1935-36 MJHL Season

This is the 1935-36 Manitoba Junior Hockey League Season.

Forword The MJHL was run and controlled by the Manitoba Amateur Hockey Association. Realistically, the League was actually two leagues under one umbrella. =MAHA Notes= Convener of Junior Hockey: Vic Johnson Selkirk Fishermen withdrew.

Transcona Panthers & Woodhaven Leafs added to "B" Division. Transcona withdrew before the start of the season. =Charlie Gardiner Memorial Series= The Charlie Gardiner Memorial Series was a preseason series of games involving the Winnipeg based teams. The winner received the Charlie Gardiner Memorial Trophy. The trophy was the idea of the University of Manitoba Student's Union, who started a fund to establish. Charlie Gardiner, born in Scotland but raised in Winnipeg, was considered the greatest goalie of his era. In 1934 after leading the Chicago Black Hawks to their first Stanley Cup, Gardiner died of a brain hemorrhage at the age of only 29. The Winnipeg Monarchs were the 1935 winners. see Charlie Gardiner Championship ="A" Division=

Schedule
40 games, 16 per team. Each team plays other divisional teams 4 X. No inter locking games.

Playoffs

 * Division Final
 * Portage defeated Falcons 2-games-to-none

see "A" Division Games

="B" Division=

Schedule
30 games, 12 per team. Each team plays other divisional teams 3 X. No inter locking games.

Division B Notes
After the shocking death of Winnipeg Rangers player Jack Brown in February, The Division honored him by giving the Division Champions the Jack Brown Memorial Trophy.

Playoffs

 * Tie Breaker
 * Elmwood defeated St. Boniface 4-1
 * Division Final (Jack Brown Memorial Trophy)
 * Elmwood defeated Rangers 2-games-to-none

see "B" Division Games

=All-Star Game= see 1936 MJHL All-Star Game

=League Final= =Manitoba Championship= =Memorial Cup Playoffs=
 * Western Memorial Cup Semi-Final
 * Elmwood defeated Fort William Kams (TBJHL) 2-games-to-none
 * Western Memorial Cup Final (Abbott Cup)
 * Elmwood lost to Saskatoon Wesleys (SAHA) 2-games-to-none
 * see 1935-36 Western Canada Memorial Cup Playoffs

=Team Photos=