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Harvey Pulford

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Harvey Pulford
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{{Short description|Canadian ice hockey player}}







factoids
| birth_place = Toronto, Ontario, Canada1940314|22}}| death_place = Ottawa, Ontario, Canada| height_ft = 5| height_in = 11| weight_lb = 201Defenceman>Defence| shoots = Ottawa Senators (original)>Ottawa Hockey Club| career_start = 1892| career_end = 1908}}Ernest Harvey Pulford (April 22, 1875 – October 31, 1940) was a Canadian athlete at the turn of the twentieth century, winning national championships in ice hockey, lacrosse, football, boxing, paddling and rowing. A highly regarded defenceman with the Ottawa Hockey Club, where he was known for being a large and solid player who was excellent at checking opponents. With Ottawa he won the Stanley Cup four times, and also won championships or tournaments in every sport in which he played. When the Hockey Hall of Fame was founded in 1945, Pulford was one of the original nine inductees.

Personal life

Harvey Pulford was born in Toronto, Ontario, on April 22, 1875. His parents, Ernest George and Minnie Pulford, were originally from England and had moved to Canada in 1874 with their infant son, Dennis. In 1878 the family moved to Ottawa, Ontario, as Ernest was hired by the Department of the Secretary of State.{{harvnb|Kitchen|2019}} Pulford married Annis Mae Field of Brockville, Ontario; she died giving birth to a son, Harvey F. Pulford, on December 7, 1904.{{harvnb|Kitchen|2008|p=141}} Pulford later married Jennie Davidson.{{Sfn|Ottawa Citizen|1947|p=29}} In 1891 Pulford started working, first as a clerk with John M. Garland, a wholesale dry-goods firm, and later transferred into working as a salesman with the company. He later worked for the Imperial Life Assurance Company of Canada from 1921 until his death.{{Sfn|Ottawa Citizen|1940|p=8}}Pulford died October 31, 1940, and was buried in Ottawa’s Beechwood Cemetery.{{Sfn|Ottawa Citizen|1940|p=8}} Jennie, his widow lived until April 29, 1947, and is also buried at Beechwood.{{Sfn|Ottawa Citizen|1947|p=29}} The younger Harvey Pulford became an employee of the Canadian Pacific Railway and eventually moved to Chicago.{{Sfn|Cross|1949|p=2}}

