Friday, April 27, 2018

Black Jack Stewart

Black Jack Stewart  [Source 1]

He didn’t like the nickname. “Black Jack” made him sound like a dirty player, a hockey thug or goon. But ruling the Detroit Red Wings’ blueline as a tough defenceman, John Sherratt Stewart deserved the moniker, and the name stuck. 

As he explained, “I got the nickname when a player woke up in the dressing room and said, ‘Who hit me with the blackjack?’ ” Other accounts say the other player awoke in a hospital room.

Playing defence, Stewart wasn’t expected to score goals, and he rarely did. But he was a great skater who played hard, winning face-offs, clearing the puck, and rarely turning it over to the other team. His defensive play forced opponents to shoot from a distance. He understood his role and delivered hits with a ferocity that made others quake. If you saw him coming at you with a smile, look out.


Press photo. If you see this smile coming at you, prepare to get hit.  [2]

Stewart carried the heaviest stick in the league, for “breaking arms” rather than scoring goals, he claimed. He often led the league in penalty minutes. And he got what he gave, playing through pain and injury all too often. 


Black Jack was one of the fastest skaters in the league.  [3]

Black Jack was born May 6, 1917 to the well-respected and civic-minded Stewart family of Pilot Mound. His grandfather was an early pioneer who came west from Perth, Ontario in 1885. While he looked like a cliché cattle rustler (that you might call “Black Jack Stewart”), he was an industrious citizen who opened the first bakery in town and served on the municipal council.

J. Stewart, Black Jack's grandfather, 1893 Louise Municipality Council.  [4]

Black Jack’s father, John Calvin (“JC”) Stewart was two years old when his family came west. JC’s wife, the former Beatrice Marian Sherratt, was also born in Perth, Ontario in 1883. Moving to Pilot Mound in 1907, she and her sister Louise opened a millinery shop in Pilot Mound prior to her marriage in 1910.

JC and Beatrice had six children: Keith, Morna, John (“Jack”), Barclay, Arva, and Mary (“Trixie”).


Jack's father, JC Stewart, was a winning hockey player, too. The Pilot Mound hockey team won the amateur championship of Manitoba in 1907-08.
L-R: Bunny Baker, Ed Hayman, JC Stewart, G. MacKay, H. Bateman, B Cuthbert, Dunc Renaud  [5]

Jack Stewart learned to play hockey on outdoor rinks in Pilot Mound. He said he kept fit by working on the family farm during the off-season. The Stewart family was very athletic, and Jack was also known as an avid curler and softball player.

In 1935 the strength of the local hockey team did not go unnoticed by the Pilot Mound Sentinel. Editor Ron Tuckwell bragged about the team winning 20 straight games as a home-grown team without imports, but moaned about the poor turnout of fans. Support improved immediately, and the team went on to win their league title.


Sentinel, February 8, 1935  [6]

Jack Stewart was a high school hockey star on the Portage Collegiate Institute team.  [7]

By 1937 19-year-old Stewart was captain of the Portage Terriers and attracting attention from the Winnipeg sports editors.

Headed for star-dom. Sentinel, February 18, 1937  [8]

A year later Stewart was playing with the Pittsburgh Pirates, the farm team of the Detroit Red Wings. He was ranked among the three best rookies that year. He was teased for being an actual farmer, but throughout his career he always praised his home town, and the town was very proud of him. As a special guest at Pilot Mound’s 1938 hockey banquet, the Sentinel reported that John claimed he had never mingled with “a better bunch of fellow or a faster team (outside the ‘pro’ ranks) than those of his home town, Pilot Mound.” The home-town editor called him a “fine, sturdy young player who himself has hung up already, an enviable record for any aspiring hockeyist to shoot at.”


Black Jack Stewart  [9]

Stewart was called up by the Detroit Red Wings in the 1938-39 season, and cemented his reputation as a fierce defenceman. It was a tough season, and he was disappointed to sit out the playoffs with a severe ankle injury. It would be one of many injuries he would receive, and inflict.

