Herb Carnegie was a fixture at a monthly NHL old-timers luncheon in Toronto even though ne never played a minute in the League.
"We all had a chance to join in and Herbie had the same chance as the rest of us to be part of it," said Pete Conacher, an NHL forward from 1951-58. "What happened to Herbie, like in hockey, didn't necessarily happen at the old-timers luncheon, that's for sure."
Carnegie was an electric, high-scoring center from the 1930s into the 1950s who dreamed of playing in the NHL but was held back because of race.
Carnegie, regarded by many as the best Black player to never reach the NHL, will finally take his place among many of the League's greats Monday when he is posthumously inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in the Builders category.
"When Jackie Robinson was breaking racial barriers in baseball, that was not happening in our sport," Hockey Hall of Fame selection committee chairman Mike Gartner told TSN in June after announcing Carnegie's election. "When you have someone like Herb Carnegie, who because of the color of his skin was really not allowed to play in our league because of just the way it was at that time, that's a problem. We're looking at it and we're looking at the type of legacy that he has left."























