Resorts

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Hot Sulphur Springs became a summer resort in 1864, when the baths were first developed. In 1906, the railroad overCoronaPassmade tourism easy.John Peyer, born inZurich, arrived in in June, 1911, and set up as a real-estate sales agent and owner of the Grand Hotel. He soon conceived the idea of turning Hot Sulphur Springs into an American St. Moritz. He organized a wintertime party for the upcoming New Year holiday. There would be skating, tobogganing and a Grand Ball.

On Saturday, Dec. 29, a train pulled out of the North Denver station for the long climb toCoronaPass.Aboard: Holmenkollen champion Carl Howelsen and his skiing buddy Angell Schmidt. After helping to found the Norge Ski Club inChicago, they had moved toDenverand now planned a multi-day holiday ski tour on the western slope.

At noon, the train pulled into Corona Station, at the top of the Continental Divide. Howelsen and Schmidt climbed down, strapped on their skis and began the exhilarating 44-mile run down the west slope of theRockies. They descended 3,100 feet to Fraser, about 16 miles, following close to the railbed because of all the fallen timber in the woods. They langlaufed into Hot Sulphur Springs at about 9 p.m., and found the Grand Ball in progress.

In the morning, Howelsen and Schmidt improvised a ski jump and put on a show. Before the day was out, Peyer began organizing a Winter Carnival for February, and invited the Norwegian pros back. Thereafter, the Hot Sulphur Springs Winter Sports Carnival was an annual event, until WWII. Hundreds of Denverites rode special trains to the event. The following winter, Howelsen settled in Steamboat Springs and with his Norwegian friends got busy teaching skiing – and building jumps — from Denver north and west to the end of the line in Craig. Competitive skiing had arrived inColorado.

http://grandwintercarnival.com

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Boulder’s backyard playground 

Boulder County has long restricted growth in the mountains at its western end. For instance, in 1996 the county commissioners capped Eldora's traffic at 180,000 skier days, and there’s little chance any form of overnight lodging will ever be approved there. Despite that, Eldora is now a roaring success with a loyal following among the college students, aging jocks and ski racers of Northeast Colorado. 

In the late 1950s, Boulder skier Gabor Cseh, a building contractor, explored the steep forests above Lake Eldora, a few miles east of the Continental Divide. He talked the terrain up to friends, and fifty years ago, a small group of investors incorporated as the Lake Eldora Corp. Fifty years ago this month, in July 1961, LEC approached Forest Service District Manager Paul Hauk for permission to build ski lifts on 480 acres steeply forested acres of Roosevelt National Forest, just 20 miles up Boulder Canyon from the University of Colorado campus. The terrain ran from Middle Boulder Creek at 8,970 feet elevation, to the ridgeline at 10,650 feet – a tract about a mile on each side. LEC’s partners included prewar alpine racing champion Frank Ashley and University of Colorado ski team coach Bob Beattie, who had just been named coach of the U.S. Ski Team. Beattie’s participation was a key to the Boulder market: he would use the new hill as a training ground for his teams.

To site the base lodge and parking lot, the group bought 440 acres of private land to the south and west of Lake Peterson and Lake Eldora.

LEC spent about $2 million on a base lodge and two T-bars. Sel Hannah came out from New Hampshire to cut some trails. For the 1963 season, one lift served the beginner hill, with a vertical of about 220 feet, and the other went to the east end of the high ridge, along the route now served by Challenger lift, with a 980-foot vertical. Beattie’s 1964 Olympic skiers got in some training off the big T-bar. The following summer, the company spent $40,000 to grade the steep, winding Shelf Road up from Eldora Road on Middle Boulder Creek. A third T-bar was installed in 1965.

The weather didn’t cooperate. Eldora got precious little snow for three years, and couldn’t open at all for 1966. LEC declared bankruptcy, and went up for sale.

Tell Ertl, Ph.D., moved quickly, buying the area for $335,000 on extended terms: $35,000 down and $10,000 per year, with a final balloon payment of $100,000 due in 1986. Ertl was a professor of mining engineering and one of the world’s leading experts on oil shale. In the 1950s he began buying up old oil-shale claims in Western Colorado, and eventually set up his own company, Energy Resources Technology Land (ERTL, Inc.). By 1963, ERTL realized significant income from leasing these lands to large oil companies. His young family skied at Aspen and Grand Mesa.

