Ontario Rugby Football Union For many years, Hamilton had an unstable presence in the
ORFU, with various teams folding and being renamed. The more established
IRFU team, the
Hamilton Tigers, faced similar struggles, and
World War II proved disruptive to both leagues' operations. In 1940, as part of a wave of hastily assembled teams brought together to fill the void of the ORFU teams that had suspended operations, the ORFU returned to Hamilton with a team informally named after the
Hamilton Alerts, a short-lived and long-dormant team notable for winning the
1912 Grey Cup. In 1941, the Tigers suspended operations due to the war, and the IRFU as a whole would do so from 1942 and 1944, leaving many talented players to join teams in the ORFU as well as a void in Hamilton football. Hamilton's ORFU franchise requested to use the Tigers name and colours but were rebuffed, opting to take on the name
Hamilton Wildcats and use colours of red and white. In the 1943 and 1944 seasons, the team is officially recognized as the Hamilton Flying Wildcats due to the RCAF personnel playing on the team.
Interprovincial Rugby Football Union and merger Due to monetary disputes that the Hamilton Tigers were having with the IRFU, the Tigers transferred to the ORFU, with the Wildcats switching to the IRFU on April 9, 1948. The switch proved to be difficult for the team, who went from first in the ORFU to dead last in the IRFU, with only one win in their two seasons in that league. Both teams were struggling to compete for fan support and the financial repercussions started to mount. As a result, local prominent citizens including Mr.
Ralph W. Cooper, Mr. F.M. Gibson, Mr. C.C. Lawson and Mr. Sam Manson decided that the two clubs should amalgamate and operate as one entity. As such, the
Hamilton Tiger-Cats football club began play in 1950 in the IRFU as the singular representative of the city of Hamilton. ==Canadian Football Hall of Famers==