Sports career

Ice hockey

missing image!
- Ottawa hockey club 1895.JPG -
right|The Ottawa Hockey Club in 1895. Pulford is in the second row, third from left.
In his youth Pulford played for Ottawa Hockey Club’s junior affiliate.{{harvnb|Kitchen|2008|p=84}} In 1894 he joined the senior club, playing as a point;{{efn|Point and cover-point were early versions of defencemen, and were not expected to contribute much to offensive actions.{{harvnb|Hardy|Holman|2018|p=130}}}} he would remain with the team until 1908, the year that Ottawa became professional.{{harvnb|Coleman|1964|p=640}} Pulford would serve as captain of the Ottawa team several times during his career, first starting in 1897.{{harvnb|Kitchen|2008|p=86}} While captain from 1902 to 1905 he led the team, later nicknamed the “Silver Seven”,{{harvnb|Zweig|2012|p=298}} to retain the Stanley Cup, the championship trophy of hockey in Canada, defending it from nine challenges and remaining as champions from 1903 to 1905.{{harvnb|Jenish|1992|p=38}}Pulford played his first senior-level games with the Ottawa club during the 1894 season, when the team was playing in the Amateur Hockey Association of Canada, then the top league in the country. His first game was on January 20, 1894, against the Montreal Victorias.{{harvnb|Coleman1964|p=13}} He played six of the eight games that year.{{harvnb|Coleman|1964|p=641}} Pulford also appeared in his first Stanley Cup challenge games, against the Montreal Hockey Club; Montreal won the series and retained the Cup.{{harvnb|Zweig|2012|p=323}} Ottawa would not win their league championship again for several seasons, and thus was not able to challenge for the Cup again.{{harvnb|Kitchen|2008|pp=351–352}}Ottawa moved to a new league in 1898, the Canadian Amateur Hockey League (CAHL).{{harvnb|Wong|2005|p=27}} The team began to improve after this, and finished first in the CAHL for the 1901 season, though they did not submit a challenge for the Cup in time to play for it that year.{{harvnb|Kitchen|2008|p=111}}{{harvnb|Zweig|2012|p=307}} This season also marked the start of Pulford changing his playing style, and started to rush towards the opponents end with the puck, rather than staying in his area, as was common at the time.{{harvnb|Coleman|1964|p=61}} Ottawa finished tied with the Victorias for the 1903 CAHL championship and right to hold the Cup, and the teams played a two-game, total-goal series to determine the winner; Ottawa won the series 9–2, with Pulford being credited for his ability to physically stop any opponents from entering his area of the ice.{{harvnb|Jenish|1992|pp=40–41}} They defended the Cup in a series against the Rat Portage Thistles, ending the season with it.{{harvnb|McKinley|2000|pp=44–45}}A dispute with the CAHL over replaying a match led Ottawa to leave the league during the 1904 season and join the newly-formed Federal Amateur Hockey League.{{harvnb|Jenish|1992|pp=45–46}} They were allowed to retain the Cup, and won all four challenge series’ they faced, against the Winnipeg Rowing Club, Toronto Marlboros, Montreal Wanderers, and Brandon Wheat City Hockey Club.{{harvnb|Kitchen|2008|pp=137–140}} Pulford played in seven of the eight scheduled games,{{efn|The one game Pulford missed was on March 2, 1904 against the Wanderers, owing to an injury.{{harvnb|Coleman|1964|p=97}}}} and scored one goal.{{harvnb|Coleman|1964|p=99}} The team won the FAHL championship for the 1904–05 season with a record of seven wins and one loss; Pulford in six games and recorded one goal.{{harvnb|Coleman|1964|pp=110–111}} The team played two challenge series that year, against the Dawson City Nuggets and the Rat Portage Thistles;{{harvnb|Kitchen|2008|pp=142–145}} Ottawa won both series, with Pulford playing in all four games.{{harvnb|Coleman|1964|p=115}}
missing image!
- silver7.jpg -
Ottawa with the Stanley Cup in 1905. Pulford is in the front row, second from the left.
Ottawa joined another new league in 1906, the Eastern Canada Amateur Hockey Association (ECAHA).{{harvnb|Wong|2005|pp=38–39}} They defeated Cup challenges from Queen’s University and Smiths Falls Seniors.{{harvnb|Jenish|1992|p=57}} The team finished tied for first in the ECHA with the Wanderers in the season, with both teams winning nine of ten games; to determine a winner a two-game, total-goal series was played, which Ottawa lost, ending their hold of the Cup.{{harvnb|Zweig|2012|pp=296–297}} Pulford played all ten regular season games, scoring a career-high three goals. He also scored one goal in the six Cup challenge games.{{harvnb|Coleman|1964|p=130}}Pulford was hesitant to start the 1907 season as he wanted to row the following summer and was concerned about playing professionals on other hockey teams, which would not allow him to compete in other sports as the rules stated. Despite members of his rowing club telling him to stay out of hockey, Pulford wanted to play for the Cup and rejoined the Senators a few days before the season started.{{Sfn|Pittsburgh Press|1906|p=8}} He recorded one goal in the nine games he played, as Ottawa finished second overall in the ECAHA.{{harvnb|Kitchen|2008|p=160}} Prior to the 1909 season Pulford decided to retire from hockey.{{harvnb|Coleman|1964|p=166}} The league had become openly professional, while Pulford wanted to retain his amateur status.{{harvnb|McFarlane|1969|p=14}}A strong defender from the start, Pulford was a key part in Ottawa’s rise as a team.{{harvnb|Kitchen|2008|p=96}} As an example, Pulford broke his collarbone playing football in 1898, which caused him to miss most of the following hockey season. He returned for the final few games, but was not fully healed. His absence from the ice was greatly missed, and after sitting out a game in January 1899 that Ottawa lost (their first loss of the season), team executives called Pulford’s absence “a pretty mean throw-down”.{{harvnb|Kitchen|2008|p=99}}{{Sfn|Ottawa Citizen|1899|p=6}} While not a fast skater or skilled stickhandler, he was known as a big player and able to give solid checks.{{harvnb|Kitchen|2008|pp=98–9}} Hockey historian Charles Coleman noted that Pulford did not try to carry the puck up the ice until 1901, several years after the concept was introduced for defencemen, instead preferring to check opposing players and then shoot the puck to the other end of the ice.{{efn|At the time, before icing rules came into effect, it was a common play for the defence to shoot the puck up into the air (lifting it with the blade of the stick, and referred to as a “lift“) into the other team’s end of the rink and opposing players would then skate to the other end to recover it.{{harvnb|Harper|2013|p=99}}}} He did not score many goals during his career, and did not score his first until he was in his seventh season, and only scored eight over his career.{{harvnb|Coleman|1964|p=12}} He was also known for his leadership of Ottawa, serving as captain for some time, and apparently was not happy to be replaced in that role in 1906.

