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Uploaded By: PRESIDENT on September 2nd, 2021

Harold Hugh "Harry" Cameron - Born February 6, 1890 in Pembroke, Ontario – Died October 20, 1953 in Vancouver, British Columbia was a Canadian ice Hockey defenceman / forward, coach and referee.

Cameron played with the Pembroke Debaters Hockey club from 1908 until 1911, before becoming a professional with the Port Arthur Lake City of the Northern Ontario Hockey League. The transaction is also famous when he accepted a contract for $30.00 a week on condition he could bring his left-winger Frank Nighbor. The Ports acquiesced, and the pair headed toward a pro career.

Cameron (along with Nighbor) joined the Toronto Blueshirts of the National Hockey Association / NHA for the 1912–13 season (Nighbor would move west the next season). In Toronto, Cameron was teamed with Jack Marshall, the equally light, reliant and talented blueliner. Together they won the Stanley Cup championship the next season, with Cameron scoring the championship goal in game 3 on March 19, 1914

Cameron stayed with the organization until the NHA suspended the franchise in the 1916–17 season. He was picked up by the Montreal Wanderers for the balance of the season, playing six games for Montreal. In 1917–18 he returned to Toronto, now called the Toronto Arenas, a franchise in the new National Hockey League / NHL, operated by the Toronto Arena Company. Cameron scored 2 goals vs the Montreal Wanderers on the very first night of NHL play, and then helped them win the 1st NHL Stanley Cup championship in 1918.

In 1918–19, he was traded to the Ottawa Senators and returned from the Senators in the 1919–20 season to the Toronto team, now named the Toronto St. Pats.

Cameron was traded to the Montreal Canadiens by the St. Pats on Jan. 14, 1920, in exchange for Goldie Prodger. He played 16 games for the Canadiens during which he recorded 12 goals and five assists. On Nov. 7, 1920, he was traded back to Toronto, again in exchange for Goldie Prodger, with Joe Matte also making the trip back to Montreal.

The 1920–21 through 1922–23 seasons saw Cameron stay with the St. Pats, winning another Stanley Cup in 1922, the third for Toronto and Cameron in the NHA and NHL.

Hockey History - Cameron won 3 Stanley Cups while in Toronto, 1914 Toronto Blueshirts, 1918 Toronto Arenas and 1922 Toronto St. Pats.
3 Stanley Cups in one city on three different teams.

After the 1923 NHL season, Cameron was released, and he played three seasons as a playing coach for Saskatoon Crescents of the Western Canada Hockey League where he switched to forward. The now called Western Hockey League was folded in 1926 and its players absorbed in the NHL. Cameron was not picked up, and he then signed with the Saskatoon Sheiks of the Prairie Hockey League for one season.

Cameron then headed to the United States, where he played in the American Hockey Association, first with the Minneapolis Millers in 1927-28, and then three season with the St. Louis Flyers, finishing his Hockey career in 1931.

One last hurrah, as Cameron rejoined the Saskatoon Crescents team in 1932–33, playing nine games.

Cameron turned to coaching, first with the Saskatoon Standards, and then with the Saskatoon Quakers.

Cameron played in 102 NHA games, scoring 53 goals and 22 assists.

Cameron played in 139 NHL games, scoring 93 goals and 55 assists.

Cameron also officiated 1 NHL game on November 11, 1933 when the Boston Bruins played the Montreal Canadiens at The Forum. NHL managing director Frank Patrick had recruited him to be a NHL referee, but after that one game, let him go, citing “Not fast enough for this league,”.

Harry Cameron of the Toronto Arenas had the 1st Gordie Howe Hat Trick on December 26, 1917 vs Montreal Canadiens at Arena Gardens. Cameron scored a goal in the 1st period, assisted on a goal in the 3rd period and had a 5 minute major penalty fighting Newsy Lalonde. Cameron had 4 goals in the game, as Toronto won 7-5.

According to Official Guide to the Players of the Hockey Hall of Fame, Harry Cameron of the Toronto St. Pats achieved the first known Gordie Howe Hat Trick on December 22, 1920. during a 6 to 3 loss vs the Ottawa Senators, but that information is wrong, as Cameron did not have a assist in the game, and it was 3 years after Cameron set the record in 1917..

Harry Cameron was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1963.

NOTE
Long before Stan Mikita or Bobby Hull were curving the blades of their wooden sticks, Cameron used to steam and manipulate his. Frank Boucher once claimed that Cameron played with a stick that was "crooked like a sabre", which allowed him to make his shots drop or veer to either side.

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