Paul Jacobs (ice hockey) explained

Paul Jacobs
Position:Defence
Shoots:Left
Height Ft:5
Height In:8
Weight Lb:160
Played For:Toronto Arenas
Birth Date:February 23, 1893
Birth Place:Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Death Place:Kahnawake, Quebec, Canada
Career Start:1912
Career End:1925

Paul Oronhyatekha Jacobs (February 23, 1893 – May 1, 1973)[1] was a Canadian professional ice hockey and lacrosse player. Jacobs played one game in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Toronto Arenas during the 1918–19 NHL season. Jacobs may have been the first aboriginal ice hockey player in the NHL.

Playing career

Jacobs was a resident of the Kahnawake Mohawk Territory, south of Montreal. Jacobs was proficient as a youth playing lacrosse. Photographs exist of Jacobs as a member of the reserve lacrosse team in 1910.

Jacobs was also proficient at ice hockey. He is first recorded on a hockey team with Dominion Bridge Company team in the 1912–13 season. Records exist for Jacobs playing for various teams from 1912 through 1916 and from 1917 through 1925, the last recorded team being the amateur Cleveland Ohio Blues of the USAHA.

Jacobs' record in the NHL is unclear. Jacobs was invited to the Toronto Arenas' training camp in December 1918. Jacobs potentially earned an opening-day roster spot but an announcement in the Toronto Globe indicated he was returning to the Montreal area instead. Jacobs played several games for the Montreal Stars of the Montreal Hockey League that season. Jacobs is recorded in referee reports for five games for Toronto between December 31 and February 4. However no newspaper reports list Jacobs as being in the lineup for any of those games. He may have been a substitute and did not play. Jacobs is recorded in an Ottawa paper for the opening-day December 23 game, but no other newspaper included Jacobs in the game report. An NHL report for the season records Jacobs as only participating in the December 31 game.[2] [3]

US census records for 1930 and 1940 list Jacobs as living in Detroit with his wife Alice.

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGP PIMGP G A Pts PIM
1912–13Montreal StarsMCHL1 0 0 0 3
1912–13Montreal Dominion BridgeMTMHL7 3 0 3
1913–14Montreal Dominion BridgeMTMHL2 0 0 0 0
1914–15Montreal NationaleMCHL1 0 0 0 3
1914–15St. Lawrence BridgeMTMHL
1915–16New Haven Hockey ClubUSAHA
1917–18Montreal StarsMCHL9 10 1 11 15
1917–18Leeside IndiansExhib
1918–19Toronto ArenasNHL1 0 0 0 0
1918–19Montreal StarsMCHL7 4 7 11 27
1919–20Laval UniversityMCHL10 6 0 6 24
1921–22Quebec VoltigeursQPHL6 2 1 3
1922–23Cleveland IndiansUSAHA16 0 0 0
1923–24Montreal NationaleECHA8 0 0 0
1924–25Cleveland BluesUSAHA9 0 0 0
NHL totals1 0 0 0 0

Transactions

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.sihrhockey.org/__a/members/deaths_by_year.cfm?year=1973&month=5 Hockey deaths - May 1973
  2. Web site: Paul Jacobs Game Logs 1918–19. National Hockey League. May 4, 2020.

    Although the NHL commonly recognizes Fred Sasakamoose as the league's first indigenous hockey player to compete in a regular season game, new research suggests that Henry "Buddy" Maracle played for the New York Rangers in the 1930s, meaning Maracle came before Sasakamoose at the very least.

  3. Web site: Setting the record straight: Maracle should be recognized as trailblazer.