Walter Jewell and How Wintersport Came to Be—A Historical Account

A lot of people have devoted considerable time and energy over the last four-and-a-half decades to make the Suburban High School Hockey League what it is today.

But if any one individual was particularly instrumental in getting the league off the ground, it likely would be Walter Jewell. He was present at the creation.

A native of Kent, England, Jewell emigrated to Canada with his family in 1956 and settled in Orangeville, Ontario, about an hour’s drive northwest of Toronto, and started coaching youth hockey there.

Three years later, the family moved to the United States, to Haddonfield, New Jersey and Jewell got involved with hockey at the old Cherry Hill Arena. He also began sponsoring exchange trips, taking teams from New Jersey north to Orangeville while a Canadian squad came to New Jersey in alternate years.
Those trips continued after Jewell settled his family in Glenside in 1966, began coaching hockey at the Wissahickon Skating Club, and launched an exchange with the Merrition Athletic Association in St. Catherines, Ont.

In October of 1971, Jewell put together a team, actually, two of them, to play in the Penn Jersey Hockey League, which operated at the original Grundy Rink in Bristol.  By this time he and his wife Iris owned a skate shop, which operated in the old Willow Grove Park Lanes bowling center, which was located near where the Willow Grove Mall is today. One team skated under the name of the Wintersport-Abington Hockey Club and the other as Willow Grove. The Wintersport Skate Shop sponsored one team and the Willow Grove Rotary Club the other. Jewell himself coached both teams, which were comprised primarily of Abington High School players.

The Wintersport team finished second in the Penn Jersey League’s regular season that year, 1971-72, but instead of participating in the league playoffs, Jewell took his teams to Conwall, Ontario on an exchange trip instead.

By this time, Jewell got the idea of building rink of his own, at least in part because ice time at Grundy was scarce. Eventually, he and his attorney Ray Reinl, formed the Willow Grove Ice Rink Corporation with the goal of constructing a rink on York Road in Willow Grove. Their plan was to have the rink up and running by July of 1972. Jewell and Reinl didn’t meet that target date but Wintersport Skating Arena, as it was called, opened its doors somewhere around November 11, 1972 and the skate shop, naturally enough, moved into the facility.

Once Wintersport was up and running, Jewell launched a league for high-school aged players, including his own two teams, which he removed from the Penn Jersey League. Abington won the league title, defeating a team called the Northeast Sabres 3-2 in the championship game.

The following season, 1973-74, Wintersport became the home of was then called the Suburban Collegiate High School Hockey League. Anecdotal evidence suggests the league consisted of eight teams: North Penn, Abington, Hatboro-Horsham, Lower Moreland, Upper Moreland Philmont (or Willow Grove), Northeast, and Plymouth Whitemarsh.

The 1973-74 season of course was the most memorable in the history of hockey in the Philadelphia area; it concluded with the Flyers winning their first Stanley Cup. The team’s success on ice, combined with the organization’s commitment to not just growing the game but educating the public about it, sparked the growth of high-school hockey throughout the region.

Walter Jewell continued to be involved in hockey for many years. He passed away in Salisbury, Maryland in July of 2007 at age 83.

 

 

Hockey Happenings is engaged in an ongoing effort to document the history of the Suburban High School Hockey League. We encourage those who played or coached in the league in its early years to contact us.

 

We thank the Upper Moreland Historical Association for their assistance in researching this account.

 

Flyers Cup Finals Set For Wells Fargo Center

Sunday, March 17 will not only be the day to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day but also a day to celebrate interscholastic hockey.

Five Flyers Cup championship games will be played on that date at the Wells Fargo Center.

The finals will determine champions in the New Jersey/Delaware and Girls Divisions, as well as Eastern Pennsylvania boys’ champions in Class A, Class AA, and Class AAA. Game times have not been announced.

The Flyers Cup has been an annual tradition since it was first contested 1980.

School Days: Tom Feeley Recalls His Days as a High School Hockey Player

At the other end of the telephone, Tom Feeley recalled his days playing high-school hockey.

“It was simpler times,” he said. “We were on the ice with referees and the goaltenders had equipment.”

Feeley graduated from Archbishop Wood in the spring of 1975. He skated for the Vikings in the 74-75 season, the first year the school had a team. The year before, as a junior, he played for Hatboro-Horsham in the Suburban High School Hockey League’s inaugural season.

A lot of high school kids wanted to play hockey around that time. The reason was the Philadelphia Flyers, who won their first Stanley Cup the same year the SHSHL got started.

“The Flyers were doing great,” Feeley said. “It was just so cool to be on the ice. Playing hockey and occasionally scoring goals and lifting your stick up it just felt like you were a Flyer; you felt like you were not a professional, but you kind of better understood the game and watching it by playing it.”

