National Ski Hall of Fame | |
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General information | |
Coordinates | 46°30′11″N87°39′56″W / 46.503°N 87.6655°W |
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The U.S. Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame and Museum is located in Ishpeming, Michigan, the birthplace of organized skiing in the United States. Located in the state's Upper Peninsula, the building includes the hall of fame and museum, as well as a theater, library, gift shop, offices, and ample storage space for archive material and collections. The current building opened in 1992.
The National Ski Association, now known as U.S. Ski & Snowboard, was formed in Ishpeming in 1905, 118 years ago. [1] It was formed during a meeting of ski clubs from Ishpeming, Minneapolis, Red Wing, Minnesota, and Eau Claire, Wisconsin. [1] Ishpeming Ski Club founder Carl Tellefsen (1854−1908) was its first president, [2] [3] and for his contribution, he was among the first four to be accorded honored membership in the hall of fame in early 1957. [4] [5] [6]
The Roland Palmedo Memorial Library, one of the largest research ski libraries in the United States, is housed here. [7] Roland Palmedo (1895−1977) was a ski-sport builder and contributor for more than 50 years. [8] He helped to organize the National Ski Patrol, [9] the teacher certification program, and various early ski teams and clubs. Palmedo also founded Mad River Glen ski area, edited two skiing books, and developed one of the most extensive ski libraries in America. Following his death, his family donated his library to the National Ski Hall of Fame and Museum where it has become the nucleus for the Roland Palmedo Memorial Library.
Name | Inducted |
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Charles "Minnie" Dole | 1958 |
Roger Langley | 1958 |
Andrea Mead Lawrence | 1958 |
Dave McCoy | 1967 |
Jill Boothe | 1967 |
Sel Hannah | 1968 |
Nancy Greene | 1969 |
Herman Smith-Johannsen | 1969 [10] |
Dick Buek | 1974 |
Tom Corcoran | 1978 |
Joan Hannah | 1978 |
Warren Miller | 1978 |
Howard Head | 1979 |
Bob Beattie | 1984 [11] |
David Bradley | 1985 |
Ernie Blake | 1987 [12] |
Tony Wise | 1988 |
Bob Lange | 2000 |
H.William Kirschner | 2001 |
Tommy Moe | 2003 |
Picabo Street | 2004 |
Jonny Moseley | 2006 |
Everett Kircher | 2007 |
Cary Adgate | 2008 |
Glen Plake | 2010 |
Shane McConkey | 2010 |
Stein Eriksen | 2010 |
Daron Rahlves | 2010 |
Scot Schmidt | 2014 |
Bode Miller | 2018 |
Ishpeming is a city in Marquette County in the Upper Peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 6,140 at the 2020 census, less than it was in the 1950s and 1960s when the iron ore mines employed more workers. A statue of a Native American figure, erected in 1884 in the small town square, is referred to as "Old Ish".
Marquette Mountain Resort is a small mountain and ski resort in Marquette, Michigan, the major city in the state's Upper Peninsula. The resort offers winter sports seasonally as well as mountain biking, volleyball, and hiking in the spring, summer, and fall.
St. Mary's Preparatory is a co-educational, Catholic, college preparatory high school with a Polish-American heritage in the Detroit suburb of Orchard Lake Village, Michigan. Its mission and message is "God, Family and St. Mary's."
Wallace Jerold "Buddy" Werner was an American alpine ski racer in the 1950s and early 1960s.
Roger Langley was the 1936 – 1948 president of the National Ski Association of America and a driving force behind the founding of the National Ski Patrol.
The U.S. Ski Team, operating under the auspices of U.S. Ski & Snowboard, develops and supports men's and women's athletes in the sports of alpine skiing, freestyle skiing, cross-country, ski jumping, and Nordic combined. Since 1974 the team and association have been headquartered in Park City, Utah.
Karl Frithjof Hovelsen was a Norwegian Nordic skier. Howelsen Hill Ski Area in Steamboat Springs, Colorado was named in his honor.
Mikkjel Hemmestveit, was a Norwegian-American Nordic skier who shared the Holmenkollen medal with his brother, Torjus Hemmestveit in 1928.
Anders Olsen Haugen was a Norwegian-American ski jumper who won four national ski jumping championships. He competed in the 1924 Winter Olympics in Chamonix and the 1928 Winter Olympics in St. Moritz. Anders Haugen was the first and, as of 2022, only American to win an Olympic medal for ski jumping.
U.S. Ski & Snowboard, formerly known as the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association, is the national governing body for Olympic skiing and snowboarding. Founded in 1905, the organization provides leadership and direction for skiers and snowboarders from over 400 member clubs. The association is headquartered in Park City, Utah.
Sverre S. Engen was a Norwegian-American skier, ski coach, ski area manager, and film-maker.
Norway Ski Club is a ski club consisting of members mainly from the New York metropolitan area. The club owns land and a building in the town of Shandaken, New York not far from the hamlet of Phoenicia. The club traces its roots back to the Norwegian immigrants of New York City who brought the history and practice of skiing to North America from its traditional home in Scandinavia.
Buck Hill is a ski hill in Burnsville, Minnesota, a suburb south of Minneapolis. It is one of three ski areas in the Twin Cities metropolitan area; the others are Afton Alps and Hyland Ski and Snowboard Area. Buck Hill opened in 1954 and offers ski, snowboard, and tubing trails. Artificial snow is often used to maintain the slopes, because while Minnesota's winters are cold, the average annual snowfall is low for a ski area: less than 60 in (150 cm).
Betsy Baxter Snite was an American alpine ski racer and Olympic medalist. She competed in the Winter Olympics in 1956 and 1960 and won the silver medal in the slalom in the latter.
Suicide Hill Ski Jump is a 90-meter ski jump located in Negaunee, Michigan, and is part of the Ishpeming Ski Club. It is one of three major ski jumps located in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Suicide Hill has been in existence since 1925. Suicide Hill Ski Jump is located in a small valley known as Suicide Bowl. Suicide Bowl contains a total of five jumps: a 13-meter, 25-meter, 40-meter, 60-meter, and Suicide Hill at 90-meters. The 13-meter and 40-meter jumps are fitted with plastic for summer jumping. All five jumps are used during winter. Suicide Bowl also contains cross-country ski runs.
Carl Tellefsen was a Norwegian-American skiing champion and the first leader of the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association.
Harvard Harry Lien was an American ski jumper and a member of the US National Ski Hall of Fame who competed in the 1924 Winter Olympics in Chamonix, France.
Roland Palmedo was a pioneering developer of recreational skiing in the United States. He founded the Mount Mansfield Lift Company which built Stowe's first chairlift, and created the Mad River Glen ski area. Roland Palmedo was also instrumental in the establishment of the National Ski Patrol and the first women's U.S. Olympic ski team. As founding president of the Amateur Ski Club of New York, Palmedo promoted skiing as an outdoor adventure for families and competitive racers alike.
U.S. National Ski Jumping Championships in the winter sport of ski jumping are decided annually in the United States since 1905, except for the years 1919, 1943-1945 and 2020.
Henry Christian Hall was the first person born in America to win an international ski jumping meet, and the first person internationally to jump over 200 feet. He twice set the world record for ski jumping.