|
A
player since 1933, and horseshoe pitcher with
international qualifications, Jack Adams has elevated his sport into
prominence. When Jack was inducted at into the
Horseshoe Canada Hall of Fame in 1987, he was
credited with the determination and ability to unite Eastern and Western
Canada into one cohesive force.
Jack was born in
Saskatoon in 1921, began pitching horseshoes
in 1933 and won the Saskatchewan junior championship in 1938.
Jack went into the Canadian armed forces during
the Second World War and remained in the military service for 30
years, playing and promoting a wide range of
sports, including horseshoe pitching, bowling,
curling, badminton, basketball, golf and hockey.
He was an
executive council member of the Canadian
Horseshoe Association as early as 1945, a Canadian regional
director of the World Association since 1960, and among his early
playing credentials was a Canadian Class C
singles championship won at Chilliwack, B.C.
After being named to the World Horseshoe Pitchers Hall
of Fame in 1984, he received further accolades when he was
honoured with the achievement award in Georgia
in 1995.
Ever the promoter, Jack was always on the look-out for
new horseshoe facilities and this picture, taken in May, 1987,
shows the home practice court with a telephone
post right in the middle of it. Jack added to
his laurels as a player in 1998
when he won the championship at the Canadian Senior Games at Medicine
Hat.
There was special
recognition for Jack in June, 1999, when he
was inducted into the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame. His success
story, told in the StarPhoenix, credits Jack
with restructuring the national horseshoe association into one, strong
body, and there's an estimate, too, that by 1999, Jack had thrown
750,000 pounds of iron, which had travelled
some 2,300 miles through the air. The job has
never quite been done for Jack, and he was
throwing the horseshoes in a warm-up for the world championships at
Bismarck, North Dakota, in 2000.
The
game has always been a family affair. Jack is joined
in this picture by Donald Adams, Bruce Adams and Joan Finnie ,
against a backdrop of a fence built by his
father, Arthur, who was a contractor and a
horse shoe pitching enthusiast who went into the Saskatoon Sports Hall
of Fame in 1988.
Although he had a
hand in multiple sports, Jack's other major
accomplishment came in 2005 when the Saskatchewan Curling Association
presented him with the Scotty Richardson Memorial Award for long
service. He had been a manager at the
Sutherland Curling Club, an executive member
of many Saskatoon men's bonspiels, an had particular skills as a
draw-maker and organizer of league formats.
|