Feeley grew up in Southampton. He and his friends got their start like many others did in that time and place, playing street hockey.

“That’s where most of us learned how to play,” he said. “We would play very day after school in the backyard of one of the neighbors who had an asphalt court about one third the size of a regular basketball court.

“We usually ended up with one net, one goalie, and that goalie would play full-time goalie for both teams. That’s where we were all the time.
“Then, when the local pond or creek froze, we got a chance to put skates on, but most of the time it was street hockey in sneakers.”

By 1973-74, Feeley’s junior year of high school, the Flyers were starting their seventh season and attracting a fair amount of attention A lot of teenage boys wanted to be hockey players. That combination of circumstances led to the launch of the SHSHL that year.

While Archbishop Wood didn’t field a team that year, Hatboro-Horsham did. The issue of ‘purity’, of players actually attending the high school they played for, wasn’t as big a factor then as it would later become, which explains why Feeley spent his junior season in the Hatters’ red and black instead of the Vikings’ black and gold.

“I think we may have wanted to get a team going at Wood my junior year,” he said, “and there just wasn’t enough interest.

“There were a couple of us from Wood that wound up playing for Hatboro-Horsham; I don’t know how that happened; someone must have known someone there.”
The Hatboro-Horsham program had its origins in the 1972-73 season.  While it was founded by three Hatboro-Horsham students, Bob Sands, Gary Rossler, and John Wszalek, it was less a high-school hockey team than a community hockey club, one that was open to men as well as boys. The group would get together at the Wintersport rink on York Road in Willow Grove.

The following year, the group became the Hatboro-Horsham Ice Hockey Club. The founders became the first coaches and the team joined the high-school league that had been created at Wintersport midway through the previous season.

The 1973-74 is considered the Suburban High School Hockey League’s first official season. All league games were played at Wintersport, usually late on Friday nights or Saturday mornings and occasionally on Sundays.

They were not necessarily prime time games,” Feeley said. “Maybe during the playoffs they would mostly have evening games, but we had a couple games that would start at like 10:00 on Saturday morning.”

Wintersport was a no-frills facility. In those days, there was no glass above the boards.

“There was a black chain link fence that went around behind the goalies,” Feeley said. “It kind of stretched up to maybe the blue line and then it was kind of open in between.”

Feeley recalls that Hatboro-Horsham’s first head coach was Ray Reynolds. “His son, Ray Junior played on the team,” he said. “He was probably, if not our best, one of our best two players. He was fast, he could skate, and he had come from a background of hockey He was one of the few kids on our team that actually played some hockey before they started playing high school.”

Feeley notes that primary job of the coaching staff was to make sure the players came off the ice when they were supposed to. “They tried to control the line shifts,” he said, “but there was many a time when I player didn’t come off and his teammates were yelling at him, ‘Come on, come on,’ because it would mess up the lines. For most the part, we would short shift everyone would come on as a group and go off as a group.”

There were no organized practices because of the cost of the ice so the players sharpened their skills by continuing to play street hockey.

“I remember taking a piece of plywood and putting car wax on it,” Feeley said, “It was a piece of paneling actually. and using that in my driveway and shooting a regular, vulcanized puck with a hockey stick off of that to try to develop a wrist shot and shooting that against the garage door.

“We would come up with ideas and ways to get some practice, even though it wasn’t on the ice.”

Feeley was a defenseman throughout his high-school career. “ I was a pretty good  skater,” he recalls. “We had a few guys who were definitely better skaters I but could skate. And with defense, you’re just on the ice longer because we typically went with two pairs of defensemen. We had a third pair but we’d get more ice time, an extra shift a period, if you played defense.

“So I played defense and I tried to be more of an offensive defenseman. My partner at Wood, Ron Fetch, was more stay-at-home.”

That 1973-74 season saw the Hatters win one of nine games. The following year, Archbishop Wood had a team organized by Ray Reinhl, an influential figure in the early years of the SHSHL.

Feeley scored the team’s first official SHSHL goal in a 4-2 season-opening win over North Penn. That team reached the league championship series before losing to Abington two games to one.

Feeley recalls that he and his teammates were enthralled by the opportunity to play hockey. The players had a do-it-yourself attitude.

“There would be a core group of spectators at every game,” he said, “Sometimes kids from school, sometimes some parents, but back then, you didn’t have parents involved in every single thing your kids did.. We took ourselves to the games, and practices. Our parents would come but they weren’t in the face of the coach, they weren’t trying to influence who gets to play. It was pretty pure back then.

