Dartmouth Ski Team
The Dartmouth College Ski Team was once organized under the aegis of the Dartmouth Outing Club and is now operating under Dartmouth Athletics. This team is notable for both providing students access to competitive skiing and training internationally successful nordic and alpine ski racers.[1] The Dartmouth Outing Club hosted the US's first downhill ski race on Mt Moosilauke in 1927, and Dartmouth skiing has been intertwined with ski racing ever since.[2][3]
The alpine teams train at the Dartmouth Skiway in Lyme, New Hampshire. The nordic teams train at The Dartmouth Cross Country Ski Center at Oak Hill, Hanover NH.[4] Cami Thompson is the Director of Skiing at Dartmouth and has been a Dartmouth coach since 1989;[5] she was a US Ski Team member from 1985-1987,[6] and is a member of the US Ski & Snowboard Board of Directors.[7]
History
Dartmouth College student Fred Harris (1888-1961) founded the Dartmouth Outing Club in 1909, and so became "the man who put America on skis"[8] The Nashua (NH) Telegraph notes that in 1914, a group of Dartmouth students travelled to Canada to compete against McGill University in the first collegiate ski race.[9] The Dartmouth Outing Club's 1927 race on Mt Moosilauke is cited by the US Ski & Snowboard Association as the first downhill ski race in the country.[10] By 1935 the ski team was sufficiently distinct from the Outing Club to have its own distinct captain; the first ″ski team″ captain was Selden Hannah D35, though there were ″winter sports″ captains before that.[11] The Dartmouth Ski Team won the NCAA national championship in 1958, 1976 (tied with Colorado), and 2007. The team finished in second place in 1955, 1956, 1964, 1969, and 1970.[12] The team has finished in the top 5 of the NCAA Skiing Championship 43 times.[13]
Captains
The list of captains of the ski teams can be found here.[14]
Year | Men's Alpine | Men's Nordic | Women's Nordic | Women's Alpine | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | Drew Duffy D21 | Leah Brams D20, Lauren Jortberg D20 | Claire Thomas D21 | ||
2019 | James Ferri D19 | Gavin McEwen D19, Koby Gordon D19 | Emily Hyde D19 | Alexa Dlouhy D19 | |
2018 | Thomas Woolson D17 | Luke Brown D18 | Zoe Snow D18 | Foreste Peterson D18 | |
2017 | Thomas Woolson D17 | Fabian Stocek D17 | Cara Piske D18, Zoe Snow D18 | Nicole Anderson D17 | |
2016 | Sam Macomber D16 | Oscar Friedman D16 | Mary O'Connell D16, Corey Stock D16 | Anne Strong D16 | |
2015 | Ben Morse D14, Hunter Black D15 | Austin Caldwell D15, Silas Talbot D15 | Julia Harrison D15 | Abby Fucigna D15 | |
2014 | Ben Morse D14, Mathieu Bertrand D14 | David Sinclair D14 | Annie Hart D14, Isabel Caldwell D14 | Abby Fucigna D15 |
Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games
Dartmouth skiers have represented the US (and other nations) in the winter Olympic and Paralympic Games.[15]
Location | Year | Dartmouth Athletes | Competitors with Class Year and Event | Medals |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chamonix | 1924 | 1 | John B. Carleton D22 (Nordic Combined)[16][17] | |
St Moritz | 1928 | 1 | Charles N. Proctor D28 (Special Jump)[18] | |
Lake Placid | 1932 | No skiers, however Jack Shea D34 (Speed Skating) | ||
Garmish | 1936 | 4 | A. Lincoln Washburn D35 (Alpine Slalom), Warren H. Chivers D38 (Nordic Combined),[19] Edgar H. Hunter Jr D38 (Alternate), Richard H. Durrance D39 (Alpine Combined)[20] | |
