Background
Ty Anderson was born in Norway and immigrated to Swampscott, Massachusetts with his parents at an early age.
Ty Anderson was born in Norway and immigrated to Swampscott, Massachusetts with his parents at an early age.
He played all six matches and scored one goal. Early Years
lieutenant was his skills as a hockey player that allowed him to play for the Boston Hockey Club (a precursor to the EAHL"s Boston Olympics) and the United States National team Playing career
Anderson first played for the United States at the 1931 World Championships, winning his first international Meda
Team United States of America would only lose a single game in the tournament, being shut out by Canada 2-0, giving the Americans second place and the Silver Meda
After the Olympics Anderson would join the Atlantic City Sea Gulls in the Tri-State Hockey league. The TSHL would become the Eastern Amateur Hockey League for the 1933-1934 seasons and though it was a sort of minor league for the National Hockey League, Anderson preferred to stay in the EAHL and remained there for 15 years.
Anderson would gain a reputation as one of the most gentlemanly players in the EAHL, averaging only 11 penalty minutes a year. Later life
After his Playing Career Anderson moved back to Swampscott and became the high school"s ice hockey head coach.
Anderson would coach the team from 1948 to 1972, leading them to three North Shore League championships (1958, 1959 and 1963).
In the summers Anderson worked as a local golf pro. On January 31, 1989 at the age of 80, Ty Anderson died of pancreatic cancer in a medical center located in Lynn, Massachusetts.
He was so respected in the league that on March 9, 1941 he would receive a gold watch for his EAHL services on what was called "Ty Anderson Day", an event that was held by the New York Rovers while Anderson was a member of the visiting Boston Olympics.