“It was right around the (oil embargo) in the early 70s; sometimes you didn’t know if you were going to get enough gas in your car to get to the rink and back but the playing was just pure fun.”

After high school Feeley headed to California University of Pennsylvania. His efforts to start a club team there were unsuccessful, although he did play in some pickup games

He played in a men’s league for a time after college but today he’s a successful businessman in the Pittsburgh area and an ardent fan of the Penguins.

He looks back fondly on his days playing high-school hockey. “It was just fun, joyful, low stress,” he said. “No one was playing for a scholarship, no one was playing for any other reason than because we enjoyed it.”

 

Another Look at Hockey History—The SHSHL

The 2019 Suburban High School Hockey League season is set to resume the day after New Year’s.

It was 46 years ago that high-school hockey was introduced to Eastern Montgomery County.

Sometime around the midway point of the 1972-73 season, hockey impresario Walter Jewell withdrew a team that he ran from a league that played  at the original Grundy rink in Bristol and moved it to the Wintersport rink on York Road in Willow Grove, which had recently opened, and where a league for high-school age players had been organized.

Jewell’s team, which featured primarily, though not exclusively, Abington players, was actually called the Wintersports. The team won the league championship that first season, defeating a team called the Northeast Sabres 3-2 in the varsity championship game.

The following season, 1973-74, saw the league take a major step forward when most teams began playing under the names of various high schools. Research indicates there were eight teams in the league that year; Abington, Hatboro-Horsham, North Penn, Plymouth Whitemarsh, Lower Moreland, Upper Moreland/Willow Grove, Philmont, and Northeast (the section of Philadelphia, not necessarily the school).

High-school hockey has been a fixture in the area ever since.

 

Our thanks to Steve Schorr and the Abington hockey alumni for their help and providing much of the information contained in this post.

Hawks Go 1-2 on DC Trip

St. Joseph’s Prep has split its first two games at the National Capital Hockey Tournament; the Purple Pucks Tournament in Washington, D.C.

The Hawks best Archbishop Spalding from suburban Baltimore, 5-0 on Friday and lost a Saturday morning game to St. Ignatius from Chicago, 2-0.

They lost to Bishop O’ Connell of Arlington, Va. 6-2 in their second game Saturday to finish the tournament with a 1-2 record.

 

Combing the Annals of History

Hockey Happenings and the Suburban High School Hockey League are engaged in an ongoing effort to document the history of the league.

We are reaching out to coaches, club officers, and anyone who have have historical material such as newspaper clippings, photographs, game programs, or even receipts for such things as purchasing ice time.

We’re concentrating on the following areas

What year each club was organized/  joined the SHSHL and, if it left the league at any point, when did it return?

What teams were part of the SHSHL each season

What teams won the SHSHL championship each season

We welcome input from all those who share our interest in and passion for high-school hockey.

Thank you all.

 

Rick Woelfel

Editor.Publisher

Hockey Happenings

 

 

 

 

 

 

Turning Back the Clock

The Philadelphia Flyers were not the city’s first National Hockey  League team. Read on for a glimpse at how professional hockey has evolved in Philadelphia. The city’s professional franchises, notably the Flyers, made it possible for high-school hockey to thrive and flourish.

1927-28—The Philadelphia Arrow become Philadelphia’s first professional hockey team. The team played in the Canadian American Hockey League, a highly-regarded minor circuit. [i]

1930-31—The Philadelphia Quakers become Philadelphia’s first National Hockey League franchise. The team was transplanted from Pittsburgh where it was known as the Pirates. It lasted just one season in Philadelphia, finishing with a record of 4-36-4, the fewest wins in a season by any NHL team in history.

One reason the franchise didn’t survive was  that the minor-league Arrows were outdrawing them. [ii]

1935-36—The Philadelphia Arrows become the Philadelphia Ramblers. The following year, 1936-37, the CAHL played an interlocking schedule with the International Hockey League.

In 1938-39 the two leagues merged into the International American Hockey League. In 1940 the league was re-christened the American Hockey League.

The Ramblers finished first in their league three times, in 1936, ’37, and ’39. They were a New York Rangers affiliate and several former Ramblers played key roles on the Ranger team that won the Stanley Cup in 1940.

The Ramblers however folded in 1941.[iii]

1941-42—The Philadelphia Rockets replaced the Ramblers in the AHL and folded after one season.

1942-43—The Philadelphia Falcons join the Eastern Hockey League. The franchise lasted four seasons, finishing second in the regular season in its final season, 1945-46

1946-47—The Philadelphia Rockets return to the AHL. The team lasted three seasons and never made the playoffs.