Sentinel, January 18, 1940  [10]

Like his friend Pete Fraser, Sentinel editor Ron Tuckwell was a tremendous hockey fan. They both served the town’s hockey club as executives, and the newspaper followed Stewart’s career closely. Pilot Mound’s pride was evident, and Stewart was referred to in glowing terms, displaying “fighting heart, courage, character, and clean-cut sportsmanship.” (No doubt, opponents like Montreal Canadiens player Elmer Lach would scoff about the “clean-cut sportsmanship” praise. A sports reporter accused Stewart of punching Elmer’s healing jaw and then elbowing him in the jaw to deliberately take him out of the 1949 Stanley Cup series. The Red Wings denied the charge and sued for libel.)

Tuckwell wrote about “Johnny” Stewart often. When Stewart made the NHL All-Star team, the April 1, 1943 Sentinel quoted Liberty magazine’s account: “What has Jack Stewart got that doesn’t show in statistics? Plenty. He is a strong skater, sure-footed, breaks quickly and passes cleanly so that his rushing pal doesn’t even hesitate in flight. Defensively, Stewart intercepts opponents’ passes with real finesse, and, if the puck-carrier insists upon going in alone, Stewart can deliver a real grand slam.” 

Detroit News columnist Joe Falls would agree, writing, “It almost was impossible getting past him without paying the price. He had a way of putting his full body into a check, and the impact could be felt throughout the arena.”


Sentinel, May 13, 1943  [11]

The home-town hockey banquet in 1943 was also a send-off for Stewart, who had joined the RCAF, and would soon be playing for their Alouettes team. The Montreal Gazette wrote that Stewart’s style of play as the hardest hitter in the NHL had not eased up in the RCAF. Of a game between the Alouettes and the Quebec Aces, the paper noted that the Aces “were flying in the first part of the game – until Stewart started to work on them; after he hit a few of them they slowed down to a canter. It isn’t going to take the other clubs long to find out he’s in this League.” 

After two years in the air force as a leading aircraftman, playing hockey in Montreal and Winnipeg, Stewart returned to the Red Wings.


Trainer Honey Walker gives Black Jack a post-game rub-down, 1946.  [12]

In March 1946 the Sentinel announced that Stewart had again been selected #1 defenceman on the NHL All-Star team. Liberty magazine was quoted once more. The magazine called Stewart a “determined battler” who led the League in penalties, but who was also a fast and skilled player. The writer admired him for having game: “he played all one season with a wristbone so badly fractured that his hockey stick was taped to the wrist with adhesive bandage.” 

Although he was sent to the penalty box often, he did not argue with referees, stating, “I figured for every penalty I got, I used to get away with 10.”


John Mariucci (Chicago Black Hawks) slugs it out with Black Jack Stewart (#2) in a fight that lasted several minutes on the ice and in the penalty box, December 4, 1946.  [13]

Stewart made the All Star team in 1946, as well. Sentinel, March 21, 1946  [14]

Sentinel, January 22, 1947  [15]

Although aggressive on the ice, Jack Stewart was not an angry person and was considered easy-going, with a wry sense of humour. The Detroit News reporter Paul Chandler had noted that, “On the street this brawny athlete wears natty suits in soft colour tones. He speaks quietly and behaves at all times with a discreet polish usually associated with genteel society.” Indeed, he was so quiet that his teammates called him “Silent Jack.” When asked a question, he would nod instead of saying “yes.” 

One fan who found Stewart charming was Lois Fraser, his new bride.


Sentinel, May 17, 1949  [16]

Lois was the daughter of a famed Ontario harness racer named Will L. Fraser (not to be confused with Dad’s uncle, another Ontario harness racer named Will L. Fraser). 


Mrs. John Stewart (nee Fraser) with her father's famed race horse "Dr. Stanton."  [17]

Come for the hockey, stay for the fights. Jack Stewart (#2) mixes it up with a Toronto player, 1940s. Detroit fans loved it.  [18]

Red Wings fans were dismayed in 1950 when Stewart was included in the biggest NHL trade to date. Five players were traded to the Chicago Blackhawks for four of their players. In Chicago the 33-year-old Stewart continued to play as team captain and assistant coach. 

Within two months of joining the Blackhawks, however, Stewart suffered a spinal injury that should have ended his career. Doctors told him he was lucky he could even walk and warned him against further play. Stewart chose to have the ruptured disc removed and returned to the ice.


