
New Brunswick group hopes to foster pride in basketball’s Canadian roots
ST. STEPHEN — The rise in patriotism prompted by a hostile U.S. president is renewing focus on everything Canada has given the world, and a small New Brunswick mill town wants people to know the sport of basketball belongs on that list.
A brick building nestled between an empty lot and a sports bar in St. Stephen, N.B., is claimed to house the world’s oldest surviving basketball court, with records of a game being played there on Oct. 17, 1893.
For years, locals have been trying to get the site properly recognized and converted into a museum, and now there is hope that the surge in Canadian pride will make the dream a reality. It is time, they say, for Canadians to have a new shrine to the sport invented by Canadian-born James Naismith while he was an instructor at the YMCA Training School in Springfield, Mass.
“A Canadian invented the game, and the world’s oldest court where the game was first played in Canada is sitting in St. Stephen, N.B.,” said Tom Liston, a transplanted New Brunswicker who works as a tech investor in Toronto. “I think people are starting to think about that fact more and more.”