Editor’s note: I have 5 articles by George Grimm to fill in when it gets very quiet. We are lucky George is willing to share his work with us, as he has done in the past, and it’s always a treat. This is his first article. Enjoy!
To many fans, a trip to Madison Square Garden isn’t complete without a stop at Cosby’s, the iconic sporting goods store. Cosby’s has long been considered the mecca, the place to buy Ranger jerseys, memorabilia and hockey equipment. But what about the man behind the brand? How did the name Gerry Cosby become synonymous with sporting goods?
Finton Gerard David Cosby was born in 1909 in Roxbury, Massachusetts and as a young man worked as an office boy and switchboard operator at the Boston Arena, the home of the Boston Tigers of the Canadian-American Hockey League. One day in 1928, Eddie Powers the manager of the Tigers, fired their netminder because his drinking had made him too unreliable and asked Gerry, who was 19 at the time, to be their practice goaltender. Keep in mind that Gerry had never played hockey, let alone goal in his life, but he went down to the Tigers’ dressing room and gamely donned the pads and oversized skates, willing to give it a shot.
On the ice, however, Gerry’s eagerness couldn’t hide his inexperience and he expected the Tigers to bring in another goalie for their next practice. But Powers asked him to come back the next day and try it again and he played a little better. His play continued to improve each day and in time Gerry had a steady job as the Tigers’ practice netminder.
The Boston Bruins also practiced in the Arena and Gerry caught the eye of Art Ross their GM and Coach and he was soon seeing double–duty as the practice netminder for both teams. Remember, this was back in the days when teams usually carried only one netminder, so having a reliable practice goaltender was a necessity. And although Gerry was not getting paid for any of these practice sessions, he was gaining valuable experience and being mentored by Bruins netminder Tiny Thompson, a future Hall of Famer.
In 1932 Gerry toured Europe with a group of American hockey players that was organized by Bruins’ president Walter Brown. A year later the United States entered a team in the World Championships in Prague, Czechoslovakia with Gerry as their goaltender. Amazingly, after playing the position for only five years, he posted four consecutive shutouts against Switzerland, Poland, Czechoslovakia and Austria and then beat a heavily favored Canadian team 2-1 in overtime for the championship. It marked the first time that a Canadian team had been defeated in the World Championship games.
Gerry then moved to New York to take a job as a runner on Wall Street, but he didn’t want to give up on his hockey career. So he called Rangers’ General Manager and Coach Lester Patrick and asked him if he could skate with the team and wound up becoming their practice goaltender.
Cosby then went to England to play for the Wembley Lions in the English Hockey League where he was voted the MVP of the league and also managed to attend Business College in his spare time. A year later he was invited to play on the United States Olympic team but declined because he had just gotten a new job with Stewart Iglehart’s construction business.
During the late 1930’s and early 40’s Gerry was a very busy guy, seeing duty as the backup netminder for the New York Rovers, the Rangers Eastern League affiliate, as well as serving as the practice goaltender for both the Rangers and the New York Americans. Then during World War II when many players from all levels of hockey were overseas, Cosby was often called upon to tend goal for the Boston Olympics as well as the Rovers in the same week.
Gerry’s involvement in the sporting goods business began while he was with the Rovers, when GM and Coach Tom Lockhart asked him to order some sticks. He was able to find a company called Lovell Manufacturing, in Erie, Pa. that made hockey sticks, mouse traps and washing machine parts and ordered six dozen at a good price. The sticks were delivered, Lockhart and the players liked them and soon Gerry was placing orders for gloves and pads and the rest as they say is history.
Cosby started getting orders from other teams in the Eastern Hockey League as well as the Rangers and the Americans. When he ran out of space in a store he had opened adjacent to his York Avenue apartment, he moved to a larger place at 12 West 48th Street, near Rockefeller Center.
Gerry briefly entered into a partnership with three other athletic suppliers but after a stint in the army as a pilot trainer, he once again assumed total control of the business. By this time Cosby’s was a respected supplier of equipment and uniforms for all sports to the pros, colleges and high schools as well as the general public and a larger store was needed.
A chance encounter with William Jennings at Gerry’s son Michael’s football game led to him asking the Rangers President about a vacant store adjacent to the old Madison Square Garden on the corner of Eighth Avenue and 50th Street. When Jennings told him it was available Gerry drove down from Massachusetts the following Monday morning to sign the lease for the store which opened in 1959.
