Vancouver Giants tribute jersey honours aboriginal players

Alkali Lake braves travelled by horse drawn wagon to play throughout the Cariboo

BY MEGAN STEWART, VANCOUVER COURIERSEPTEMBER 24, 2013

http://www.theprovince.com/business/Vancouver+Giants+tribute+jersey+honours+aboriginal+players/8954847/story.html

Praised for his speed and sharpeyed shot, centreman Alex Antoine was visiting 
Vancouver from his home near Williams Lake for a two-game exhibition series 
when the New York Rangers offered him a contract.

The year was the 1932. Antoine turned them down.

Antoine's Alkali Lake Braves lost both games to the all-star Vancouver 
Commercials that week, but their style of hockey was fast and beautiful and 
clean. It had elevated the players from the Esk'etemc First Nation to the top 
of the Northern B.C. amateur league and place them in front of jubilant city 
crowds of 8,000 at the Denman Arena.

Friday night at Pacific Coliseum for their WHL season opener, the Vancouver 
Giants paid tribute to the Alkali Lake Braves by wearing a special, single-game 
jersey.

The beautiful jersey is cream-coloured with bold black stripes and the "lazy 
cross" emblem of the Alkali Lake Ranch, a large cattle operation where many of 
the aboriginal hockey players worked, now known as the Douglas Lake Ranch. Such 
a jersey was never worn by the hockey players, said the Giants vicepresident of 
business development, Dale Saip. But the look is contemporary with the Brave's 
era and is more visually compelling than the dark green colour and giant "AL" 
lettering of the sweaters they did wear.

"We needed something that had some significance to the group and these guys 
came together on the ranch. That's where they worked," said Saip.

Indeed, when Antoine turned down Lester Patrick and his job offer with the 
Rangers, it was because he already had work. "I've got a good job at Alkali 
Lake Ranch," he reportedly said. According to Cariboo-Chilcotin: Pioneer People 
and Places, he made $15 a month.

The observations of one hockey writer, the son of English immigrants, are 
included in the seminal anthology, Hockey: A People's History. "He skated 
backward with the puck better than most of the players could carry it going 
forward. He had a natural talent for shooting as well," came the report. "His 
accuracy was uncanny."

The Alkali Lake Braves formed around 1927 when the league was a loosely knit 
organization of teams from Clinton to Prince George and included rosters from 
reserves at Sugar Cane and Canim Lake. The Braves were segregated from the 
dominant racist society and had no financial backing. They travelled to games 
by horse-drawn wagon and a second wagon was loaded with fans. These road 
warriors would often sleep overnight in the snow alongside the rink.

Young, male aboriginal athletes picked up hockey at residential schools where 
the sport was used as a tool of cultural assimilation. They were encouraged to 
play the tough, fast contact sport and they could win, beating white boys and 
being celebrated for it.

The owner of Alkali Lake Ranch supplied the Braves with their first jerseys, 
their dark green sweaters, and when they travelled to Vancouver, the owner also 
outfitted them with special uniforms. Saip said no picture could be found and 
the colours are unknown but the chief of the Esk'etemc Council, Fred Robbins, 
told him what they looked like.

"When they came down to play against the Commercials, the sponsor came up with 
a different look: two hockey sticks with the puck in the middle that made an 
'A,'" said Saip. "We can't find an actual copy."

By the 1930-31 season, the Braves were experienced and "acclaimed as one of the 
cleanest teams in Cariboo history," according to Pioneer Places and People.

"They had amazing stamina, never seeming to tire. During the season, they 
clubbed all comers and finally toppled the perennial champion Prince George 
club."

Squamish labour activist and sports organizer Andy Paull, the president of the 
North Shore Indian Brotherhood at the time, invited the Braves to play against 
the Commercials. "It'll be the Indians' night to howl," Paull declared.

The visitors competed with only nine men and adjusted their play to an arena 
with boards instead of a rink with snow banks but still only lost each game by 
a single goal. The Commercials won 2-1 and 1-0. The Braves folded after the 
next season because of financial strife.

The Giants are selling a limited number of Alkali Lake tribute T-shirts and 
hats as well as game-worn jerseys. In previous seasons, the organization has 
honoured hockey's past with commemorative jerseys for the Vancouver 
Millionaires and the White Spots. Vancouver opened its season with a 4-2 loss 
to the Victoria Royals Sept. 20 at Pacific Coliseum. Their next home game is 
tonight (Sept. 25) against the Seattle Thunderbirds.

mstew...@vancourier.com twitter.com/MHStewart

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