Ertl took over operations for the 1967 season, and immediately installed a snowmaking system. He also ran a chairlift, the Cannonball, alongside the big T-bar. He installed lights for night skiing. The family planned eventually to build a 100-room hotel. Meanwhile, they had an apartment above the patrol headquarters, with picture windows facing south for a perfect view of the slalom hill.

Business picked up. Boulderites were enthusiastic skiers, and liked having a backyard resort area where their small kids could learn to ski and race. The ski school staffed up with part-timers who had real professions on weekdays. The CU team trained on the slalom hill early each morning, providing role models for the kids, and at night “retired” racers drove up the canyon to run gates under lights. Local factories, notably Head and Lange, tested product at Eldora. The resort was able to sell group visits to busloads of Texas skiers, who lodged in Boulder.

Eldora did suffer a deficit of real expert terrain. In 1968, the Western Slope Gas Co. built a natural gas pipeline, paralleling the creek at about the 9200-foot contour. The availability of gas power opened the opportunity to run an expert-level lift along the west end of the terrain. Corona lift opened in 1970, named for Corona Pass four miles to the west.

It proved a mistake to remove all the trees from Corona Bowl. The snowmaking system didn’t yet extend there, and 50-knot winds often scoured loose snow off into the woods. If you wanted powder at Eldora, you needed tree-skiing expertise. In retrospect, Tell Ertl’s real stroke of genius was to leave a few trees to break the wind on the very steep West Ridge terrain. Eldora now had its black-diamond chops, spanning about 1,370 vertical feet. In 1975, an extensive network of Nordic trails opened south of the lake, mostly on land owned by Dr. Henry Toll.

Tell Ertl died of cancer in January, 1975, and management of the resort passed to Joe Fox, an accountant who handled ERTL’s books. He had no experience in marketing to skiers. Eldora prospered as a family-skiing area, with traffic peaking a 147,000 skier-days in 1979-80. Fox cut costs by abandoning the Corona lift and its expert-level terrain.

But that was the year the Eisenhower tunnel opened, and suddenly Boulder skiers could reach expert terrain at Breckenridge and Vail in just two hours. By 1982, Eldora traffic fell to 99,360 skier-days.

The family decided to sell the resort, but Tell’s son Rett, then 32, objected. Rett, a computer salesman for IBM in Europe, took over management in 1982. He turned on the lights seven nights a week and brought live entertainment to the base lodge. He ran promotions, like Dollar Nights and the Cardboard Derby. He tried to reopen the Corona lift, which had fallen into disrepair. It derailed. The 100-room hotel remained a distant dream, and when Rett launched a plan to sell homesites, Boulder County officials killed it.

Rett figured break-even was 110,000 skier-days, and he couldn’t quite reach it. The resort lost about half a million bucks a year. In 1982, when world oil prices plunged, the oil shale bubble burst. ERTL Inc. could no longer afford a ski area operating in the red, especially with the 1986 balloon payment looming.

In 1985, the family sold the resort to Steve Finkel, aka O.Z. Minkin. Finkel-Minken showed up in a white stretch limo with a crew of bodyguards. His history of unpaid bills and bounced checks infected Eldora’s operations. O.Z. was indicted in Los Angeles on a federal fraud charge. He went to prison for five years and the Ertls recovered the ski area in foreclosure. Eldora didn’t open for the 1986-87 season.

A rescue was needed. The white knight was Andy Daly. In September of 1987, Daly quit his job as president of Copper Mountain and took a lease on Eldora, with an option to buy. He invested $250,000 for base-lodge renovations and lift maintenance. He gladed the woods on either side of Corona Bowl and ran snowcat tours out to West Ridge. He extended the snowmaking system to Corona and reopened the lift in 1989. Groomed smooth and firm, Corona was able to hold snow. It became a favorite route for ex-racers and wannabes carving fast turns on good toothy racecourse snow, while the glades and West Ridge drew the loyalty of Boulder’s hardbody powder-and-bumps advocates.