Gerry often said that the 50th Street store was his favorite. Being so close to the Garden was good for business and good for the Rangers who were frequent visitors, especially when a new batch of sticks came in. “They didn’t have room upstairs in the Garden to keep the sticks”, Michael Cosby recalled, “so when the Northland sticks came in the players would come in and we had a big rack in the back and they would go pick out the ones they liked.” Former Ranger Dick Duff also recalled the store fondly; “The guys were always good to us in the Cosby’s store down in the old Madison Square Garden. It was a nice store, nice family and they loved hockey”.
And then in 1968 when the Rangers and Knicks moved into the New Garden on 33rd street and Seventh Avenue, Cosby’s moved along with them, first to a street level location outside Penn Station then into a space in the Garden’s Esplanade. Today they are located at 11 Penn Plaza about half a block from the Garden. There is also a store and warehouse in Sheffield, Massachusetts, where most of the merchandise is designed, manufactured and distributed.
I have a lot of fond personal memories of Cosby’s. The old Garden location reminded me of a men’s clothing store except with jerseys and team jackets instead of suits and sports jackets and skates instead of shoes. In a way, Cosby’s gave us a playground for our childhood dreams because with all of the hockey equipment lined up along the wall it was very easy to imagine yourself pulling on a jersey and skating on the Garden’s ice next door. I used to go in and look around and after a while Gerry came to recognize me and waved hello. I even applied for a job there when I was in my early teens. I was probably too young to work at the time but Gerry’s son Michael took me in the office and interviewed me. I didn’t get the job, but it was an experience I’ll never forget.
One Saturday I was in the store by the old Garden and saw Jim Neilson, trying on a pair of sneakers. I recognized “The Chief” right away and gathered up all the courage a 13-year old could muster and asked him for his autograph. He was very nice and signed my scrap of paper. I told him it was nice to meet him and he said thanks. My friend Tom, who was usually the more bold and boisterous of the two of us, was awestruck and managed to say, “me too”.
A few years later I was in the street level store by the new Garden and saw Muzz Patrick talking to another gentleman. I went over and shook Muzz’s hand and he introduced me to Johnny Wilson another former Ranger. They both signed a card for me and Muzz seemed especially happy to be recognized.
And then one afternoon I was in the store in the Garden’s Esplanade and heard a familiar voice. I turned around and it was Downtown Julie Brown from MTV fame. You never knew who you were going to meet when you went to Cosby’s.
During the late 1980’s – early 90’s when I was publishing SportStat… The Rangers Report, I asked Michael to buy a yearly advertisement that I placed over the Rangers schedule on the back page. To me, having that Cosby’s logo associated with my newsletter gave it instant credibility and it looked pretty good too. I would have ran that ad for nothing.
Gerry was an innovator. He redesigned hockey jerseys to allow equipment to be worn comfortably underneath. He also added padding to hockey gloves and designed adjustable size and suspension features for helmets. He added Velcro straps to hockey pads and worked with stick manufacturer to create laminated stick shafts and fiberglass wrapped blades.
Sadly, Gerry Cosby passed away in 1996. He was inducted posthumously into the International Hockey Federation Hall of Fame in April of 1997 for his outstanding goaltending in International play.
Gerry Cosby’s legacy is one of quality, service and integrity and it is being carried on proudly by his son Michael and his grandchildren Christy and Matthew. Now in their eighth decade, Cosby’s has provided quality equipment and service as well as memories to countless generations of fans with many more to come.
George Grimm is the former publisher of Sportstat… The Ranger Report and columnist for the Blueshirt Bulletin. He currently writes the Retro Rangers column for Insidehockey.com. His book “We Did Everything But Win” about the Emile Francis era Rangers was published in 2017 and he is currently working on a book about the history of Ranger goaltenders.
UPDATE: Click here to read Carp’s new article. Pretty impressive work!
267 responses to “Gerry Cosby, The Man Behind The Brand By George Grimm.”
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Deschamps managed that team through the tournament really well, good counterattacking game plans. I remember Mourinho being criticized years back for parking the bus and responding that, no, he was parking a jet plane. Dsechamps had exactly that with Mbappé–his speed was a nightmare for defenders in this WC. Throw in the defensive talent and vision of Varane, Umtiti and Kanté (as well as the latter two’s decisive goals against Uruguay and Belgium) and Deschamps played his cards almost perfectly. As to will and skill, of course you need both, and championship teams can succeed with an overabundance of either. In this particular final, talent won out, but it could easily have gone the other way. Croatia’s never-say-die attitude was impressive. Talent alone won’t get it done, nor will mere will. And it depends on the sport–will doesn’t get you much in baseball, for instance.
If ‘hustle’ is a part of ‘will,’ it works too in baseball.
