Alex Currie Explained

Birth Date:12 December 1891
Birth Place:Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Death Place:Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Height Ft:6
Height In:0
Weight Lb:180
Position:Right Wing
Shoots:Right
Played For:Ottawa Primrose
Ottawa Emmetts
Ottawa Cliffsides
Haileybury Comets
Ottawa Senators
Quebec Bulldogs
Montreal Wanderers
Career Start:1907
Career End:1915

Alexander John Currie (December 12, 1891 – October 4, 1951), was head coach of the original Ottawa Senators for the 1925–26 NHL season. As a player for the Senators, he won the Stanley Cup in the 1910–11 NHA season.

Playing career

Born in Ottawa, Currie graduated to senior hockey with the Ottawa Primrose of the Ottawa City Hockey League in 1907, joining the Ottawa Emmetts in 1908 where he played on a forward line with Punch Broadbent and Gordon Roberts. After playing briefly with the Ottawa Cliffsides in the IPAHU, Currie joined the professional Haileybury Comets for their season in the National Hockey Association in 1909–10, for a sum of ($ in dollars),[1] before returning to Ottawa to play for the Senators in their 1910–11 Stanley Cup championship season. He was loaned to the Quebec Bulldogs for one game that season. The following season, he did not play hockey.

Currie returned to the NHA in 1913 with the Montreal Wanderers for one season, and played one final season with Senators in 1914–15.

Coaching career

Starting in 1914, Currie became coach of various teams in the Ottawa area, such as the Ottawa Aberdeens and Ottawa St. Pats. He coached in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Ottawa Senators in the 1925–26 season.

Personal life

Currie's parents were Mr. and Mrs. Francis Currie of Ottawa. He had a brother John W., and a sister, Mabel.[2]

Currie was found drowned in the Ottawa River on October 18, 1951, after he had been missing for two weeks.[3] [4] Currie's body was recovered from the Ottawa River near Angers, Quebec, about 12miles down the river from Hull. Currie had been gravely ill for some months prior to his disappearance, and he was last seen alive after he dismissed a taxi cab on Booth Street in Ottawa on the afternoon of October 4.[5]

Outside of ice hockey Currie was also a well-known lacrosse player, and as a golf player he was a member of the Rivermead Golf Club. He had worked as a siderographer for the Canadian Bank Note Company for some years.[5]

He is buried at Beechwood Cemetery in Ottawa.

Statistics

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGP PIMGP G A Pts PIM
7 14 0 14 9
NHA 4 1 0 1 10
NHA 1 0 0 0 3
1911–12Did not play
NHA 4 1 0 1 2
Ottawa Senators NHA 3 0 0 0 0
NHA totalt191601624
Statistics from sihrhockey.org

Coaching record

National Hockey League

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/78798258/currie-turns-pro/ "Currie Turns Pro."
  2. News: Ottawa Citizen . October 19, 1951 . Find Body of Alex J. Currie in Ottawa R. . 32.
  3. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1946&dat=19511019&id=rYMtAAAAIBAJ&sjid=gJkFAAAAIBAJ&pg=3901,7622298 "N.H.L. Veteran Drowns"
  4. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1350&dat=19511019&id=peROAAAAIBAJ&sjid=VQAEAAAAIBAJ&pg=5803,1707970 "Currie's Body Found"
  5. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/78799391/body-of-alex-currie-recovered-from/ "Body of Alex Currie Recovered From River Near Angers"