In the fall of 1989, Daly pulled off a coup: He went to work as general manager at Beaver Creek, and part of the deal was that Vail Associates bought a substantial share of his own management operation at Eldora. At the same time, Vail took over operation of The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs: the strategy was to operate “feeder areas” to train customers for the big resorts. Vail also hoped to build a 450-room hotel at Eldora.

It was not to be. By the spring of 1991, it was clear that the county wasn’t interested in supporting rapid growth at the mountainous end of its jurisdiction. Vail declined to exercise the purchase option, and that spring Eldora was back on the market.

This time the white knights were a trio of savvy ski industry veterans who could see their way to a profitable operation without a hotel. Billy Killebrew was Hugh Killebrew’s heir at Heavenly Valley, Calif. After selling Heavenly to Kamori Kanko in 1990, Killebrew ran a number of successful retail chains. Chuck Lewis was former president of Copper Mountain. Graham Anderson, ex-racer and Sun Valley resident, had made a successful career selling insurance to ski resorts.

The new managers expanded Eldora’s capabilities at both ends: For advanced skiers, they brought in a used triple chair from Sun Valley, increasing uphill capacity on the Cannonball line by 150 percent. In 1997, they installed a fixed-grip quad to serve the new Indian Peaks trail complex, midway between the Cannonball and Corona lifts. Corona got its own quad in 1998. Beginners got some new chairlifts, too.

Skier days now average 175,000 annually – far into the black side of the ledger. Under general manager Jim Spenst, the resort’s application for an expanded trail and lift system is moving forward toward county approval. When winds close the Corona quad, we’ll be able to ski the tree-sheltered Rocky Mountain powder down to about 8900 feet. There’s some cliffs in there: it’s going to be tasty.

This article is based on interviews with Rob Linde, Jim Spenst, Rett Ertl and Bobbi Chenoweth, and on Rett Ertl’s archives.

 

 

 

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John W. Lundin and Stephen J. Lundin

This story was published by HistoryLink.org, a free online encyclopedia of Washington state history.

Milwaukee Ski Train

Milwaukee Ski Train (image courtesy of MOHAI)

The opening of the Snoqualmie Ski Bowl on January 8, 1938, revolutionized skiing in the Pacific Northwest. Developed by the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul, and Pacific Railroad (known as the Milwaukee Road), the ski area, located at the Hyak stop at the east end of the Snoqualmie Pass tunnel, was renamed the Milwaukee Ski Bowl after World War II to differentiate it from the nearby Snoqualmie Ski Area.  Accessible by train from Seattle, the Ski Bowl offered the Northwest’s first ski lift and lighted slopes for night skiing.  This history of the Milwaukee Ski Bowl and Seattle-area skiing in the 1930s and 1940s was written by John W. Lundin and Stephen J. Lundin, based largely on their research in the digital archives of The Seattle Times, which sponsored ski lessons at the Ski Bowl and provided extensive coverage of the local ski scene. The authors’ mother, Margaret Odell Lundin (1916-2001), played a role in the early days of the Ski Bowl. Margaret Odell was the adviser to the Queen Anne High School Ski Club and for three years took her charges to the bowl for lessons. She was young, single, and attractive and was often interviewed for skiing articles.

Excitement Grows

Skiing on Snoqualmie Pass dates back to the first decades of the 1900s, when it was centered around ski lodges built by private clubs. In 1914, The Mountaineers built a lodge just west of the summit. Other lodges were built by ski clubs in the 1920s and 1930s. In 1934, the Seattle Park Board opened a ski area called Municipal Park at Snoqualmie Summit. In those days, there were no tows to take skiers up the hill — they used skins on their skiis to climb up before they could ski down. The trip to the pass by car on icy roads was always an adventure. The Ski Bowl changed all of this.

Excitement grew in the fall of 1937, as news of the Ski Bowl appeared in Seattle papers. The bowl had two hundred acres, “mostly wooded but with cleared ski runs from the Old Milwaukee grade crossing down out of the ‘rim’ section of the Bowl to the flat area in which the railroad company has erected a two story … ski cabin.”

