Career
Ironstone was a goaltender who played professionally from 1921 until 1936. He is recorded as playing two games in the National Hockey League (National Hockey League), and one season as a back-up, but played mostly in the minor professional leagues during his career. Ironstone was the second Jew to play in the National Hockey League.
Born in Sudbury, Ontario, Ironstone first played senior hockey in 1921 with the Sudbury Wolves of the Northern Ontario Hockey Association.
He played three seasons with the Wolves before joining the Ottawa Senators for the 1924-1925 season.
Ironstone was the back-up goaltender for the season, and did not see game action. In 1925-1926, Ironstone played for the new New York Americans expansion team, but was mostly the backup.
He joined the Niagara Falls Cataracts Canadian Professional Hockey League (Can-Pro) minor league team for the 1926-1927 season. The following season, Ironstone was traded to the Toronto Ravinas, where he was called up to play for the Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League. He played one game, a 0–0 tie that went to ten minutes of overtime.
Ironstone asked for double the contract rate for the game, an offer which was accepted by the Leafs" owner Conn Smythe.
However, Smythe informed Ironstone that would be the last game he would ever play in the National Hockey League, which ultimately would be the case. He returned to the Can-Pro league in 1928-1929, and played for numerous teams until 1931, when he retired from hockey temporarily. He returned to hockey when he moved back to Sudbury in 1933, playing for the Sudbury Legionnaires, Falconbridge Falcons, and finally, the Sudbury Wolves, returning to the team he started professionally with.
After leaving ice hockey, Ironstone returned to the family business, a men"s wear store started by his father Hyman.
He died on December 12, 1972, in Sudbury at the age of 74. Ironstone was the subject of a radio play written by Paul Davies in 1996.