Quilty was the founding president of the
Ottawa District Hockey Association (ODHA) in 1920, which soon affiliated with the national governing body, the
Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA). Quilty succeeded
Toby Sexsmith as president of the CAHA at the annual meeting in Toronto, on March 29, 1924. Quilty was immediately faced with branches of the CAHA resigning due to disagreements on rules of play, and set up a committee to look into uniform rules of play across Canada, in cooperation with the three existing professional leagues. In February 1925, he confirmed that the
1925 Allan Cup remained scheduled for Winnipeg, despite the
1925 Stanley Cup Finals being played in Western Canada. Quilty also confirmed that districts were voting on whether to make the Allan Cup final a best two-out-of-three series, or remain two-game total-goals series. Quilty announced Allan Cup and Abbott Cup schedules as a two-game series for 1925, but later switched the Allan Cup playoffs to a best-of-three series due to public demand. In March 1925, Quilty ordered an intermediate one-game playoff between
Fort Frances and the Manitoba champion, but the Manitoba Association refused to play citing that no provision existed for inter-provincial intermediate playoffs. Quilty was unanimously reelected president of the CAHA on March 25, 1925, at the annual general meeting held in the
Fort Garry Hotel in Winnipeg. Also at the meeting, the CAHA agreed to award individual medals to team members of Allan Cup and
Memorial Cup champions. The Allan Cup, and the
J. Ross Robertson Cup series were changed to be a best-of-three series. The CAHA established the
T. B. Patton Cup as the championship for Western Canada senior teams. Quilty and the CAHA were lauded at a banquet for progress made in working out the differences between east and west in Canadian amateur hockey. The general meeting also saw the CAHA cancel its alliance with the
United States Amateur Hockey Association (USAHA) due to persistent disagreements, but Quilty still allowed CAHA teams to play against American colleges not affiliated with the USAHA. The CAHA also updated residency rules, where a player must be a resident of the place he wishes to play in by May 15, and that player registrations must be filed with CAHA within 15 days of registration with the branch. Proposed rule changes discussed included elimination of the
offside rule at centre ice,
substitution of players while game is in progress, allow kicking of the
hockey puck, reduce the size of
ice hockey goaltending equipment, and to allow only two defenders behind the
blue line. On March 18, 1926, Quilty declared a forfeit in the early rounds of the eastern Allan Cup playoffs in favour of the Ottawa Gunners from the
Ottawa City Hockey League, when St. Francis Xavier of Montreal refused to play a sudden death game necessitated by time constraints caused due to delays in the previous round. Quilty was succeeded as the CAHA president on March 27, 1926, by
Frank Sandercock from Calgary. Quilty was the honorary president of the CAHA from 1926 to 1928. He was also made an Allan Cup trustee after his term as CAHA president expired. In 1930, Quilty served on the executive of the
Amateur Athletic Union of Canada, and was the chairman of its committee for affiliations and alliances for all amateur sports in Canada. ==Personal life==