Black Jack bares all.  [19]

At 5’11”, with a playing weight of 185 lbs., Stewart wasn’t considered a big guy, but he was all muscle and sinew. He attributed his strength to working on his family’s farm, where he spent the offseason.


Sentinel, February 15, 1951  [20]

Early in the 1951-52 season Stewart suffered a minor skull fracture in an on-ice collision with teammate Clare Martin. He spent two weeks in hospital and missed several weeks of play. By mid-February 1952, he asked to be released from the team to pursue coaching opportunities in the minor leagues. 

Stewart was a player/coach with the Chatham Maroons in the Ontario Senior League during the 1952-53 and 1953-54 seasons, where he played the final games of his career. He continued coaching at various levels until 1963, when he left hockey for good. 

The move from hockey to harness racing was not so strange. Jack Stewart’s father, JC Stewart, had long been a harness racing enthusiast. He owned and operated the Pilot Mound racetrack and acted as judge and starter for countless race meets in the province, and was president of the Manitoba and Northwestern Racing Association.

Pilot Mound and its racetrack on the northeast edge of town.   [21]

Sentinel, September 29, 1960  [22]

Jack worked his way through the ranks as a harness race timer and held various judging roles. He served as a judge with the Ontario Racing Commission for nearly 30 years.

A post on the Third String Goalie blog of May 6, 2017 [23] summarized Stewart’s hockey stats: 
“His final NHL totals were 565 games played with 31 goals and 84 assists for 115 points and 765 penalty minutes and two Stanley Cups. Stewart was inducted into the Michigan and Manitoba Sports Halls of Fame [24], was named a charter member of the Red Wings Hall of Fame in 1944 and was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame [25] in 1964.” 


John Sherratt Stewart was inducted into the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame in 1997.  [26]

John Sherratt Stewart  [27]

John (Black Jack) Sherratt Stewart retired to Florida, but returned to Michigan for medical treatment. He died of cancer in Troy, Michigan on May 25, 1983, at age 66. He was predeceased by his wife and survived by son Barclay and daughter Jaclyn.


The Black Jack Stewart Arena, Pilot Mound  [28]

Pilot Mound continues to honor its hockey hero. On April 23, 2010 the town celebrated the grand opening of its new Millennium Recreation Centre Complex. Myrna and I accompanied Dad out to the Mound for the day’s events, which included a dedication and naming of the arena after Black Jack Stewart.


The Black Jack Stewart display at the dedication of the arena in Pilot Mound's Millennium Recreation Complex, April 23, 2010  [29]

The Black Jack Stewart display at the dedication of the arena in Pilot Mound's Millennium Recreation Complex, April 23, 2010  [30]

Dad reads up on Pilot Mound's local celebrity.  [31]

We met up with Dad’s friends Clare Geddes and Arva Shewchuk (Jack Stewart’s sister) at the Centre and gave our names at the reception table. We were surprised at the registrar’s delight upon hearing we were Frasers. (Dad hadn’t lived there since 1946!) We knew there had been other Frasers in Pilot Mound (like their illustrious first mayor James Fraser), and guessed that explained it. We didn’t know at the time, of course, that we must have been mistaken for Jack Stewart’s in-laws.

At the same time, however, we are relatives of a sort. Black Jack had in-laws from two different harness-racing Fraser families from Ontario. His sister, Mary Beatrice (“Trixie”), was the wife of Dad’s cousin Doug, the son of Gordon Fraser. 


Jack Stewart's brother-in-law and Dad's cousin, Doug Fraser  [32]

Trixie was a year younger than Dad, but he knew her well from their school years. She lived in Red Deer, Alberta until her death in October, 2012.


Dad with Arva (nee Stewart) Shewchuk  [33]

Trixie was the older sister of Arva Shewchuk, who lived in Winnipeg and became a good friend of Dad’s after Mom’s demise. A widow herself since 1984, Arva introduced Dad to line and Scottish country dancing, and the two of them enjoyed recreational skating, biking, and dining. Arva outlived her five siblings, and passed away at age 89 on December 26, 2013. 

