The Pirates, the third American-based NHL team, got off to a promising start in the
1925–26 season, making the playoffs in two of their first three seasons. However, the team soon fell on hard times both on the ice and at the box office. A sale to
bootlegger Bill Dwyer did not help the cause. With the
Wall Street crash of 1929 followed by the
Great Depression, the owners found themselves having to sell off their star players to make ends meet. By the end of the
1929–30 season, the team was $400,000 in debt, and their arena, the
Duquesne Garden, was not suitable for an NHL team. Boxing promoter
Benny Leonard, Dwyer's front man, then requested permission to temporarily move to Philadelphia as the Quakers (from the historical importance of the
Quaker religious community in the founding of Philadelphia and Pennsylvania) until a new arena was built in Pittsburgh. Things did not get better on the other side of Pennsylvania. The financial woes continued unabated. On the ice, the Quakers were the definition of futility. It took the team three games to score a goal and three more to get its first win, which came on November 25, 1930, a 2–1 win over the visiting
Toronto Maple Leafs. They finished with a horrendous 4–36–4 record. The .136 winning percentage was the lowest in NHL history, a record that would stand for 45 years until the
Washington Capitals finished with a .131 winning percentage in the
1974–75 season. The four wins tied the
1919–20 Quebec Bulldogs for the fewest wins in NHL history for a team that played a full season. They had the worst offense (76 goals for) and worst defense (184 goals against) in the league. At the end of the 1930–31 season, the Quakers, along with the
Ottawa Senators, announced that they would not field a team for the
1931–32 season, leaving Philadelphia without an NHL team until the arrival of the
Flyers in
1967. The Flyers would adopt the orange and black colors used by the Quakers, though ironically because they used the colors of the
Texas Longhorns as inspiration. . While the Senators came back for two years before moving to
St. Louis, the Quakers franchise never iced a team again. At each of the next five season-opening NHL governors meetings, they announced that they were suspending operations for that season. They officially canceled the franchise on May 7, 1936, when a new arena in Pittsburgh was no longer evident. Pittsburgh would not see a new arena until 1961, when the
Civic Arena was constructed. The NHL returned to Pittsburgh the same year it returned to Philadelphia with the arrival of the
Penguins. ==Season-by-season record==