach in professional hockey who led the Atlanta Knights to the International Hockey League championship in 1994, and Anson Carter, a member of Canada's World Championship team of NHL players in 1997, and now a member of the Oilers. Carter's parents were both natives of Barbados and part of the great immigration boom of the modern era. They at first attempted to put a damper on his hockey playing because the sport was too rough, but even though being behind his Scarborough mates in skating ability he soon surpassed them. Carter went on to a university career with the Michigan State University Spartans and was a member of Canada's 1994 World Junior champs.

The NHL has a Diversity Task Force, a not-for-profit program designed to introduce children of diverse ethnic backgrounds to the game of hockey. The program's mission is to help and enable local youth hockey programs to teach hockey and other life skills, to economically disadvantaged children, creating a fun experience for boys and girls of all age levels. There are approximately 31 programs in various stages of development that receive support from the National Hockey League.

Some current non-white players in the NHL, including Forwards:
George Laraque, Jarome Iginla, Mike Grier, Donald Brashear, Dustin Byfuglien, Nigel Dawes, Robbie Earl, Jamal Mayers, Greg Mauldin, Kenndal McArdle, Kyle Okposo, Wayne Simmonds, Anthony Stewart, Chris Stewart, Joel Ward. Current players as of 2021 include:

K'Andre Miller with the New York Rangers.

Pierre-Edouard Bellemare with the Vegas Golden Knights.

P. K. Subban while with the Nashville Predators.

Justin Bailey with the Buffalo Sabres.

Madison Bowey with the Washington Capitals.

Malcolm Subban with the Vegas Golden Knights.

Lucas Raymond with the Detroit Red Wings.
 
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Back in the day it was always like this, because as soon as we put them on to something, they wanted to push us out of it. I posted a story about horse racing and the prevalence and success of black jockeys up until the rise of jim crow ended them in the early twentieth century.
 
They weren't enslaved and it's unknown if they actually invented it. It's a really good book about it called Black Ice. I know it's been mentioned here a lot.
 
Little Known Black History Fact: The Origins Of Hockey
D.L. CHANDLER
3 YEARS AGO
The origin of hockey, most especially ice hockey, has been debated for years with some tracing the game’s roots back to regions of Europe and also connecting it to early Native American sports. However, there are claims that Black residents of Nova Scotia invented the game in 1815.
According to historian Chris Stevenson, hockey, as its played today, did not exist before 1815 until a group of children from four families – Courney, Williams, Munro, and Leale – played the game in an area of Nova Scotia known as the Northwest Arm during the cold winter months. These families were said to be from the Chesapeake Bay area of the mid-Atlantic United States.



While this fact has never been confirmed, hockey experts universally state that the game most likely evolved from Native Americans, who are also credited with inventing a form of lacrosse. Notably, white players dominate both sports today, and as wealthy whites embraced hockey, it ultimately excluded poor Black Canadians.

What is also known is that Black hockey leagues existed before the National Hockey League, which began in November 1917. The Colored Hockey League was established in Nova Scotia in 1895, and lasted until 1930. Eddie Martin of the Halifax Eureka was said to be the first player to perform the slapshot – the hardest shot in hockey – during a game in 1906.
 
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