Con Corbeau

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Con Corbeau
Con Corbeau.jpg
Corbeau c. 1913
Born (1885-05-08)May 8, 1885
Penetanguishene, Ontario, Canada
Died June 14, 1920(1920-06-14) (aged 35)
Penetanguishene, Ontario, Canada
Height 6 ft 1 in (185 cm)
Weight 225 lb (102 kg; 16 st 1 lb)
Position Defence
Shot Right
Played for Pittsburgh Professionals
Calumet Miners
Canadian Soo
Portage Lakes Hockey Club
Toronto Professional Hockey Club
Pittsburgh PAC
Haileybury Comets
Berlin Dutchmen
Toronto Tecumsehs
Toronto Blueshirts
Playing career 1905–1915
Corbeau, second from left in the back row, with the 1913–14 Toronto Blueshirts.

Henry John "Harry, Con" Corbeau (May 8, 1885 – June 1, 1920[1]) was a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman in the National Hockey Association for the Toronto Blueshirts.[2] Corbeau was a member of the Blueshirts when they won the Stanley Cup in 1914. Corbeau's brother Bert also played professional ice hockey.

Playing career[]

Born in Penetanguishene, Ontario, Corbeau played senior ice hockey with Toronto St. Georges and Victoria Harbour, before signing as a professional with the Pittsburgh Professionals of the International Professional Hockey League in 1905. In one of the earliest trades of a player, Pittsburgh traded him to the Calumet Miners in exchange for the Miners' vote to reinstate Hod Stuart. Corbeau played for both Calumet and the Canadian Soo teams that season as well as Pittsburgh. The following season, he signed with the Portage Lakes Hockey Club but was released and finished the season with Calumet. In 1907, he signed with the Toronto Pros of the OPHL, and played in their unsuccessful challenge of the Montreal Wanderers for the Stanley Cup.

Corbeau signed for the next season with Pittsburgh PAC of the Western Pennsylvania Hockey League in 1908, but jumped his contract to re-sign with Toronto. Later that season, he jumped his contract with Toronto to play for the Haileybury Comets. In 1909, he re-signed with Haileybury for the new NHA, but he did not play a game. The following year, he stayed with Haileybury went it returned to the TPHL, although he finished the season with the Berlin Dutchmen of the OPHL. In 1912, he joined the new Toronto Tecumsehs of the NHA. He moved the following season to the Toronto Blueshirts and was a member of their Stanley Cup-winning squad. He played his final season of 1914–15 with the of the Nova Scotia Eastern Pro League. He coached after his playing days with Port Arthur Columbus Club before returning home to Penetanguishene, and died in 1920 of internal bleeding of his heart.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ "Births, Marriages, and Deaths". The Lancet. 94 (2415): 828. December 1869. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(02)50903-x. ISSN 0140-6736.
  2. ^ Con Corbeau at JustSportsStats
  3. ^ "Con Corbeau Is Dead Result Of Heart Trouble" The Morning Leader, June 17, 1920.


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