- Bill Stewart (sports)
William Joseph Stewart (
September 20 1894 -February 14 1964 ) was an American coach and sports official who was anice hockey referee and coach, and also an umpire inMajor League Baseball . In his first season as head coach of the Chicago Black Hawks, he led the team to aStanley Cup championship in 1938. Born in Fitchburg,Massachusetts , he was the first American-trained head coach to win the Stanley Cup. He was also an umpire in theNational League from 1933 to 1954, and officiated in fourWorld Series (1937, 1943, 1948, 1953) and four All-Star Games (1936, 1940, 1948, 1954), calling balls and strikes for the last contest. He also was the home plate umpire forJohnny Vander Meer 's second consecutiveno-hitter in by|1938, and was the crew chief for the by|1951 three-game pennant playoff between the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers.Stewart grew up in
Boston, Massachusetts , and competed in baseball, hockey, track andwrestling in high school. He became aminor league baseball player with Worcester in theNew England League in 1913, and in 1917, while withMontreal , was the firstInternational League player to enlist forWorld War I service, joining the Navy. After the war he was signed by theChicago White Sox , but he suffered an arm injury falling down a flight of stairs while working as a census taker in Boston, and was unable to remain with the team in 1919. He stayed in the minor leagues as apitcher and manager (including inNashua, New Hampshire in 1927) until 1930, when he became an umpire in the Eastern League, and later officiated in the International and New York-Pennsylvania Leagues.cite news |title=Stewart, Ex-N.L. Arbiter and Hockey Ref, Dead at 68 |work=The Sporting News |page=36 |date=1964-02-29 ]During baseball offseasons in the 1910s and 1920s, he generally coached Boston-area college and high school hockey teams. He became the NHL's first U.S.-born referee in 1928, and served in that capacity until 1941 excepting his two years (1937-39) as Chicago's coach. He coached the U.S. national hockey team in 1957, posting a 23-3-1 record, but the team was barred by the State Department from participating in the World Championships following the Soviet invasion of Hungary.
Stewart worked 714 consecutive games from the time he entered the NL until September 1938, when he was stricken with
appendicitis . He resigned from the NL umpiring staff in January 1955 after not being promoted to league supervisor, a position he claimed had been promised him by commissionerFord Frick when he had been NL president; new league presidentWarren Giles instead announced that the position would not be filled. After retiring as an umpire, he continued to work as a scout for theCleveland Indians and Washington Senators.Stewart died at age 69 at the Veterans Administration Hospital near his home in the Jamaica Plain section of Boston after suffering a
stroke two weeks earlier. He was inducted into theUnited States Hockey Hall of Fame in 1982. His grandson Paul also became an NHL player and referee.ee also
References
External links
* [http://www.ushockeyhall.com/ U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame]
* [http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/S/Pstewb901.htm Retrosheet]
*findagrave|id=6675999|name=Bill Stewart
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