Kenny Wharram was with the Chicago Blackhawks for his entire NHL career, which lasted 14 seasons and 766 Games. Early, he would assist Chicago win the 1961 Stanley Cup, but realistically he blossomed a little later in his career, and his first really good season in the NHL took place when he was 30, where he would be a Second Team All Star, A Lady Byng Trophy winner, and lead the league in Power Play Goals and Shooting Percentage. He was sixth in Points that year with a career high 71 Points. Wharram would have two more 60 Point seasons, finishing fourth and ninth respectively, the first of which was his second Second Team All-Star campaign.
Paul Thompson would win a Stanley Cup with the New York Rangers in 1928, but after he was traded to Chicago before the 1931-32 Season, he would go on the best run of his playing career.
Brent Seabrook played all 1,114 of his NHL Games with the Chicago Blackhawks, where he provided leadership, solid defense, and offensive rushes when needed. Seabrook was an Alternate Captain, but it was not that long ago that he was part of a youth movement that would bring the Blackhawks their first Stanley Cup in decades with their win in 2010. That year was pretty special for the Defenseman, as he would help Canada win the Olympic Gold Medal.
Bob Murray is one of the few players who played all of his 1,000-plus Games in the National Hockey League with one team, which, obviously, for this list, was the Chicago Blackhawks. The Defenceman would be named to two All-Star Games, where he would average roughly a half-point per game as an NHL Player.