Cobourg

1893 Cobourg Mens Baseball team -Canadian champs

Card Description
Baseball games were often played between teams on both sides of the border. American players often made their way onto Canadian team rosters. This photograph depicts the Cobourg Men's Baseball team who was declared Canadian Champions in 1893
Type Of Object
Vintage
1893
Team or Principal Name
Sport Type
Sport Level
Accession Number
2017.003.009

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2003-31st Annual Softball Tournament t-shirt

Card Description

This 31th Annual Fast Pitch Softball Tournament t-shirt was from the 2003 season. This tournament gathered men's and women's teams locally and from the province and beyond

Type Of Object
Vintage
2003
Team or Principal Name
Sport Level
Accession Number
2017.002.011

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2011-39th Annual Softball Tournament t-shirt

Card Description

This 39th Annual Fast Pitch Softball Tournament t-shirt was from the 2011 season. This tournament gathered men's and women's teams locally and from the province and beyond

Type Of Object
Vintage
2011
Team or Principal Name
Sport Level
Accession Number
2017.002.010

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FRED DUFTON

FRED DUFTON

Fred Dufton was born in Stratford, Ontario in 1886. After public school, his family moved to Toronto where he attended Jarvis Collegiate. In Toronto he went to work for Clark and Clark Tanneries. He became the manager of the Strollers Baseball Team, a semi-professional team that played their games at Christie Pitts Park. In 1926, he moved with his wife, three sons and three daughters to Cobourg, to join the Edwards and Edwards Tanneries.

Fred became interested in football when his sons started playing in high school. He got involved and then became the manager of the Cobourg Collegiate Teams. When the boys left high school, Fred decided to start up an Intermediate football team. The year was 1935 and the team was known as the “Red Raiders.” However, in 1937, with the goal of revitalizing the team, the name was changed to “The Cobourg Galloping Ghosts.”

Over the years he earned the nickname “Ferocious Fred” because of his tremendous desire to surmount all obstacles and bring home a winner. The Galloping Ghosts won a total of eight Ontario Championships and became Dominion (Canadian Amateur) Football Champions in 1946, 1948 and 1950. Fred Dufton managed the team for its full 13-year existence. Layton Dodge, Cobourg’s most distinguished sportswriter ever, proclaimed, “The Galloping Ghosts were, and continue to be, the most famous of all teams in Cobourg’s history”.

This legacy was a direct result of the work ethic, commitment and passion of Fred Dufton.