Kenora Thistles
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The Kenora Thistles were an early amateur, later professional, men's ice hockey team based in Kenora, Ontario, Canada and formed in 1896. The club is notable for winning the Stanley Cup in 1907. The town is the smallest in population to have ever won the Cup.
The team started play in amateur leagues in the 1890s, becoming openly professional in early 1907, playing against Manitoba and north-western Ontario based teams. Since the original team's demise in late 1907, the nickname Thistle has been used for many hockey clubs in Kenora, today being the name of the amateur junior and senior-level men's teams.
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[edit] Team History
The town of Kenora, Ontario was originally known as Rat Portage. In the early 1890s, an amateur senior hockey club was formed. A contest to name the team was held, and the winning entry came from a Scottish carpenter named Bill Dunsmore, who submitted the nickname Thistles along with a drawing of a Thistle for the team logo. By January 1896, several young boys of the Rat Portage area, most of them between the ages of 11-14, formed a junior ice hockey team, which went on to beat the senior team in an exhibition. Among these boys were future Hockey Hall of Famers Tommy Phillips, Tom Hooper, Billy McGimsie, and Silas Griffis.
Over the next five years, these young players populated the senior team and quickly established themselves as one of the premier amateur hockey clubs of the western Canadian provinces. In 1903 they challenged the Ottawa Senators for the Stanley Cup and lost. In 1905 they again challenged the Ottawa squad with the same disappointing results. That summer, the town of Rat Portage changed its name to the better sounding moniker of Kenora.
In January of 1907 the Thistles again challenged for the Cup, winning it in a two-game, total goals series against the Montreal Wanderers. The games were played Jan. 17 and 21, with Kenora winning 4–2 and 8–6, respectively. Two other future Hockey Hall of Famers, Art Ross and "Bad" Joe Hall were also on the roster. Kenora, with a 1907 population of around 4,000, is the smallest town ever to claim the legendary chalice of hockey supremacy.[1]
Just two months later, the Thistles were challenged by the Wanderers to a re-match. Despite importing the services of three more future Hockey Hall of Famers (Alf Smith, Harry "Rat" Westwick, and Frederick Whitcroft), the team lost the Stanley Cup and most of its noted players afterward to other professional teams or retirement.
On the weekend of January 20, 2007, one hundred years after the Thistles won the Cup, the City of Kenora held celebrations commemorating the team's win over the Montreal Wanderers.
[edit] 1907 Rat Portage/Kenora Thistles
- Tommy Phillips
- Silas Griffis
- Tom Hooper
- Billy McGimsie
- Roxy Beaudro
- Eddie Giroux
- Art Ross
- "Bad" Joe Hall
- Frederick Whitcroft
- Alf Smith
- Harry Westwick
[edit] References
- ^ Stanley Cup Winners: Kenora Thistles 1906-07Jan. Hockey Hall of Fame. Retrieved on 2006-07-24.
[edit] External links
- Official Kenora Thistles Webpage
- Out of the Mists of the Past -- A website on the 1907 Stanley Cup Champion Kenora Thistles. Team history, player biographies, team photos, essays, & statistics.
- Ontario historical plaque - The Kenora Thistles 1907
[edit] See also
- List of Stanley Cup championsno:Kenora Thistles

