Pacific Coast Junior Hockey League

The Pacific Coast Junior Hockey League was a Canadian Junior "A" ice hockey league operating in British Columbia in the 1960s and 1970s.

History
The Pacific Coast Junior Hockey League first operated from 1962 until 1967 as Junior "A" hockey league. Their champion each of those 5 seasons was the New Westminster Royals, who then proceeded to the Mowat Cup to play against the champions of the Okanagan Junior Hockey League and the Kootenay Junior Hockey League for the right to move on into the Memorial Cup playoffs. The league folded in 1967 and New Westminster and the Victoria Cougars jumped to the British Columbia Junior Hockey League.

In 1974, the league was restarted as a Tier II Junior "A" by Fred Page. Fred Page was a Canadian Amateur Hockey Association executive, who later had the Fred Page Cup and the BCHL's Championship Trophy named after him. The league continued to run until 1979, when Fred Page agreed to allow a merger between the BCJHL and the PCJHL. The league's top team at that time was the Richmond Sockeyes.

PCJHL 1962-67

 * 1963 New Westminster Royals
 * 1964 New Westminster Royals
 * 1965 New Westminster Royals
 * 1966 New Westminster Royals
 * 1967 New Westminster Royals

PCJHL 1974-79

 * 1975 Coquitlam Comets
 * 1976 Nor Wes Caps
 * 1977 Richmond Sockeyes
 * 1978 Richmond Sockeyes
 * 1979 Richmond Sockeyes

Seasons

 * 1974-75 PJHL Season
 * 1975-76 PJHL Season
 * 1976-77 PJHL Season
 * 1977-78 PJHL Season
 * 1978-79 PJHL Season