League News
Glace Bay Minor Hockey Association welcomes three new inductees into its wall of fame
The Glace Bay Minor Hockey Association recognized three individuals who made significant contributions to the sport of hockey in the community on Friday afternoon.
Bob (Bugsy) Seward
Seward was an instrumental part of growing the sport of hockey in the Glace Bay community.
In the mid 1960s, he established the Glace Bay Community Hockey Clinic, which was created to give local children the opportunity to learn and play the game in 1965.
Seward prepared the players before they joined the Rotary Common School League, which was essential bantam hockey. The players later went on to play with the Glace Bay Youth Hockey Association, which had midget and juvenile divisions.
The first registration, open and free to participants, had around 100 people registered. The success followed in 1966 with under-12, which had a one-hour ice time for about 100 kids.
The program continued to expand to under-11 players with another 100 kids registered. It eventually grew to include under-9 and eventually the tots program.
The program would eventually have close to 300 people involved with dozens of coaches, instructors and executives. It continued until 1985 when it became part of the minor hockey association.
As a player, Seward began his hockey career with the Glace Bay Minor Hockey Association during the 1950s.
During his career, he played bantam, midget, juvenile, interscholastic, junior and senior hockey. After playing with the Jr. Miners, he attended Acadia University in Wolfville, playing four years with the Axemen from 1960-63.
Following his time with the Axemen, Seward spent five seasons with the senior Miners from 1963 to 1968.
As an on-ice official, Seward began in the school league as referee-in-chief. Upon his return to Glace Bay, he began working games at the bantam, midget, high school, intermediate, junior and senior leagues. He was part of the first national referees’ program, graduating as a national certified referee in 1968.
Off the ice, Seward coached at Morrison High School for several years, winning a provincial title in 1964. He also coached four seasons with the midget Miners, the Jr. Miners affiliate, as well as the Centennial Miners and many years at the peewee level.
Barrie Campbell
Barrie Campbell began playing hockey when he was nine-years-old, attending Bob Seward’s peewee clinic.
He later suited up for the peewee Clippers when he was 12-years-old before moving on to common school for St. Anne’s and then midget ‘A’ for two years. He later played for the Glace Bay Kinsmen in the juvenile league and with the Glace Bay Miners from 1976-80.
Following his playing career, he continued his passion for hockey by coaching, starting with an atom house team in 1993. He later progressed to coach atom ‘A’, peewee, bantam ‘A’ and midget ‘X.’
Campbell was an instrumental part of developing female hockey and coached in the category at the peewee, bantam and major midget divisions.
His coaching career led to many awards, but more notably was winning provincial titles at the midget ‘X’, female peewee ‘A’ and female bantam ‘A’ divisions.
His love for hockey and desire to give all children, both male and female, a chance to play and learn about the game while having fun made him one of the most respected and admired coaches in local minor hockey.
Charlie Campbell
From the time he began playing hockey as a child to finishing his career with the huff and puff group, Charlie Campbell always had a passion for the game.
His biggest impact in the sport may have come off the ice.
As an organizer, he made sure children’s time in hockey was the best it could be and his involvement in the Glace Bay Minor Hockey Association website was his way of giving back to the players.
Campbell set the bar high for everyone in the association, making sure it was special for all players, no matter the age, division or calibre of hockey they played.
He put a spotlight on all the players every chance he could, making them feel like they were superstars. Some may not have had that attention again in sports.