Other sports

File:Harvey Pulford rowing.jpg|thumb|right|Pulford, at the front, with Ottawa Rowing Club teammates Eddie Phillips, Wilf Harrison and Ormie Haycock.]]Pulford was outstanding in several sports. He was a backfielder for the Ottawa Football Club football team from 1893 to 1909, winning national championships in 1898, 1899, 1900, and 1902.{{harvnb|Zweig|2012|p=304}} He also served as captain of the team.{{Sfn|The Gazette|1899|p=2}} He played lacrosse for the Ottawa Lacrosse Club from 1893 to 1900, winning four national titles. As a boxer, he won Eastern Canadian light heavyweight and heavyweight titles between 1896 and 1898.{{harvnb|Jenish|1992|p=39}}However it was as a rower that Pulford gained international acclaim. He was a member of the Britannia Boating Club, winning national and U.S. championships.{{sfn|Harvey Pulford Biography}} Due to his hockey career, which coincided with the rise of professionalism in that sport, he had to be re-instated by the Canadian Association of Amateur Oarsmen in 1909, as had played against professionals and was thus considered a professional by the rules of the time.{{efn|A professional athlete was considered anyone who was paid to play a sport, or played against anyone else being paid to play a sport. This label would apply to all other sports the individual played.{{harvnb|Harper|2013|p=18}}}}} He was a member of the Ottawa Rowing Club, and in 1910 their eight defeated every one of its opponents, earning the Canadian and North American championships.{{Sfn|Koffman|1953|p=E20}} In 1911 his crew reached the semifinals of the Henley Royal Regatta.{{sfn|Harvey Pulford Biography}} Pulford’s crew lost to one from Magdalen College, Oxford University; Pulford reportedly said his participation in the regatta was his greatest sporting achievement. He time as a rower with the Club ended in 1915.{{Sfn|Vancouver Sun|1915|p=6}} Later on he served as president of the Club, and resigned in 1936.{{Sfn|The Gazette|1936|p=16}}

Post-playing career

After retirement from playing hockey, Pulford served as a referee, working in that capacity from 1912 to 1919 in both the National Hockey Association (NHA) and National Hockey League. In 1916, Pulford was a candidate to succeed Emmett Quinn as president of the NHA, though he lost to Frank Robinson.{{harvnb|Holzman|Nieforth|2002|p=104}} He was nominated by Eddie Livingstone to replace Frank Calder as president of the by-then defunct NHA in a league meeting on September 28, 1918, but Calder would retain his position.{{harvnb|Holzman|Nieforth|2002|p=174}} In 1933, Pulford was given an option to buy the Ottawa club, by then known as the Senators, and move it to Baltimore, Maryland, but the purchase did not go through.{{harvnb|Wong|2005|p=132}}Pulford was a charter member of the Hockey Hall of Fame, in 1945, and the Ottawa Sports Hall of Fame, 1966. He was also inducted into the Ontario Sports Hall of Fame in 2003 and into Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame in 2015.{{sfn|Harvey Pulford|2018}}{{harvnb|Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame|2015}}

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs{| BORDER“0” CELLPADDING“1” CELLSPACING“0” width“75%” style@text-align:center”

