"It is with our
deepest respect that we honor these Massachusetts natives. We
honor them for their achievements, contributions and dedication to
the sport".
Bob Rogers Massachusetts Hockey
Past Webmaster
Just some of the
items at the Massachusetts Hockey Hall of Fame (Left) Robbie
Ftorek's Pee Wee Jacket (Right) Kevin Ahearn's World Hockey
Association Championship Trophy
The World Hockey
Association Champion New England Whalers
John P.
Chase Harvard University
1924-1928 Forward USA Olympic Team 1932 Silver
Medal Coach: Harvard
University 1942-1950 John Chase began his formal hockey
career at Milton Academy playing on the 1922-23 team. Transferring
to Exeter Academy the following year he played there one year before
matriculating at Harvard in the fall of 1924. Born: June 12, 1906,
Milton, Massachusetts
John P.
Chase
1932
He played as
a regular at center ice as a freshman and as a first line center on
the varsity for three years. He was selected as team captain his
senior year. Chase also excelled at baseball at Harvard and as an
amateur player in later years. Following graduation from
Harvard, Chase was sought after by professional teams, but he chose
instead to pursue a business career. He did, however, continue his
hockey career with such teams as the Boston Athletic Association,
Boston University Club, and Brac Burn Hockey Club. All were strong
contenders because of Chase's presence in the lineup. In 1932 he
captained the United States Olympic Team which captured the silver
medal at Lake Placid, New York, losing the final game to Canada 2-1
in a heartbreaker. When his playing days were over Chase coached the
Harvard varsity for eight years, from 1942 through 1950. Not only
was John Chase a graceful, heady player and playmaker, he was also a
very talented coach at Harvard University. John was inducted into
the USA Hockey Hall of Fame in 1973.
1932
Olympic Team
Ed Frazier
1932
Do you
know where the word hockey came from? Do you know where the game
of ice hockey began?
The word
hockey comes from old French "hocquet" which meant "stick". The
origins of ice hockey are unclear, but it's widely accepted that the
British are responsible for bringing hockey to North America.
Soldiers stationed in Nova Scotia, Canada, played the earliest
games. In 1879, a group of college students at McGill University in
Montreal organized competitions and had developed the first known
set of hockey rules.
The sport
migrated south to the United States during the 1890s. The first
known hockey games took place between Johns Hopkins and Yale
Universities in 1895.
The first Olympic Games to include ice
hockey for men took place in 1920 in Antwerp. However, the first
Olympic Winter Games took place in 1924 in
Chamonix.
One of the first
teams in the history of ice hockey Princeton
University.
Did
you know that Harry Sinden Boston Bruins President, former
General Manager & Coach played in the Olympics?
That's right Harry
Sinden was a top amateur player in Canada. A defenseman, he
captained his Whitby Dunlops team to the 1957 Allan Cup as
Canada's Senior Amateur Champions. That team then captured the
1958 World Championship title with seven straight wins while
outscoring their opponents, 82-6, in the tournament. He also
won a silver medal with Team Canada in the 1960 Olympics in
Squaw Valley.