1955-56—The Philadelphia Ramblers return to the EHL and remain for nine seasons. Like all the Philadelphia franchises before them, the Ramblers played their games at Philadelphia Arena at 46th and Market Streets.

1964-65—The Ramblers move across the Delaware River to Cherry Hill, N.J. and become the Jersey Devils. The team reached the EHL finals in 1966-67. The Devils and the EHL folded at the conclusion of the 1972-73 season.

1965—The National Hockey League announces it will double in size, from six teams to 12. The league had operated with six teams since 1942 but was dealing with the fact that it would be impossible to get a network TV contract in the U.S. without expanding,

February 9, 1966—Philadelphia is awarded an expansion franchise to begin play in 1967-68. Philadelphia was one of 10 cities under consideration for the six new franchises. The franchise was awarded on the condition that a new arena be built for the team, what became the Spectrum.

The other five went to Pittsburgh, Minnesota, St. Louis, Los Angeles, and the San Francisco Bay area.

October 11, 1967—The Flyers play their first game and lose 5-1 to the California Seals in Oakland.

October 19, 1967—The Flyers play their first regular-season game in the Spectrum, defeating the Pittsburgh Penguins 1-0.

1969—The Intercounty Scholastic Hockey League is founded with six teams: St. Joseph’s Prep, Haverford High, Conestoga, Cardinal O’Hara. Marple Newtown, and Swarthmore.

 1972-73—The World Hockey Association launches as a competitor to the NHL. One of its 12 teams is the Philadelphia Blazers, which played its games at the Civic Center. The Blazers, which featured Former Flyer (at the time) Bernie Parent in goal, lasted one season in Philadelphia before moving to Vancouver and later Calgary. The franchise folded at the close of the 1976-77 season.

 1973-74—The Suburban High School Hockey League is formed. Information on the structure of the league that season that year is still being complied but the latest information available indicates it consisted of eight teams: Abington, North Penn, Plymouth Whitemarsh, Hatboro-Horsham, Willow Grove, Philmont, Northeast, and Lower Moreland.

The Flyers win their first Stanley Cup, defeating the Boston Bruins in six games in the finals. Rick MacLeish scored the only goal in the final game on May 19, 1974 at the Spectrum, tipping in a shot from Andre “Moose” Dupont.

 1974-75—The Flyers win their second  consecutive Stanley Cup, defeating the Buffalo Sabres in six games.

The Philadelphia Firebirds begin play in the North American Hockey League, which forms from the remnants of the EHL. The team plays its games at the Philadelphia Civic center. The team won the NAHL championship in 1976.

The EHL folded in 1976 and the Firebirds moved to the American Hockey League. In 1979 the team moved to Syracuse where it played for one season.

[iv]

1980—The Philadelphia Flyers sponsor the first Flyers Cup tournament. It featured four teams. All games were played at the University of Pennsylvania’s Class of 1923 Rink.

Archbishop Carroll defeated Archbishop Ryan in one semifinal game while Malvern Prep defeated Germantown Academy in the other.

Carroll defeated Malvern Prep two games to one in the best-of-three finals.

Scores

Game 1 – Malvern 6, Carroll 5

Game 2 – Carroll 7, Malvern 3

Game 3 – Carroll 6, Malvern 2

MVP: Scott Chamness, Carroll (four hat tricks in four games)

This year will mark the 40th Flyers Cup tournament.

1996—The Philadelphia Phantoms, a Flyers affiliate, begin play in the American Hockey league. The team played most of its home games at the Spectrum. The Phantoms won two Calder Cup titles (in 1998 and 2005) before leaving Philadelphia following the 2008-09 season. Today the team is known as the Lehigh Valley Phantoms and plays its games in Allentown.

November 2, 2018—The Atlantic Prep Athletic Conference begins its inaugural season

 

 [i] The Broad Street Bullies; the Incredible Story of the Philadelphia Flyers

By Jack Chealier © 1974 Additional information: Wikipeddia.org

[ii] Ibid The Broad Street Bullies

[iii] Wikipedia.org

[iv] Wkipedia.org

APAC Celebrates Opening Night

The prevailing mindset at Grundy Arena Friday night, both before and after LaSalle’s 5-1 win over Holy Ghost Prep, was one of satisfaction.

The result of the game mattered of course, but there was a lot more to the evening than that result

A lot of people but in a lot of effort to make the Atlantic Prep Athletic Conference a reality and seeing that vision become a reality on the ice was obviously satisfying to the responsible parties.

“It’s something we’ve talked about for years,” said LaSalle coach Wally Muehlbronner, “and to finally pull it together, I think it’s going to be a great thing for all the schools involved.”

