John Howard Crocker Lecture

John Howard CrockerConsidered one of the founding fathers of the Canadian Olympic movement, John Howard Crocker initiated the renewal of professional physical education at Western University. For more than half a century, he also contributed to sport in Canada and abroad. To honour his memory, ICOS has dedicated an annual lecture in his name. Inaugurated in 1991, the John Howard Crocker Lecture has attracted renowned scholars from seven countries and three continents.

John Howard Crocker was born in 1870 in St. Stephen, New Brunswick. Upon graduating as an Arts student in 1897 from Dalhousie University in Halifax, he entered Dalhousie's School of Medicine. However, he discontinued his medical studies in 1899 in order to accept a Physical Director position at Toronto’s Central YMCA. After working in various YMCAs across Canada, Crocker was appointed National Director of the organization. During his long and storied affiliation with the Canadian YMCA, Crocker introduced the sport of basketball to Canada – originally at the YMCA in Amherst, Nova Scotia in 1894. In 1911, Crocker accepted a YMCA position in Shanghai, later becoming Chinia’s National Physical Director. While serving in China, Crocker was appointed manager of the 1915 Chinese team which participated in the third Far Eastern Athletic Games.

In the midst of his career with the YMCA, Crocker was appointed by the 1908 Central Olympic Committee of Canada to manage the first-ever Canadian Olympic Team, and from 1912 to 1956, he was named honorary manager of Canada’s Olympic teams. From 1922 until 1947 he was secretary of the Canadian Olympic Committee and lived to see the COA become an organization independent from the Amateur Athletic Union.

In 1930, Crocker joined Western University as Director of Physical Education. Sixteen years later, at the age of 76, Crocker was instrumental in developing a curriculum at Western for preparing future physical education teachers. Since that time, thousands of physical education graduates from Western have taken their places as teachers and coaches in the public schools of Ontario and Canada.

In 1949 Crocker retired from active service at Western but not before he had witnessed the completion of his last great physical education project – the construction of Thames Hall. One year later, in 1950, the Western conferred its highest honour on Crocker, a Doctor of Law, Honoris Causa.

Past John Howard Crocker Lectures

2014: Ian Ritchie & Rob Beamish 2001: John Bale, England
2012: Brian Wilson, Canada 2000: Douglas Booth, Australia
2011: John MacAloon, USA 1999: Roberta Park, USA
2010: Bruce Kidd, Canada 1998: Karel Wendl, Czech Republic
2009: Robert Barney, Canada 1997: Fekrou Kidane, Switzerland
2008: Deane Neubauer, USA 1996: Fernand Landry, Canada
2007: David Zang, USA 1995: Cladimir Platonov, Ukraine
2006: Stephen Wenn, Canada 1994: Richard Pound, Canada
2005: Mark Dyreson, USA 1993: Carol Letheren, Canada
2004: Jim McKay, Australia 1992: John Lucas/James Worrall, Canada/USA
2003: David Leighton, Canada 1991: John MacAloon, USA
2002: Ronald Renson, Belgium 1990: Bruce Kidd, Canada