The Montreal Amateur Athletic Association came into existence June 1881 and began as a confederation of three sporting clubs: The
Montreal Snow Shoe Club, The
Montreal Bicycle Club, and The
Montreal Lacrosse Club. These founding clubs shared the club space of the Montreal Gymnasium, located at Mansfield Street and
de Maisonneuve Boulevard. In the 1880s, the MAAA organized the famous annual Montreal Winter Carnival. The Winter Carnival featured a temporary "ice castle" or "ice fort", which would be "stormed" in a mock attack, as well as several events, such as snowshoe races, toboggan slides, skating carnivals and ice hockey tournaments. The Sir
Vincent Meredith Trophy was awarded to the best all-round athlete in the MAAA. The current clubhouse was opened in 1905, on
Peel Street in downtown Montreal, in the current commercial district. Due to problems with an aging population, the club switched from being solely member-financed during the revival of 1999. The high taxes on the clubhouse property in central Montreal exacerbated their problems.
W. R. Granger served two years as the president Montreal AAA from 1918 to 1920, and hosted
The Prince of Wales at the clubhouse on a royal visit in November 1919. By the end of
World War I, Granger had overseen the revival of the association's ice hockey, baseball and soccer teams; and hoped to restart the lacrosse team, establish a trapshooting club, and erect a memorial for members who died serving in the war. ==Historic teams==