Friday’s game drew a large and enthusiastic audience to Grundy Arena. Holy Ghost Prep coach Gump Whiteside enjoyed the evening despite his team taking the loss.

“This is great,” he said. “The environment we had here tonight, both teams competing really hard, “LaSalle worked hard. I thought we worked hard, this was just a great atmosphere. This is what high-school hockey in the Delaware Valley is all about. Two great teams, two great schools, and I wish we could play like this every night.”

Holy Ghost Prep captain Tom McNulty enjoyed the atmosphere as well. “It was a great atmosphere tonight,” the senior defenseman said. “We had a big (turnout), the whiteout (from Holy Ghost Prep supporters) was awesome. Our fans were really into it.”

McNulty pointed out that the four APAC schools (Holy Ghost Prep, LaSalle, Malvern Prep, St. Joseph’s Prep) will benefit from going against each other on a regular basis. “I think it will be really good,” he said. “We’re going to have a lot of time for improvement. Playing these better teams, we’re going to become better; we’re going to just keep picking it up from there.”

APAC Commissioner Jim Britt was on hand for Friday’s opener. Britt coached at Holy Ghost Prep and later helped launch the Ed Snider Youth Hockey Foundation. He was approached last spring about heading up the APAC.

“(The four league schools) had come together and reached a great discussion point,” he said, “to try to organize, celebrate, to help grow the game of high-school hockey in the Philadelphia area.

Britt was elated at the atmosphere of Friday’s game and the enthusiasm of both the participants and fans.

“The turnout tonight is indicative of the kind of enthusiasm that is possible, that is out there,” he said. Someone said earlier that it’s like a Flyers Cup playoff game already and this is only the first game of the conference. So, it’s really neat to see.”

 

 

 

LaSalle Beats Holy Ghost Prep

Friday night marked the beginning of a new era in scholastic hockey in the Delaware Valley. At 7:38 p.m. the referee dropped the puck to begin the matchup between LaSalle and Holy Ghost Prep, the inaugural game of the new Atlantic Prep Athletic Conference.
A large, emotionally engaged crowd was on hand at Grundy Arena for the event.

The players on both sides rose to the occasion, particularly the Explorers, who got two goals from sophomore Sam Lipkin on the way to a 5-1 win.

Lipkin scored the first goal in APAC history at the 9:15 mark of the first period, beating Firebird netminder Sean Joyce. Brandon Leer made it a 2-0 game on a power-play goal at 13:19.

Lipkin said the Explorers (3-0 overall) were buoyed by their quick start. “Any game in this league can be important,” he said. “I think we just played really good overall.”

The Firebirds (0-1) hurt themselves in the first period by taking four minor penalties; Leer’ goal came while they were two men short.

“You don’t want to work on your penalty kill all that much in the first period,” said Holy Ghost Prep coach Gump Whiteside. “But we battled through, we got a couple scrapes and a couple bruises from it, but it’s a learning experience.”

It took the Firebirds just 10 seconds to respond to Leer’s goal. Byron Hartley scored to make it a one-goal game.

Michael Casey extended LaSalle’s lead when he scored at 9:54 of the middle period before Lipkin and Daniel Sumbuco scored goals in the third. The line featuring Lipkin, Casey, and Sambuco combined for nine points.

“We’re missing some key guys tonight (because of club commitments),” said LaSalle coach Wally Meuhlbronner, “so we needed a good push out of that top line that we had and then I think the other two lines did a great job. The fast start helped us and helped us settle in a little bit too.”

Whiteside looked at Friday’s game as a learning experience for his young team, which also had some players away on club duty.

“I was really happy with our group,” he said. “If you lose 10 seniors, it’s tough, but I love the makeup of our team. We’re going to be a good team.”

Notes: LaSalle had a 33-19 edge in shots. All APAC games will have a winner. If a game is tied after 48 minutes of regulation, a five-minute overtime will be played followed by a shootout if needed. The game was officiated by one referee and two linesmen.

 

LaSalle 2 1 2—5

Holy Ghost Prep 1 0 0—1

First-period goals: Sam Lipkin (L) from Daniel Sambuco and Michael Casey, 9:15; Brandon Leer (L) from Ryan Ferry and Andrew Budzynski, 13:19 (pp); Byron Hartley (HGP) from Alex D’Angelo, 13;29 (sh).

Second-period goal: Michael Casey (L) from Sambuco and Lipkin, 9:54.

Third-period goals: Lipkin (L) from Sambuco and Casey, 6:23; Sambuco L) unassisted, 14:58.

Shots: LaSalle 33, Holy Ghost Prep 19; saves: Aidan McCabe (L) 18; Sean Joyce (HGP) 28.