Winnipeg Monarchs (senior)
The Winnipeg Monarchs were a Canadian senior ice hockey team from Winnipeg, Manitoba, that was organized in 1906. The Monarchs won the 1915 Allan Cup as the Canadian Senior Hockey Champions. In 1935 the Monarchs won gold for Canada at the World Ice Hockey Championships.
Winnipeg Monarchs team collage in 1915
The Allan Cup trophy
Winnipeg Monarchs with the Allan Cup in 1915. Back row, from left: Walter Robertson (trainer), Dick Irvin, Stan Marples, Harry Stuart. Front row, from left: Tommy Murray, Reg Hay, Frank Cadham, Alex Irvin, Del Irvine, Steamer Maxwell, Clem Loughlin.
Frederick Paul Henry Marples was a Canadian sports executive in ice hockey and athletics. He was president of the Winnipeg Monarchs team which won Winnipeg Amateur Hockey League championships in 1914 and 1915, and the Allan Cup as senior ice hockey champions of Canada. His operation of a reserve team to support the Monarchs led to debates on player eligibility for the Allan Cup and calls for a national governing body of hockey. As the secretary-treasurer of the Winnipeg Amateur Hockey League, he helped establish both the Manitoba Amateur Hockey Association (MAHA) and the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) in 1914; then served as secretary-treasurer of the MAHA from 1914 to until 1934, and as secretary of the CAHA from 1926 to 1945. He sought to grow the game in rural regions of Manitoba, promote minor ice hockey as a source of future senior players, to keep players in junior ice hockey until age 21, and was against the exodus of amateur players to professional teams.
Main Street in North End, Winnipeg, c. 1910
The Allan Cup trophy
Winnipeg Monarchs team collage in 1915
Winnipeg Falcons en route to the 1920 Olympics