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 Origin 
Overview  
Written
  
  Evidence
  
   
  
   Haliburton Quote
  
  News Accounts
  
  Early Names
  
   Game Chronology 
Dispelling 
  
  
   Other 
  Claims 
  
  
    
  
 Original Equipment 
Further Evidence  
  
  
  
  
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 Early Newspaper Accounts of Ice Hockey
Ice Hockey is Canada’s great winter game and Haliburton’s 
        quote is the earliest known reference to a stick-ball game being played 
        on ice in Canada. Nova Scotia’s newspapers chronicle the development of 
        Ice Hockey from Ice Hurley, between 1800 and 1850, thus designating Windsor 
        as the birthplace of Ice Hockey. With boys attending King’s College School 
        from all over the British Empire, it was only natural that once the game 
        of Ice Hurley got underway, graduates of the school would spread love 
        of the game far and wide. 
Many of the students attending King’s College in Windsor, N.S. were from 
        the nearby Halifax-Dartmouth area. During the 1800 – 1850 era there were 
        many accounts in the Halifax papers of the game being played on Halifax’s 
        North West Arm, the Dartmouth Lakes and the frozen inlets of Halifax Harbour 
        which lies between the two towns. Many of those games involved members 
        of the military and new immigrant Irish workers.  
  
        Skatists on the Dartmouth Lakes in 1800s 
Evidence of the spread of the game is to be found in the 1830s papers 
        of Pictou County, some two hundred miles away. Accounts of “Break Shins” 
        and “Hurley” appear which indicate that interest was growing from place 
        to place about the province.  
By 1865, accounts appeared telling of folks in the Fredericton and Saint 
        John areas of the neighbouring province of New Brunswick playing the game 
        on Lilly Lake. All areas mentioned had students attending King’s College 
        in Windsor. They also were visited regularly by members of the military 
        who travelled between the forts at Windsor, Halifax and Fredericton. 
       
Not until 1872 did the game get to be played outside of the Maritimes. 
        At that point, a young graduate of Dalhousie University in Halifax, James 
        George Aylwin Creighton, moved to Montreal and was responsible for teaching 
        new friends there how to play Ice Hockey. As a result, Montreal’s citizens 
        got to see their first game of Ice Hockey played in Victoria Skating Rink 
        on March 3, 1875.  
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"The Novascotian"
  
        Halifax, N.S., Canada
  
        February 24, 1831 
  
        Skatists on the North West Arm  
Winter Sports.- ‘The weather, during the past week or ten days, has been 
        delightful; generally clear, with an unclouded sky, and singularly moderate 
        for the season. There has been excellent skating upon the head of the 
        North West Arm, and large parties of our Townsfolks and the Military, 
        have enjoyed, during several afternoons of this and the past week, the 
        healthy and spirit stirring game of Wicket."  
Note: The influence of the game of Cricket on the evolving game of Ice 
        Hockey was evident as it was often referred to as Ricket and Wicket as 
        well as Hurley for years before it took on the permanent name of Ice Hockey. 
Note: Not everybody liked Ice Hockey as it began to develop in Nova Scotia. 
        Many felt that field games like Hurley and Ground Hockey should remain 
        on the fields, and not be adapted to ice. Skating was very popular at 
        the time, and there were not yet indoor rinks available for skating. ‘Skatists’ 
        appeared on lakes and ponds by the hundreds and did not enjoy having ‘Hockeyists’ 
        darting about, shooting wooden pucks and spoiling the tranquility of a 
        nice afternoon’s skating session.  
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"The British Colonist"
  
        Halifax, N.S., Canada
  
        January 4, 1859 
  
        Early Dartmouth Players 
The Young Men of Halifax:
  
        "We have long held the opinion that the young men of this city are 
        second to none in the world of energy, skill and daring, in all manly 
        games and exercises… Often have we been led to express the same opinion, 
        when the bat laid aside, skates strapped on, and hurley in hand, the ball 
        is followed over the glassy surface of the lakes, which ring to the skates’ 
        heel…." 
Note: The stick used was simply called a "hurley" and later 
        a "hockey" as opposed to a "hurley stick" or "hockey 
        stick". Early versions of skates, called "Block/Stock Skates" 
        were strapped to boots. The ‘bat laid aside’ refers to both Rounders (developed 
        into Baseball) and Cricket, both of which were common stick-ball games 
        of the day along with hurley. 
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        "Boston Evening Gazette"
  
        Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.,
  
        Saturday, November 5, 1859. 
A visiting journalist from New England wrote a piece about Winter Sports 
        in Nova Scotia telling of the marvellous skaters and describing the new 
        game played on ice called Ricket, Hurley or Hockey. The editor of the 
        paper added a note saying that he had sent to Nova Scotia for a set of 
        hurley sticks so that the game could be tried in the Boston area. He pointed 
        out that Nova Scotians were then referring to the sticks by the name of 
        “hockey”. Actually, the game at that time was referred to by interchangeable 
        names, Hurley and Hockey, and a stick used to play the game was likewise 
        called a “Hurley” or a “Hockey”.  
Click here for more of the 
        article 
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"The Halifax Reporter"
  
        Halifax, N.S., Canada 
  
        January 2, 1864 
‘…If we turn towards the country, we are at once struck by the almost 
        total absence of stone throwing boys, upon whose characteristics and mode 
        of life we remarked in a former article. What has become of them? The 
        nearest pond answers this question; they are playing hockey on the ice 
        and occasionally mimicking the mistakes of such among their betters as 
        are not quite at home on skates…’ 
Note: This article was written in 1864 and shows that Ice Hockey was 
        being played in Nova Scotia at least eleven years before it was first 
        played in Montreal on March 3, 1875 
"The Halifax Morning Sun"
  
        Halifax, N.S., Canada 
  
        January 25, 1864 
"Hockey ought to be sternly forbidden, as it is not only annoying 
        but dangerous. In its right place, hockey is a noble game, and deserving 
        of every encouragement, but on the ice it is in its wrong place, and should 
        be prohibited." 
The above noted newspaper accounts are from the Nova Scotia "Journal 
        of Education" Vol.14, #4 June 19, 1965, as compiled by C.Bruce Fergusson.
       
  
        C. Bruce Fergusson – N.S. Provincial Archivist
  
        (more on C.B. Fergusson in "Evolution 
        – Halifax Rules" section) 
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 "The Gazette"
  
          Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  
          Interview 1936 
On March 3, 1875, Henry Joseph, an outstanding Montreal athlete, 
            played in the city’s first public game of Ice Hockey along with his 
            friend J.G.A.Creighton. In an interview 
            later in life, he told reporters that Creighton was the “leading spirit” 
            in the introduction of ice hockey into Montreal and added that he 
            “could not recall seeing hockey sticks in Montreal before that time, 
            nor anybody playing hurley on skates”. Finally, Joseph said that ” 
            to Creighton should go the credit for the origin of ice hockey in 
            Montreal”. 
 
 "Canadian Magazine"
  
          Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  
          April, 1898 
Dr. A. H. Beaton, secretary of the Ontario Hockey Association, 
          wrote an article describing Ice Hockey. “Nearly twenty years ago,” he 
          wrote, “hockey, as a scientific sport, was introduced into Upper Canada 
          from Nova Scotia, the latter being the indisputable home in Canada of 
          this game.”  
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