bgcolor=“#e0e0e0“! colspan=“3” bgcolor=“#ffffff” |  ! rowspan=“99” bgcolor=“#ffffff” |  ! colspan=“5” | Regular season! rowspan=“99” bgcolor=“#ffffff” |  ! colspan=“5” | Playoffs bgcolor=“#e0e0e0“! Season! Team! League! GP !! G !! A !! Pts !! PIM! GP !! G !! A !! Pts !! PIM1894 AHAC season>1893–94Ottawa Senators (original)>Ottawa Hockey ClubAmateur Hockey Association of Canada>AHAC| —| — bgcolor=“#f0f0f0”1895 AHAC season>1894–95| Ottawa Hockey Club| AHAC| —| —1896 AHAC season>1895–96| Ottawa Hockey Club| AHAC| —| — bgcolor=“#f0f0f0”1897 AHAC season>1896–97| Ottawa Hockey Club| AHAC| —| —1898 AHAC season>1897–98| Ottawa Hockey Club| AHAC| —| — bgcolor=“#f0f0f0”1899 CAHL season>1898–99| Ottawa Hockey ClubCanadian Amateur Hockey League>CAHL| — | —1900 CAHL season>1899–1900| Ottawa Hockey Club| CAHL| —| — bgcolor=“#f0f0f0“| 1899–1900| Ottawa Aberdeens| CAHL-I| —| —1901 CAHL season>1900–01| Ottawa Hockey Club| CAHL| —| — bgcolor=“#f0f0f0”1903 CAHL season>1902–03| Ottawa Hockey Club| CAHL| 15| —| 1902–03| Ottawa Hockey ClubStanley Cup>St-Cup| —| 9 bgcolor=“#f0f0f0”1904 CAHL season>1903–04| Ottawa Hockey Club| CAHL| 3| —| 1903–04| Ottawa Hockey Club| St-Cup| —| 12 bgcolor=“#f0f0f0”1904–05 FAHL season>1904–05| Ottawa Hockey ClubFederal Amateur Hockey League>FAHL| 6| —| 1904–05| Ottawa Hockey Club| St-Cup| —| 6 bgcolor=“#f0f0f0”1906 ECAHA season>1905–06| Ottawa Hockey ClubEastern Canada Amateur Hockey Association>ECAHA| 27| —| 1905–06| Ottawa Hockey Club| St-Cup| —| 36 bgcolor=“#f0f0f0”1907 ECAHA season>1906–07| Ottawa Hockey Club| ECAHA| 31| —1907–08 ECAHA season>1907–08| Ottawa Hockey Club| ECAHA| 32| — bgcolor=“#e0e0e0“! colspan=“3” | AHAC totals! 36 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! —! 1 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! — bgcolor=“#e0e0e0“! colspan=“3” | CAHL totals! 25 !! 1 !! 0 !! 1 !! 18! 2 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! — bgcolor=“#e0e0e0“! colspan=“3” | FAHL totals! 6 !! 1 !! 0 !! 1 !! 6! — !! — !! — !! — !! — bgcolor=“#e0e0e0“! colspan=“3” | ECAHA totals! 29 !! 4 !! 0 !! 4 !! 90! 2 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! — bgcolor=“#e0e0e0“! colspan=“3” | St-Cup totals! — !! — !! — !! — !! —! 17 !! 2 !! 0 !! 2 !! 63
  • Source: Total Hockey{{harvnb|Diamond|2000|p=623}}{{efn|Assists were not officially counted.{{harvnb|Diamond|2000|p=610}}}}

