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June 30, 2003
Doc Des Roches dead, at 86
10th Mountain veteran, resort exec
was key fundraiser for USST and led SIA for twenty years.
Ralph A. "Doc" DesRoches, 86, died peacefully on June 30, 2003, at
his home on Clearwater Lake in Industry, ME.
Doc was born in 1916 in Mexico, Maine, the son of Alec and Angelina
Des Roches of Prince Edward Island. He was educated at Mexico schools
and Fryeburg Academy and attended the University of New Hampshire in
the class of 1943, where he participated in intercollegiate, national
and regional ski meets, achieving Class A Downhill, Cross-Country and
Combined.
During World War II, Doc served in the 10th Mountain Division, trainingski
troops at Camp Hale, Colorado and Lake Placid, New York. He was seriously
wounded at Camp Hale when a mortar round exploded in the tube.
In 1946, Doc married Yvonne "Toby" Stone and taught her how to ski,
and they worked side by side in ski area management at Laurel Mountain
Slopes in Ligonier, PA, until 1963. Doc was ski school director, mountain
manager, ski shop manager and ultimately president and CEO, while Toby
taught skiing and raised four children.
From 1963 to 1981, Doc served as executive vice president and CEO
of Ski Industries America (now SnowSports Industries America), the national
trade association of manufacturers, importers and distributors of consumer
ski products, again with Toby working by his side.
"When we hired Doc, he told us in his gruff manner, 'You make the rules
and I'll make sure they will be followed by everyone', and he did. He
saw to it that every member big or small had the same level playing
field and rules. Doc was a man among men," stated Jim Woolner of Beconta
Inc., and president of SIA from 1967-69.
Doc managed the organization and its respective trade shows in New
York, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and its now permanent home,
Las Vegas. He played an integral role in shaping the association as
the industry knows it today.
"Doc was SIA. He was responsible for developing the organizational
foundation that saw SIA grow into its leadership role in the ski industry.
Doc's background as a retailer, ski instructor, racer and mountain manager
was perfect to be able to communicate and understand all segments of
the industry. He leaves a legacy of leadership from his insight and
honesty in dealing with people. He was a great inspiration to me and
others in the industry. SIA would not be where it is today without Doc
DesRoches," said David Ingemie, current president of SIA.
"It is with great sadness that I have to say goodbye to Doc DesRoches.
I never worked with another man with his character which was absolutely
honest above everything else. He was a true friend of mine for forty
years and we worked together through many difficulties in the early
years of SIA. Every problem was overcome with Doc's leadership. He was
truly Mr. Ski. I salute a real gentleman," said Jim Weinstein, SIA's
general counsel from its inception in 1954 to 1983.
During his tenure at SIA, Des Roches was named national chairman of
the US Ski Team Fund Committee in 1963, and in 1964 finance chairman
of the Olympic Ski Games Committee. Asked to raise $100,000 for the
nascent US Ski Team, Doc produced over $140,000. In 1967, he teamed
with J. Negley Cook to found the New York Ski Ball. "The team wouldn't
have gotten off the ground without him," says Bob Beattie, head coach
of the team through the '60s. "We were desperate for money, but Doc
told me, 'We'll find the money if you'll find the team.' We were joined
at the hip, traveling everywhere together. And he did all this work
gratis."
When Doc "retired," he moved to Clearwater Lake in Industry and developed
the UMF Ski Industry Program, serving as coordinator from 1982-1992,
and remained a consultant to the program till his death. Among his many
working and honorary memberships, Doc was Charter Member #7 of the Professional
Ski Instructors of America, an FIS member (Federation Internationale
de Ski), and helped to found the Eastern Ski Writers Association (1962)
and the U.S. Ski Writers Association (1963), now called the North American
Ski Journalists Association.
At the United States Ski Association, Des Roches sat on the Board of
Directors, and worked as an Alpine Official, U.S. Ski Team Fund Finance
Chairman, TV representative, Press Officer and representative at several
Winter Olympic Games. Doc was the permanent Honorary Chairman of the
U.S. Ski Team Fund, and he was named a lifetime honorary member of the
U.S. Ski Team, the PSIA and the U.S. Ski Writers Association. Doc received
many national and state awards for his outstanding contributions to
the sport and industry of skiing, including the Julius P. Blegen Memorial
Award of the U.S. Ski Association, the Golden Quill Award of the U.S.
Ski Writers Association, the John Clair Award for outstanding service
to the U.S. Ski Team, and the Darien, CT, Oldtimers Athletic Award.
He was recognized as a "Founder of Skiing," for leadership in setting
the high standards skiing enjoys today.
He was inducted into both the National Ski Hall of Fame and the Pennsylvania
Ski Hall of Fame's Inaugural Class; and was also named Distinguished
Lifetime Member of International Association of Exposition Managers
Emeritus. The University of Maine at Farmington recognized Doc "in grateful
appreciation for his contribution in developing the UMF Ski Industries
Program." And shortly before his death, Doc was notified that he was
to be inducted into the first class of the Maine Ski Museum's Hall of
Fame later this year. He is survived by Toby, his wife of 57 years,
four children, eight grandchildren, four great-grandchildren, one brother-in-law
and two sister-in-laws. He was predeceased by four brothers and three
sisters.
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