Today hockey is still front and centre in Pilot Mound. Their hockey academy for young male and female players is attracting international attention, and it's been a real boost for the community. The Black Jack Stewart Arena is seeing a lot of action:



Black Jack Stewart would have been thrilled to see the hockey academy in "his" arena.  [34]


Sources
  1. Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame, http://honouredmembers.sportmanitoba.ca/inductee.php?id=190&criteria_sort=name
  2. http://www.teamspiritextras.com/LineChange/html/redwings.html
  3. https://www.detroitathletic.com/blog/2015/10/02/black-jack-stewart-was-quietly-lethal-on-the-blue-line
  4. Pilot Mound 1964 reunion program
  5. Pilot Mound 1954 reunion program
  6. Pilot Mound Sentinel, February 8, 1935. All clips are from the Pembina Manitou Archives,  http://www.pembinamanitouarchive.ca
  7. Manitoba Historical Society, originally from http://pciarchive.webs.com 
  8. Pilot Mound Sentinel, February 18, 1937
  9. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Stewart_(ice_hockey) 
  10. Pilot Mound Sentinel, January 18, 1940
  11. Pilot Mound Sentinel, May 13, 1943
  12. https://puckstruck.com/tag/black-jack-stewart
  13. https://twitter.com/vintagemnhockey/status/672784419137052672  
  14. Pilot Mound Sentinel, March 21, 1946
  15. Pilot Mound Sentinel, January 22, 1947
  16. Pilot Mound Sentinel, May 17, 1949
  17. http://www.standardbredcanada.ca/news/2-4-17/sc-rewind-years-ago-1940s.html 
  18. http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/mobile/jsp/MemberDetails.jsp?type=Player&mem=P196404&list=ByTeam&fullname=Stewart,%20Jack&ind-pos=P 
  19. http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/mobile/jsp/MemberDetails.jsp?type=Player&mem=P196404&list=ByTeam&fullname=Stewart,%20Jack&ind-pos=P 
  20. Pilot Mound Sentinel, February 15, 1951
  21. Captured Memories: A Pictorial History of the R.M. of Louise (Pilot Mound Museum Inc., 2000)  http://www.pembinamanitouarchive.ca/documents/docview/33290
  22. Pilot Mound Sentinel, September 29, 1960
  23. http://thirdstringgoalie.blogspot.ca/2017/05/1949-50-detroit-red-wings-jack-stewart.html 
  24. http://honouredmembers.sportmanitoba.ca/inductee.php?id=190&criteria_sort=name 
  25. http://www.legendsofhockey.net/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/LegendsMember.jsp?mem=p196404&type=Player&page=bio&list=ByName 
  26. Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame video:  https://youtu.be/iDktrFZKQzY 
  27. Pilot Mound reunion program, 1964
  28. Photo by Joe Bryska, Winnipeg Free Press
  29. Photo by Stephanie Fraser
  30. Photo by Stephanie Fraser
  31. Photo by Stephanie Fraser
  32. Photo by Stephanie Fraser
  33. Photo by Bill Ong
  34. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2aZdlr7rk9A 



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Thursday, April 5, 2018

Lulu

Long-time newspaper editor Ronald Wesley Tuckwell (1890-1991) was quite the character. According to the Manitoba Historical Society, "Tuck" was born in England in 1890. The family then spent ten years in Australia before returning to England and moving to Canada in 1903. After working as a billing clerk with the CPR, Tuck spent a few years with his father, David Grieve Tuckwell, running the Lloydminster Times. In 1916 Tuck purchased The Pilot Mound Sentinel and was its editor for 33 years. He retired to Winnipeg and spent a further 21 years as a legislative reporter for Manitoba's weekly newspapers.

Tuck's self-portrait as an "Old Hayseed" editor.

Tuck's time in Pilot Mound paralleled very active years for the Fraser family. In a small town, everyone knows what everyone else is up to, and back then the local paper was very "local" indeed. The Sentinel published all the scuttlebutt: who had visitors, who was travelling, store openings, fires and other accidents, students' school marks, every winner of every category at the local fair (P.H. won a ribbon for his walnut loaf), and, of course, sports results.

