April 26, 2024

Effort to refurbish historic St. Stephen basketball court considers next steps | CBC News

Most people would never think the old building at 4-8 King St. in St. Stephen was anything more than an empty retail space.

But people in the town believe it is the oldest surviving basketball court in the world, where a game was played less than two years after Canadian James Naismith invented the sport.

For Robert Otto, a longtime basketball fan, seeing the tiny gymnasium on the upper floor of the building for the first time was an exciting experience.

“I sort of got chills,” Otto said.

“I thought it was amazing. You could almost hear the squeak of the shoes.”

Robert Otto, president of the group spearheading the project, says the goal is to celebrate Canada’s contribution to the game of basketball. (Submitted by Canada First Basketball)

Otto had recently moved to St Stephen, and he agreed to head up the organization trying to turn the building into a museum dedicated to the event.

Canada First Basketball is nearing the end of phase one of its fundraising goal of $1 million for what Otto says is an estimated $10-million project.

That has allowed the Town of St. Stephen to purchase the property on behalf of the organization, an effort that began in 2018.

The building was home to the local YMCA back at the end of the 19th century and housed a number of local businesses over the past 120 years.

The St. Stephen YMCA, far left, occupied the building from 1891 to 1899. (Facebook)

In 2010, after a small fire, the carpet in the upper floor was removed, revealing the original gymnasium floor.

That kicked off research into a local legend that the first basketball game outside the U.S. happened there.

It turns out that wasn’t quite true. 

In September 1893, a man named Lyman Archibald arrived in town to run the Y.

Lyman Archibald, front row at right, is credited with bringing the game to St. Stephen in 1893, two years after being part of the world’s first basketball team in Springfield, Mass. (Hallie Lowry/Library and Archives Canada)

He was a member of James Naismith’s YMCA class in Springfield, Mass., and played in that famous first game in December 1891.

And on Oct. 17, 1893, he introduced the game to St. Stephen. It was a big enough deal that the local newspaper reported the story.

But Canada First Basketball soon found out games had been hosted in Toronto and Montreal by that time.

That’s when they realized that the venues where earlier games had been played no longer exist. 

A gymnasium in Paris, France, a replica of the Springfield YMCA, claimed the title of oldest surviving basketball court, but Otto said its December 1893 game was two months after Archibald’s game.

James Naismith, the Canadian credited with inventing the game of basketball. (Robyn Miller/CBC)

Back then, the game likely barely resembled the fast-paced sport we know today.

“With nine players a side, it must have been pure pandemonium,” Otto said.

“The rules were ill-defined … it was predominantly a passing game.”

Now that the building is officially in town hands, the work can begin on the refurbishment of the building.

Otto said the building itself is in good condition structurally, and recent roof work ensures it is watertight.

At nearly 130 years old, the St. Stephen basketball court is believed to be the oldest surviving original court in the world today. (Peter Corby/Submitted)

“There’s nothing overly pressing,” so the group can focus on the job of refurbishing the gym.

“The floor is going to need some work. We have to figure out what’s the best way to protect the floor and retain its history.”

The plan also includes adding an “experience centre” on the first floor.

It will allow people to “experience the history of basketball and Canada’s contribution to the game,” Otto said.

That will include another Canadian connection, the hosting of the first NBA game in 1941.

A recent photo of the building at 4-8 King St. in St. Stephen. (Submitted by Canada First Basketball)

The New York Knickerbockers came to Canada to face the Toronto Huskies in the first-ever game in a league then called the Basketball Association of America, or BAA.

Otto said the group hopes to have plans in place in six to nine months, which will include more precise estimates on the $10 million price tag.

The fundraising will have to be fast and furious if Otto has his way on a timeline.

“We’d like to be essentially wrapped up with doors open in two years.”

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