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International Professional Hockey League - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

International Professional Hockey League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The International (Professional) Hockey League was the first major professional hockey league, operating from 1904 to 1907. It was formed by Jack 'Doc' Gibson, a dentist who played hockey throughout Ontario before settling in Houghton, Michigan. The IPHL was a five team circuit which included Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, Calumet, Michigan and Houghton.

To this point, leagues in Canada fought against the professionalization of athletics. John Ross Robertson was quoted in the newspapers of the day as saying "for self preservation, the stand of the Ontario Hockey Association (OHA) against the professionalism of Pittsburgh, Houghton, Calumet and the Soo must be uncompromisingly antagonistic ... Any player who figures on any of these teams must be banished from Ontario Hockey."

Leagues in Canada had been accused of paying individual players for several years and, in fact, Gibson played on a team expelled from the Ontario Hockey Association in 1898 for paying some of its players. However, it wasn't until the Portage Lakes Hockey Club and the formation of the IPHL in 1904 that any hockey league achieved full fledged professional status.

The mining industry was making huge investments in Northern Michigan at the time. In the fall of 1903, James R. Dee of Houghton started discussions with representatives in Pittsburgh regarding the establishment of a national hockey association.

In 1903-04 the professional Houghton team, still without a league of its own, played exhibition games against teams from Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario and Michigan prompting the OHA to ban both the American Soo Indians and Canadian Sault Hockey Club from competing against Canadian amateur teams. As a result, the two teams had nowhere to go but to the proposed professional league.

A meeting was held on November 5, 1904 which included prominent business leaders from Pittsburgh, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario and Northern Michigan. A number of cities were considered for this new professional league including Montreal, Detroit, Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Milwaukee, Grand Rapids, and Duluth. However the league accepted teams from Houghton, Pittsburgh, the two Soos; and Calumet. The representatives of the Canadian Soo suggested a revenue sharing plan that would divide gate receipts in a 60-40 home-visitor split. This revenue sharing plan would make the long journey to Pittsburgh possible, considering that team played at the 5,000 seat capacity Duquesne Gardens.

The Houghton Portage Lakes team played at what was a new facility at the time called the 'Amphidrome' on Portage Lake. The Calumet-Larium Miners, a nearby rival of the Houghton team, played at the new Palastra. By contrast, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan made the Ridge Street Ice-A-Torium, the local curling club, its home rink. The Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario team or Canadian Soo as it was called also played at its local curling rink.

The International Hockey League attracted some of the best players from established Canadian amateur leagues. Every player received a minimum salary of at least $15 to $40 a week, with many also getting lucrative jobs in the community. Ottawa's "Hod" Stuart, was payed $1,800 by the Calumet Miners to play for the team and manage their rink for the 1904-05 season. Cyclone Taylor was enticed into the league with a salary offer of more than $3,000.

Fifteen of this league's 97 players are members of the Hockey Hall of Fame. They include Jimmy Gardner, Jack Gibson, Joe Hall, Reily Hern, Newsy Lalonde, Hugh Lehman, Jack Laviolette, George MacNamara, Didier Pitre, Oliver Seibert, Tommy Smith, Bruce Stuart, Cyclone Taylor and Marty Walsh.

With the hockey season only lasting a couple of months a year due to the fact that teams played on natural ice, most of the players went home to their families and regular jobs in Canada at the end of each season. In many cases this meant that IHL managers would have to organize completely new teams each season.

The Calumet Miners won the first league championship in 1905. In 1906 and 1907, the title went to Houghton's Portage Lakes.

After the 1906-07 season, Canada finally established individual professional teams and, soon after, leagues were formed drawing back many players to play for their home crowds. In addition, it was apparent that, while the league was talking about expanding to larger centres such as Toronto, Cleveland and Duluth, there were problems among the existing clubs. The Pittsburgh franchise was seeking a league closer to home to play in and the champion Houghton-Portage Lake club, wasn't interested in another season.

Between the leagues inability to add new franchises and keep the old ones, it became clear that there were fundamental problems in the International Hockey League. After the American Soo franchise announced it also would not operate for the following season, the league ceased operations for one year. The league did not return after that.

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