Ron Tuckwell and Pete Fraser shared a sense of humour and got on very well. Pete was active in a number of community endeavours, and received a lot of newspaper coverage for his horsemanship, management of the Pilots hockey team, volunteer efforts, and work organizing major events like the annual Chautauqua. But Tuck gave Pete even more attention than he earned, never missing an opportunity to tease him, and always noting Pete's ever-present smile.


November 18, 1926. "Local moguls" request your presence at the annual hockey meeting.

In a 1932 column detailing the hockey lineup, Tuck wrote: "Pete Fraser, honorary president -- came from the East some 25 years ago, but has since reformed. Never played hockey, but can tell you all about it and argue over anything connected with it; will sell a cow at any time just for a hockey match." Gordon Fraser was listed as "transportation manager; brother of Pete -- but that doesn't seem to bother him much; specialty -- getting the team there on time."

Lulu, Pete's race horse that never raced, became a running gag for Tuck over the years. He probably actually admired Pete for taking pity on this sorry horse, but he teased Pete relentlessly all the same.

Lulu Bond

It was said that Pete won race horse Lulu Bond in a raffle, but in truth he bought a ticket and didn't win, and instead purchased the standard bred mare from the draw winner. As Dad reported, "The idiots who had tried to train her had tied a rope to her front leg and would trip her, afraid she might run away. Naturally, Lulu was a trembling, nervous wreck. Dad hitched her, tied back between two big Percherons, in a four-horse abreast team. She soon calmed down and pulled her weight. Pete may have hoped she might race, but that didn't happen."


June 14, 1926.
Tuck used his caricature several times over the years to advertise race meets (and to tease Pete).

The likeness is unmistakable. Young Pete Fraser in Normal School, Meaford, Ontario


March 21, 1929. "Pete is still smiling."

June 20, 1929. Pete becomes the poster boy for race meets.


July 4, 1929. Tuck imagines Lulu in a mule derby.


January 23, 1930. Tuck suggests "Lulu" as Pete's costume for the local ice carnival.


August 13, 1931.
The Might-Have-Beens old-timers softball team includes 55-year-old Pete Fraser.
"The winners of this game will challenge the Girls' Team."


January 7, 1932.
Pete was a good sport, and allowed Tuck to promote want ads with this testimonial. Pete really did have a heifer who strayed, and was selling chickens three for a dollar.


June 9, 1932.
The paper's fold scalps Pete a little, but Tuck is happy to announce a new colt in the Fraser barn. Human birth announcements were a mere two lines of type.


June 7, 1934. It's race time again!
Lulu looks as eager as ever, and Pete is still smiling.


August 23, 1934.
Even when applauding Billy Hugo, Tuck can't resist a dig about Lulu.


Will Fraser tears up the track with Billy Hugo, 1934.



June 2, 1938.
Billy Hugo looks faster...
June 23, 1938.
Excerpt from the Glenora Gleams column in the
Sentinel.


May 30, 1946.
Will Fraser trains a world champion in "Blue Again" but Tuck claims Lulu is famous, too.

This race was at Santa Anita, California, not San Anita, Mexico.

 

"Blue Again and driver Jimmy Cruise lead a field of 20 to the wire in winning the $50,000 Golden West Pace at Santa Anita. The time of 2:32 1/2 for the longer distance of 1-1/4 miles set a new world's record. Blue Again was owned by a Canadian R.W. Leatherdale who at the time resided in Windsor, Ont. The longshot paid $28.00 for a two dollar win ticket."
Read more about the 1946 Meet of the Century at: www.standardbredcanada.ca 


"Blue Again Wins $50,000 Golden West Pace: On closing day of the famous Santa Anita 'Meeting of the Century' the Canadian-owned horse Blue Again made racing history as he won the Golden West Pace driven by Jimmy Cruise. Mr. Leatherdale is at the front of the group. Trainer Will Fraser is partially obscured standing at the horse's head."
 Read more about the 1946 Meet of the Century at: www.standardbredcanada.ca 


Tuck's dog had his own "Fidogram" column:

August 8, 1946.
Pete's "limousine" may have been his decrepit 1929 Plymouth that son Murray resurrected in 1946.


August 15, 1946.
You can't win. The editor always gets the last word.


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