References

Notes

{{notelist}}

Citations

{{reflist|20em}}

Bibliography

  • {{Citation|title=A Few Remarks About That Game|newspaper=The Gazette|location=Montreal|date=November 30, 1899|ref={{SfnRef|The Gazette|1899|p=2}} }}
  • {{Citation|author=Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame|title=Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame Celebrates the Induction of an Historic Canadian Sport Legends Class |publisher=Sport Information Resource Centre|date=June 18, 2015|url=https://sirc.ca/news/canadas-sports-hall-fame-celebrates-induction-historic-canadian-sport-legends-class|access-date=September 7, 2019}}
  • {{Citation|title=Church Filled To Capacity For Harvey Pulford Funeral|newspaper=Ottawa Citizen|date=November 1, 1940|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Wu8uAAAAIBAJ&sjid=yNsFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6409%2C574649|ref={{SfnRef|Ottawa Citizen|1940|p=8}} }}
  • {{Citation|last=Coleman|first=Charles L.|year=1964|title=The Trail of the Stanley Cup, Volume 1: 1893–1926 inc.|publisher=Kendall/Hunt Publishing|location=Dubuque, Iowa|oclc=957132}}
  • {{Citation|last=Cross|first=Austin|title=Cross Town|newspaper=Ottawa Citizen|location=Ottawa|date=November 8, 1949 }}
  • {{Citation|editor-last=Diamond|editor-first=Dan|title=Total Hockey: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Hockey League|year=2000 |edition=Second|publisher=Total Sports Publishing|location=New York|publication-date=2002|isbn=1-892129-85-X}}
  • {{Citation|last1=Hardy|first1=Stephen|last2=Holman|first2=Andrew C.|title=Hockey: A Global History|year=2018|publisher=University of Illinois Press|location=Champaign, Illinois|isbn=978-0-252-08397-6}}
  • {{Citation|last=Harper|first=Stephen J.|author-link=Stephen Harper|title=A Great Game: The Forgotten Leafs & The Rise of Professional Hockey|year=2013|publisher=Simon & Schuster Canada|location=Toronto|isbn=978-1-4767-1653-4}}
  • {{Citation|title=Harvey Pulford|website=oshof.ca|publisher=Ontario Sports Hall of Fame|year=2018|url=https://oshof.ca/index.php/honoured-members/item/45-harvey-pulford |access-date=September 7, 2019 |ref={{harvid|Harvey Pulford|2018}}|archive-date=July 12, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190712152628oshof.ca/index.php/honoured-members/item/45-harvey-pulford|url-status=dead }}
  • {{Citation|title=Harvey Pulford|newspaper=Pittsburgh Press|location=Pittsburgh|date=December 31, 1906|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=kRIbAAAAIBAJ&sjid=uUgEAAAAIBAJ&pg=5974%2C6824933 |ref={{SfnRef|Pittsburgh Press|1906|p=8}} }}
  • {{Citation|title=Harvey Pulford Biography|publisher=Hockey Hall of Fame|url=http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsMember.jsp?mem=p194509&page=bio|access-date=September 7, 2019|ref={{harvid|Harvey Pulford Biography}} }}
  • {{Citation|title=Hold E.R.A Regata At Brockville July 4|newspaper=The Gazette|location=Montreal|date=March 20, 1936|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=jX8tAAAAIBAJ&sjid=I5kFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5314%2C2486771 |ref={{SfnRef|The Gazette|1936|p=16}} }}
  • {{Citation|last1=Holzman|first1=Morey|last2=Nieforth|first2=Joseph|title=Deceptions and Doublecross: How the NHL Conquered Hockey|year=2002|publisher=Dundurn Press|location=Toronto|isbn=1-55002-413-2}}
  • {{Citation|last=Jenish|first=D’Arcy|year=1992|title=The Stanley Cup: A Hundred Years of Hockey at Its Best|publisher=McClelland & Stewart Inc.|location=Toronto, Ontario|isbn=0-7710-4406-2}}
  • {{Citation|last=Kitchen|first=Paul|year=2019|title=Pulford, Ernest Harvey|publisher=Dictionary of Canadian Biography|url=http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/pulford_ernest_harvey_16E.html|access-date=March 17, 2022}}
  • {{Citation|last=Kitchen|first=Paul|year=2008|title=Win, Tie, or Wrangle: The Inside Story of the Old Ottawa Senators, 1883–1935|publisher=Penumbra Press|location=Manotic, Ontario|isbn=978-1-897323-46-5 }}
  • {{Citation|last=Koffman|first=Jack|title=Ottawa Rowing Club Nearly Scored Grand Slam|newspaper=Ottawa Citizen|location=Ottawa|date=April 28, 1953}}
  • {{Citation|last=McFarlane|first=Brian|title=50 Years of Hockey, 1917–1967: An Intimate History of the National Hockey League|year=1969|publisher=Greywood Publishing Limited|location=Winnipeg, Manitoba|oclc=459759}}
  • {{Citation|last=McKinley|first=Michael|title=Putting a Roof on Winter: Hockey’s Rise from Sport to Spectacle|year=2000|publisher=Greystone Books|location=Vancouver|isbn=1-55054-798-4}}
  • {{Citation|author=Ottawa Citizen|title=Mrs. Harvey Pulford dies in 75th year|newspaper=Ottawa Citizen|location=Ottawa|date=April 30, 1947}}
  • {{Citation|title=Pulford Quits Rowing|newspaper=Vancouver Sun|location=Vancouver, British Columbia|date=March 24, 1915|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=eDNmAAAAIBAJ&sjid=eYgNAAAAIBAJ&pg=2335,3409099&hl=en|ref={{SfnRef|Vancouver Sun|1915|p=6}} }}
  • {{Citation|title=The Sporting World|newspaper=Ottawa Citizen|location=Ottawa|date=January 30, 1899|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=10EuAAAAIBAJ&sjid=9tgFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6771%2C1088000|ref={{SfnRef|Ottawa Citizen|1899|p=6}} }}
  • {{Citation|last=Wong|first=John Chi-Kit|year=2005|title=Lords of the Rinks: The Emergence of the National Hockey League, 1875–1936|publisher=University of Toronto Press|location=Toronto|isbn=978-0-8020852-0-7}}
  • {{Citation|last=Zweig|first=Eric|title=Engraved in History: The Story of the Stanely Cup Champion Kenora Thistles|year=2022|publisher=Rat Portage Press|location=Kenora, Ontario|isbn=978-1-7778897-0-8}}
  • {{Citation|last=Zweig|first=Eric|title=Stanley Cup: 120 Years of Hockey Supremacy|year=2012|publisher=Firefly Books|location=Richmond Hill, Ontario|isbn=978-1-77085-104-7}}

External links

  • {{ice hockey stats|legendsm=P194509}}


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