Jump to content

William "Lady" Taylor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William Taylor
Taylor with the Brantford Lacrosse Club
Born (1880-05-15)May 15, 1880
Paris, Ontario, Canada
Died April 24, 1942(1942-04-24) (aged 61)
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Height 5 ft 6 in (168 cm)
Position Center
Rover
Played for Brantford Hockey Club
Paris Hockey Club
Canadian Soo Algonquins
Michigan Soo Indians
Brantford Indians
St. Catharines Pros
Berlin Dutchmen
Cobalt Silver Kings
Pittsburgh Athletic Club
Portage Plains Cities
Playing career 1901–1911

William Charles "Lady, Billy" Taylor (May 15, 1880 – April 24, 1942) was a Canadian professional ice hockey and lacrosse player who played 96 games in various professional hockey leagues, including the International Professional Hockey League (IPHL) and Ontario Professional Hockey League (OPHL). He was born in Paris, Ontario.

Career

[edit]
Taylor while with the Canadian Soo

Amongst the professional ice hockey teams Taylor played with were the Canadian Soo Algonquins and the Michigan Soo Indians of the IPHL.[1] Taylor also represented the Brantford Indians, St. Catharines Pros and Berlin Dutchmen of the OPHL. Prior to his exploits in professional hockey Taylor played as an amateur with Brantford and Paris clubs in the Ontario Hockey Association. He was also concurrently a lacrosse player.

In the 1906–07 IPHL season Taylor led the league with 46 goals and 64 points in 24 games. In the three-year history of the IPHL only Lorne Campbell of the Pittsburgh Professionals scored more goals than Taylor, with 108 and 99 goals respectively, but in 15 more games played.

In the 1908 OPHL season Taylor scored 28 goals in 12 games for the Brantford Indians which placed him second in the league, only behind future Hockey Hall of Fame inductee Newsy Lalonde of the Toronto Professionals who scored 32 goals in 9 games.

As a lacrosse player, Taylor played as a centre fielder, and was known as one of the speediest players in the game. In 1903 he was a member of the Brantford Lacrosse Club which finished as runner-ups to the Montreal Shamrocks for the Minto Cup.[2]

Playing style

[edit]
Garnet Sixsmith

Over the course of his career in hockey, "Lady" Taylor primarily worked the two mid-ice forward positions, the centre forward and rover positions, from where he scored the majority of his goals. While standing at a fairly modest 5 feet and 6 inches, he more than compensated for his lack of stature with a rough and rowdy side to his game, or sometimes outright violent.

Fellow IPHL player Garnet Sixsmith, in 1931, told a story in the Pittsburgh Press how Taylor once had threatened to break his leg before a game at the Duquesne Gardens in Pittsburgh, and then fulfilled on his promise with Sixsmith being carried off the ice with his leg broken in three different places.[3]

Taylor's rowdy or violent on-ice demeanour was sometimes mirrored off the ice as well, and in October 1908 he was fined $50 or three months in jail by Magistrate Livingston in Brantford, Ontario on a charge of threatening to shoot his estranged wife, and for having a loaded revolver in his possession for that purpose. Taylor had been warned twice by the magistrate to leave the city, but had instead showed up at his wife's house flourishing a revolver and allegedly told her "Let's have a tragedy, and die together." He was also bound over in $1,000 surety to keep the peace in Brantford for two years.[4]

Military duty

[edit]

After his ice hockey career had ended Taylor enlisted with the Black Watch Regiment in Montreal and served with the 42nd Battalion during World War I in England and France between 1915 and 1917.[5] He returned wounded to Canada with both a bullet and shrapnel in his body, and also had a silver plate inserted in his skull.

Statistics

[edit]

Fit-Ref = Fit-Reform Trophy, SPHL = Saskatchewan Professional Hockey League, EOPHL = Eastern Ontario Professional Hockey League, NOHL = New Ontario Hockey League

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1904–05 Canadian Soo Algonquins IPHL 24 35 0 35 21
1905–06 Canadian Soo Algonquins IPHL 10 13 0 13 22
Michigan Soo Indians IPHL 4 5 0 5 12
1906–07 Canadian Soo Algonquins IPHL 24 46 18 64 50
Cobalt Silver Kings TPHL 3 7 0 7 3
1907–08 Portage Plains Cities Fit-Ref 1 0 0 0 0
1908 Brantford Indians OPHL 12 28 0 28 12
1908–09 Pittsburgh Athletic Club WPHL 2 1 0 1 0
New Liskeard TPHL 2 1 0 1 0
1909 St. Catharines Pros OPHL 1 0 0 0 0
Berlin Dutchmen OPHL 2 4 0 4 7
1909–10
1910–11 Port Arthur Athletics EOPHL 1 0 0 0 0
Port Arthur Thunder Bays NOHL 5 4 0 4 3
IPHL totals 62 99 18 117 105
OPHL totals 15 32 0 32 19

Statistics per Society for International Hockey Research at sihrhockey.org

References

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ SIHR – Player List sihrhockey.org
  2. ^ "Pertinent comment on sportdom happenings" The Ottawa Journal, December 2, 1915. Retrieved 2025-06-09.
  3. ^ "Garnet Sixsmith – He played hockey when a rival said, "I'll break your leg" – and did it" by Lester Biederman, The Pittsburgh Press, December 15, 1931. Retrieved 2025-06-09.
  4. ^ "Pro hockey player fined – Billy Taylor of Brantford warned by the police to leave that city" The Toronto Star, October 27, 1908. Retrieved 2025-06-09.
  5. ^ "Lacrosse and hockey player joins Black Watch at Montreal" The Windsor Star, December 4, 1915. Retrieved 2025-06-09.