Albert Kerr

For the British canoer, see Albert Kerr (canoer).
Not to be confused with George Albert Kerr.
Albert Kerr
"The Brockville Cannonball"[1]

Albert Kerr in 1911.
Born June 19, 1888
Brockville, Ontario
Died September 17, 1941(1941-09-17) (aged 53)
Iroquois Falls, Ontario[2]
Height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Weight 175 lb (79 kg; 12 st 7 lb)
Position Left Wing
Shot Right
Played for Pittsburgh Lyceum (WPHL)
Pittsburgh Athletic Club (WPHL)
Toronto Pros (OPHL)
Ottawa Senators (ECHA, CHA, NHA)
Victoria Aristocrats (PCHA)
Spokane Canaries (PCHA)
Playing career 19071920
Albert Kerr with the Ottawa Senators on an Imperial Tobacco hockey card.

Albert Daniel "Dubbie" Kerr (June 19, 1888 – September 17, 1941) was a Canadian professional hockey player. He was a member of the 1909 and 1911 Ottawa Senators Stanley Cup-winning teams. Born in Brockville, Ontario, he started out as a professional with the Pittsburgh Lyceum and Pittsburgh Athletic Club in 1907 before returning to Canada with the Toronto Pros in 1908. He played with the Senators from 1909 until 1912. In 1913, he moved out west to play in the Pacific Coast Hockey Association until 1920 for the Victoria Aristocrats.

Playing career

Kerr started his career in his hometown of Brockville, Ontario, playing junior and intermediate amateur hockey for Brockville of the Ontario Hockey Association. He turned professional in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1907-08. Kerr started 1908–09 with Pittsburgh, but left after seven games to join the Toronto team of the Ontario Professional Hockey League. After three games in Toronto, Kerr jumped to the Ottawa Senators and became a star.

Ottawa was rebuilding after the "Silver Seven" years and was seeking a player on left wing. Executive Weldy Bate had read that Kerr had scored five goals in a game for Toronto. Bate sent coach Pete Green who confirmed Kerr's ability and an offer was made to Kerr, who then moved to Ottawa.[1] He played with future Hall of Famers Marty Walsh and Billy Gilmour. He also played alongside Bruce Ridpath and scored 20 goals in nine games as Ottawa won the Eastern Canada Hockey Association title and the Stanley Cup.

In 1910, Kerr suffered a serious skate cut to his right eye, at first losing his sight, necessitating an eye operation, limiting his play to five games. He would recover to play in the 1910–11 season. During the 1910–11 season, he along with Walsh and Ridpath, scored in twelve consecutive games, including five in one game and had 32 goals in 16 games to finish behind Walsh in NHA scoring. Kerr, Ridpath and Walsh had one, two and three goals respectively in a 7–4 Stanley Cup challenge win over Galt, Ontario.

Kerr retired after the 1911–12 season but Lester Patrick lured him to Victoria, British Columbia of the Pacific Coast Hockey Association in 1913–14. He played three seasons with Victoria Aristocrats and moved with the club to Spokane for the 1916–17 season when the Victoria arena was taken over for wartime activities. Kerr served during World War I from 1917–19, but returned to ice hockey to play another season with Victoria, retiring in 1920.

Statistics

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1906–07 Brockville HC OHA 4 15 0 15
1907–08 Pittsburgh Lyceum WPHL 1 0 0 0 0
Pittsburgh Athletic Club WPHL 17 15 0 15 0
1908–09 Pittsburgh Athletic Club WPHL 7 4 0 4
Toronto Professionals OPHL 3 6 0 6 9
Ottawa Senators ECHA 9 20 0 20
1909–10 Ottawa Senators CHA 1 3 0 3 9
1910 Ottawa Senators NHA 4 8 2 10 31
Stanley Cup 1 0 0 0
1910–11 Ottawa Senators NHA 16 33 0 33 45
Stanley Cup 2 2 0 2
1911–12 Ottawa Senators NHA 18 24 0 24 35
1912–13
1913–14 Victoria Aristocrats PCHA 16 20 11 31 15
1914 Victoria Aristocrats Stanley Cup - - - - - 3 1 0 0 3
1914–15 Victoria Aristocrats PCHA 17 14 4 18 15
1915–16 Victoria Aristocrats PCHA 18 16 12 28 46
1916–17 Spokane Canaries PCHA 23 20 11 31 58
1917–18
1919 Victoria Aristocrats PCHA 1 0 0 0 0
1919–20 Victoria Aristocrats PCHA 16 8 1 9 12
NHA totals 38 65 2 67 111
PCHA totals 91 78 39 117 146
Stanley Cup totals 6 3 0 3

Awards

Personal life

At the time of his death in 1941, Kerr was an employee of the McNamara Construction Company in Iroquois Falls, Ontario.[3] He was laid to rest in Toronto, Ontario.[4]

References

Notes
  1. 1 2 Koffman, Jack (September 19, 1941). "Along Sports Row". Ottawa Citizen. p. 14.
  2. Albert "Dubby" Kerr, former pro hockey star here, passes Ottawa Citizen, September 17, 1941
  3. Canadian Press (September 18, 1941). "Albert "Dubby" Kerr, Former Pro Hockey Star Here, Passes". Ottawa Citizen. p. 12.
  4. "Dubby Kerr is Buried: Funeral for Former Star of Silver Seven In Toronto". Montreal Gazette. September 20, 1941. p. 19.

External links

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