Cancelled | 1940 | 9 | Athletes named but did not compete due to World War II: Selden J. Hannah D35 (Nordic Combined),[21] David J. Bradley D38 (Nordic Combined), Stephen J. Bradley D39 (Nordic Combined), Warren H. Chivers D38 (Nordic Combined), Richard H. Durrance D39 (Alpine Combined), John P. Litchfield D39 (Nordic Jumping),[22] Edward P. Wells D39 (Alpine), Harold Q. Hillman D40 (Alpine) | |
Cancelled | 1944 | Athletes not named | ||
St Moritz | 1948 | 1 | Colin C. Stewart IV D48 (Alpine Slalom) | |
Oslo | 1952 | 4 | John H. Caldwell Jr D50 (Nordic Combined),[23] Brooks Dodge Jr D51 (Alpine Giant Slalom), William L. Beck D53 (Alpine Downhill), Chiharu Igaya D57 (Alpine) | |
Cortina | 1956 | 6 | Brooks Dodge Jr D51 (Alpine), Charles N. Tremblay D52 (Nordic Combined), William L. Beck D53 (Alpine Downhill), Thomas A. Corcoran D54 (Alpine),[24] Chiharu Igaya D57 (Alpine),[25] Ralph E. Miller Jr D55 (Alpine) | |
Squaw Valley | 1960 | 3 | Thomas A. Corcoran D54 (Alpine), Chiharu Igaya D57 (Alpine), Richard W. Taylor D59 (XC) | |
Innsbruck | 1964 | 2 | Richard W. Taylor D59 (XC), James W. Page D63 (Nordic Combined) | |
Grenoble | 1968 | 2 | Edward G. Williams D64 (Biathlon), Edward F. Gillette D67 (XC) | |
Sapporo | 1972 | 5 | Scott W. Berry D71 (Jumping), Walker T. Weed III D71 (Nordic Combined), David H. Currier D74 (Alpine), Thomas A. Reaper D74 (XC Jumping), Timothy J. Caldwell D76 (XC) | |
Innsbruck | 1976 | 5 | David H. Currier D74 (Alpine), Donald M. Nielsen D74 (XC), Douglas J. Peterson D75 (XC), Timothy J. Caldwell D76 (XC) | |
Lake Placid | 1980 | 4 | Donald M. Nielsen D74 (XC), Douglas J. Peterson D75 (XC), Timothy J. Caldwell D76 (XC), Walter A. Malmquist II D78 (XC) | |
Sarajevo | 1984 | 7 | Donald M. Nielsen D74 (XC), Timothy J. Caldwell D76 (XC), William K. Carow D80 (Biathlon), Landis A. Arnold D82 (Jumping), Glen R. Eberle D85 (Biathlon), Dennis McGrane D84 (Jumping), Gale H. Shaw III D85 (Alpine) | |
Calgary | 1988 | 7 | William K. Carow D80 (Biathlon), Dennis McGrane D84 (Jumping), Gale H. Shaw III D85 (Alpine), Leslie Thompson D86 (XC), William H. Hudson D88 (Alpine), Martha Hill D82 (Alpine), Diana Golden D84 (Alpine) | |
Albertville | 1992 | 9
World CupThe highest level of competitive ski racing takes place on the Alpine and Nordic World Cup circuits. Moosilauke Time TrialTwo times each year, the alpine and nordic ski teams complete a time trial, starting at the Moosilauke Ravine Lodge and ending at the summit of Mt Moosilauke.[26] The course follows the Gorge Brook Trail, and ascends 2387 feet (to 4802 feet ASL) across 3.6 miles.[27][28] The course record of 36:16 was set in 2010 by Kris Freeman.[29] Dartmouth Ski Team alumni notable for accomplishments other than Olympic Skiing
See alsoDartmouth Outing Club alumni not associated with the ski team have made notable contributions to mountaineering. For example, in 1963, Barry Bishop D53, Barry Corbet[61] D58, Jake Breitenbach [62] D57, Barry Prather D61,[63] and Dave Dingman D58[64] all joined the first US expedition to Mt Everest.[65][66] Margaret Wheeler D97[67] was president of the American Mountain Guides Association.[68][69] References
Further reading
External links
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