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The Eastern League has operated primarily in the Northeastern United States since 1923. It was known as the New York–Pennsylvania League from 1923 to 1937 and the Double-A Northeast in 2021. Over that 103-season span, its teams relocated, changed names, transferred to different leagues, or ceased operations altogether.
National Hockey League in Pennsylvania (2 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Professional ice hockey teams in Pennsylvania" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
Defunct ice hockey teams in Pennsylvania (8 C, 48 P) Professional ice hockey teams in Pennsylvania (1 C, 6 P) Ice hockey teams in Philadelphia (4 C, 2 P)
1970–1971 – Western Pennsylvania High School Hockey League forms in April at the Alpine Ice Chalet. Teams include Shaler, Churchill, Mt Lebanon, Penn Hills, Upper St Clair, and West Mifflin North 1971–1972 – Western Pennsylvania High School Hockey League completes first season of play at the Alpine Ice Chalet as Churchill, Mt Lebanon ...
Team Sport League Venue Lehigh Valley IronPigs: Baseball: International League: Coca-Cola Park: Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders: Baseball International League PNC Field: Altoona Curve: Baseball Eastern League: Peoples Natural Gas Field: Erie SeaWolves: Baseball Eastern League UPMC Park: Harrisburg Senators: Baseball Eastern League FNB Field ...
Eastern Hockey League (1934–1935, 1954–1973, 1978–1981) Eastern Junior Hockey League (1993–2013) – some teams split from the league to form the United States Premier Hockey League and the remaining teams joined the Eastern Hockey League; Eastern Junior B Hockey League (1951–1972) Eastern Ontario Senior Hockey League (2003–2008)
ECAC Hockey was founded in 1961 as a loose association of college hockey teams in the Northeast. [2] Cornell won the first NCAA championship for ECAC Hockey in 1967 in 4-1 victory over fellow ECAC Hockey team Boston University.
The league was renamed as the Eastern League in 1938 when the Scranton Miners of Scranton, Pennsylvania, moved to Hartford, Connecticut, and became the Hartford Bees. The league has had teams in a total of 52 different cities, located in 12 different states and two Canadian provinces. The league consisted of six to eight teams from 1923 until 1993.