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Hockey - Players√
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Women's Hockey Game

University women playing hockey at [Nutana Collegiate Rink], 1915.

Lloydminster High School Hockey Team

Team/Group photograph of the Lloydminster High School Hockey Team during the 1939-1940 season. Players named (back row, left to right): John Hill; George Brown; Grover A. Berry; Bill Jenkins; Glen Gerow; Fred Gerow; Pooch Miller; Gordon Hamilton; Earl Beatty; Lorne Boyle

Rosetown Peewee Hockey Team

Rosetown's Peewee Hockey club in 1938-1939, the first year of organized hockey in Rosetown. Back row, L-R: Ted Carr, Eldon Muttit, Hank Craddock, Geo. Lee (Principal), unknown, Lorne McConnell. Front row, L-R: Vic Dillabough, Phil Lefevre, Jim Maxwell, Gord Winters, George Pietro.

Crescents Hockey Team

Group of thirteen men and boys in hockey uniforms, holding hockey sticks; one of the boys is holding a trophy; names of players not supplied.

Moose Jaw Millers Hockey team

Team photograph of the Moose Jaw Millers hockey team, Southern Saskatchewan Champions for the 1937-1938 season. Photograph taken in front of Kerr and Anderson Mens Wear store. Players identified on back of photograph as (left to right): Ted Pudden; Vic Myles; Eddie Steinhauer; Archy Getty; Lou Labovitch; Harry Warr; Sid Boyling; Pete Dewar; Alex Echit; Pallie Pascoe; Billy Simpson; Pete Voet; Tommy Dewar; Reg Bentley; Doug Bentley; ___ Collins; Hendy Henderson; Howard Weekes; Cy Polson; Doc Calvert (in front)

Sans titre

University of Saskatchewan Women's Hockey Team - Group Photo

Hockey team members, Eddie Carr (coach), F. Miller, Ginger Catherwood, Alda Mathers, F. Mahaffy, O. Leitch, F. Brown, Queade Isabel Helen Johnston.

Bio/Historical Note: Born in Hannah, North Dakota in 1902, Ginevra (Ginger) Irene Catherwood and her family moved to a homestead just outside Scott, Saskatchewan, four years later. Ginger likely learned to skate and play hockey on frozen sloughs. She also played baseball and excelled as pitcher. Catherwood entered the University of Saskatchewan on a scholarship in 1919. It was on the ice, as captain of the Varsity women’s hockey team, where she excelled. Catherwood’s arrival at the U of S coincided with the beginning of inter-varsity competition in women’s hockey. During the 1920-1921 season, playing against the University of Manitoba, Catherwood scored five goals in the first period and finished the game with three more in a 9-1 victory. She netted four goals in the first 11 minutes in a match against the University of Alberta. The final score was Saskatchewan 7 (Catherwood 6) and Alberta 1. The Saskatoon Star-Phoenix declared the U of S team the unofficial champion of university women’s hockey that season (there was no formal league at the time.) Opposing teams quickly learned that Catherwood was a scoring threat every time she had the puck. During the 1921-1922 season, she was hurt in the first period in a game in Edmonton and left the ice. The team squeaked out a 2-1 win. She was still nursing her injury in the next game against Manitoba and played defence in a 2-2 tie. Catherwood graduated with a three-year Arts degree in 1922. After attending Normal School in Saskatoon, she found work as a teacher in the Plenty, Saskatchewan district. Then in 1928, her sister Ethel won Olympic gold in high jump and Ginger was called upon by their family to chaperone her during her Canadian travels. Ginger was rumoured to have accompanied Ethel when she left Canada for the United States sometime around 1932. Ginger Catherwood later married English-born Charles Mitchell in Toronto in the fall of 1933.

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