Hustle doesn’t hurt, but won’t get you in the league. Even the lunchpail guys have freakish reflexes. And the last thing managers want to see in this home-run age is their best sluggers sprinting hard to first base and risking a pulled muscle. 95 MPH pitches and home-run swings with two strikes. Nearly unwatchable these days.
Agree, all except nonsense about managers worrying about players sprinting.
Two years ago today the New York Rangers traded Derick Brassard and a seventh round pick to the Ottawa Senators for Mika Zibanejad and a second round draft pick. Since the trade, Zibanejad has posted a stat line of 41-43-84 in 128 games. Brassard 35-50-85 in 153 games
Like NHL defensemen, these baseball kids grow up to know little or nothing of the basics. And everyone lets them get away with it, from fathers to LL coaches, to Major League Managers and GMS, Pathetic,
Not players sprinting, coos, sluggers sprinting, and of course pitchers sprinting.
Pitchers are treated with kid gloves. Blatantly lazy slackard Sluggers coming up will be ragged on by their teammates and sat by their managers. That’s still the drill.
Lazy sluggers as they age get a rep that follows them into retirehood.
Lazy sluggers who do their primary jobs well retire into the Hall of Fame. As a front-line hitter, you’d be an idiot to sprint to first on easy ground balls in the hopes of beating the one error in hundreds of chances. The injury tradeoff doesn’t make sense. Cano (leaving out his latest exploit) has always been chastised for that part of his game, but has been more durable as a result and got his teams what they needed most, his at-bats.
Carp has a new article up.
“Why Lindy Ruff’s return makes sense”
The dog days of summer deserve a good article on ‘ruff’.
I learned most of my history of the 20th century from Tom Lehrer
We need a ruff article on the dog days of summer? Drop the puck already I’m groin’ a beard!
Kids aren’t the probelm! You know who doesn’t know anything about history or much else for that matter!
Those who are doomed to repeat it, what Chamberlain gave up at Munich, when standing strong would have kept a bluffing Hitler in check (or actually out of Czech) is a lesson some people have not learned, possibly because they are totally unaware that it occurred.
Or if France was willing to fight early on, war would have been over right quick
France had mobilized in ’38, they were ready, if not eager. After Chamberlain created ‘Peace in our time’, they demobed. JP Sartre was part of that mobilization and describes it (fictionalized) in his trilogy, Les Chemins de la Liberte, the French soldats were fatalistic about it, they were ready to fight even if the generals were going to fight the last war, the Germans were not ready (believe me, the vaunted German Panzer force was a quasi-joke in ’38 as a matter of fact, rebranded Czech tanks, better than the Pz 1’s and 2’s, made up a significant proportion of their armor in the campaigns of ’39 and ’40). Hitler would have had to back down, Chamberlain blinked. Sure, it’s fashionable to blame the French but fashion is not history.
Aneirin is 100% correct re the brits, specifically Chamberlain, blinked and created the “lull”.
The french char tank was definitely superior the early panzers as well.
They didn’t have Varane back then.
Varane would have done better than the Maginot line!
Quickie got married!! Lets hope he doesnt fall fowl of the “Brendan Smith curse”!
I spy a Hank and Auntie in one of the pics (plus a guy who looks a bit like EK, but not sure)
https://www.instagram.com/explore/tags/lindbergfastwedding/
The “Quickie Support Team” stag do (thats Bachelor party for you guys!) t-shirts look good, did AV have them made for him?
Hope AV didn’t gum up his wedding!
Mika and Zuke were there too…
Zika: “I only wear a tie when a top six forward gets married “
AV-“So put-on a tie!” 🙂
Zika was probably the DJ!
I thought it was EK as well, could be wrong.
Best player in baseball young and not vocal enough, says commish
https://deadspin.com/angels-defend-mike-trout-after-mlb-commissioner-rob-man-1827702340
Where’d they get married, on top of a lava flow?
Brendan Smith: “My time has come”
Who’s the nasty blondie falling out of her dress?
Wedding night, wife says to Jesper: “Now I know why they call you Quickie.”
Any North American born Rangers good enough to come to the wedding?
#teamrift
#splitroom
So AV calling him Quickie has really stuck. I’m guessing that is on the Mediterranean somewhere. Italy or maybe Greece. Lots of cruise ships in the background of one of the shots. No honeymoon. Everyone back to the gym.
SN – a Russian bot trying sow divisiveness in Rangertown.
Rangers re-sign Billy Joel.
They wanted to invite smith but were worried he’d eat all the cake 😉
Would someone refresh my oft concussed brain, what happened with the smith and leitteri dust up again?
Wicky
The rumor is that Smith actually baked the cake!
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