Johnny Bower took some unusual turns during his trip to the Hockey Hall of Fame, including a detour that brought a championship to Rhode Island and a pair of vintage pads to a young goaltender here.
At the beginning of his trip, Bower seemed an unlikely future Hall of Famer. As a kid in rural Saskatchewan in Canada, his first goalie pads were made from a mattress, and his stick was fashioned from a crooked tree branch. Later, he got bogged down in the minors, spending eight seasons there before playing his first NHL game. Then, he found himself back to the minors for four more years.

And, along the way, he made a huge impact in Rhode Island, leading the 1955-56 Providence Reds to that franchise’s last AHL title. During that exciting season, Bower was named the league’s MVP and led a Reds’ team that also featured Zellio Toppazzini as the AHL’s scoring champ (113 points), linemate Camille Henry as the top goal scorer (50) and saw Bruce Cline, capture the AHL’s “Rookie of the Year” Award.

Johnny would become a regular at the Heritage Society’s annual reunions, bringing en entourage along on what came to be known as the “Bower Bus”

Bower led Toronto to the playoffs in his first full season, then to consecutive Stanley Cups from 1962 through 1964. Three years later, Bower shared goaltending duties with another veteran, Terry Sawchuk, on an aging team dubbed the “over the hill gang”, which surprised everyone to win the1967 Stanley Cup.

Bower’s stay in Providence was relatively brief, but it was magical. In 61 games, Bower’s goaltending was a major factor in the team’s Calder Cup win. The Reds finished in first place during the regular season, then beat Buffalo and Cleveland in the playoffs. Ironically, Bower had spent eight previous seasons in the Cleveland net, and would rejoin the Barons after the second and last of his two years in Providence.
Bower reunited with many of his teammates at his first Heritage Society’s reunion. He was also reunited with the pair of vintage goalie pads he wore in Providence in the mid-50s. They were passed along to friends over the years and ultimately in the mid-70s to Paul Goldenberg, then playing PeeWee hockey. Paul and his father, Mal, a Heritage Society Director, donated the pads to the Society. Today, they’re on display as part of the Reds permanent Kiosk Exhibit at the Amica Mutual Pavilion (AMP).