From the back cover of ''On the Origin of Hockey'':
The debate about the origin of hockey appears to be as
old as the debate about the origin of species, though if
we compare the number of pages dedicated in every day's
newspapers to hockey and those dedicated to animals and
plants, the relative importance of each quickly becomes
obvious (well, to hockey fans at least). Hockey
historians have been looking for the smallest piece of
evidence that would reveal the secrets of the origin of
hockey. However a wealth of evidence is available - as
soon as one starts looking in the right place. This book
does not present a new theory based on slivers of
evidence. It is a presentation of known facts about the
origins of hockey, based on tens of thousands of words,
from hundreds of sources, written about hockey played on
the ice, with skates, before Montreal's first recorded
game. Carl Giden is a medical doctor who has been
researching the origins of hockey for more than two
decades. He made news in 2008, together with Patrick
Houda, when they announced their discovery of a
reference to ice hockey played in 1839 on Chippawa Creek
(Niagara Falls, Ontario). Sports journalist Patrick
Houda has also been researching the origins of hockey
for over two decades and teamed up with Giden on several
projects since the mid-1990s. It was the two of them
who, from Sweden, wrote biographies for the main
Canadian pioneers of hockey, including the eighteen
players who participated in the first recorded game
played in Montreal, in 1875. As a member (past
president) of the Society for International Hockey
Research, Montreal-region-based Jean-Patrice Martel was
most impressed by the findings of Giden and Houda, and
always pleaded that they should publish them. The trio
finally teamed up to produce this book, with the hopes
of reinvigorating the debate on hockey's origins and
setting it on sound foundations. |
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