One of the Northwest’s best ski instructors was hired to give lessons: Ken Syverson, an assistant to noted Austrian instructor Otto Lang. An “instruction course” was cleared close to the ski cabin where lessons would be held.

The Milwaukee Road ran ads promoting the Ski Bowl: “All aboard for the newest of the winter playgrounds, Snoqualmie Ski Bowl (61 miles east of Seattle).” The Seattle Times said the ski trains should “come in first in the ski area’s rating of excellence.” Ski Trains had “warm, comfortable coaches, a specially equipped baggage car for storing your skis, and a recreation car for dancing.”  There was a covered platform at the Ski Bowl offering protection to the passengers departing from the train.

The Ski Lodge was a two-story building “capable of unlimited expansion,” with a waxing room and ski racks on the first floor, and a large recreation room with a fireplace and a 94 foot lunch counter on the second floor. Skiers had their choice of downhill runs, steep or casual. More than 300 tickets were sold for the first weekend.

The Ski Bowl had the region’s first ski lift, an 1,800 foot “Sun Valley type lift,” later called  a Poma lift:

“Suspended from the cable are other cables, ending in a trapeze-like wooden handle to which the skier clings. He stays on his skis, keeps in a track, and is pulled up the course at about four miles an hour — a moderate pace, but it takes no time to get to the top. Then when he leaves the grade crossing, he has his choice of five downhill runs, each named after a crack Milwaukee train … Olympian, Hiawatha, Pioneer, Arrow and Chippewa.”

The Ski Bowl opened on January 8, 1938, hosting 1,200 skiers. Ceremonies included music by the Franklin High School band, and the crowning of a ski queen who was shown walking through a tunnel created by two lines of skiers holding their skis above her. The ski lift experienced some problems, as skiers’ enthusiasm derailed the cable twice as the boys and girls swung back and forth on the “hangers.” A total of 1,584 rides on the lift were taken despite the delays. The lift’s capacity for the opening weekend was 300 skiers per hour, but it was expected to double by the following weekend.

Seattle’s stores promoted their ski ware. Cunningham’s offered ski equipment: ridge top hickory skis, poles, and Almonte adjustable bindings for $13.95; maple ridge top skis, poles, and Almonte adjustable bindings for $10.95; complete children’s outfits for $7.95; and flat top skis, bindings, and poles for $8.95. Harry B. Cunningham, who operated the store, was a pivotal force in promoting Seattle skiing. He was the boys’ counselor at Garfield High School and served as the ski adviser for Garfield students, sharing chaperoning duties on trips to the Ski Bowl with Queen Anne High School Ski Club adviser Margaret Odell. Cunningham lived in Montlake, one house up from the Montlake business district. He opened one of the earliest ski shops in Seattle, with equipment and supplies available for sale and lease. Cunningham operated out of his basement and garage until 1948, when he moved the ski shop into a storefront in the Montlake business district, where Cunningham’s Ski Lodge flourished for years.

Ski Trains

The Ski Bowl and trains overcame opposition from parents and school officials who had worried about lack of control on the way to skiing and the dangers of traveling by car on snowy roads. “Today, however, with ski trains carrying these youthful ski aspirants, the opposition is melting to a great degree. … It is expected that the Ski Bowl and ski trains will do much in the future to erase the official objection.”

Ski trains were an immediate success, and the Ski Bowl became the primary destination of Northwest skiers. The railroad built on the region’s intense interest in outdoor sports, and the lack of adequate highway access to ski areas. Its catch phrase, “Let the Engineer do the Driving,” highlighted the ski package’s ease and convenience. High school ski clubs were formed to take advantage of the easy access to the ski area. The Seattle Times offered free ski lessons, and thousands of students enrolled to learn skiing.

“The area is well lighted and later trains will permit skiing well into the evening.”  Trains for night skiing featured “two big recreation coaches for dancing. Geo Smith’s famous orchestra will provide music, but to have even more fun, bring your own instruments too.”  Evening ski trains left Tacoma at 4:45 and Seattle at 6:00, arrived at the Bowl at 8:00, and began the return trip at 10:00 p.m. It was determined, after “profound research,” that this was the first night ski train in America. That first night ski train carried 300 skiers to an “evening’s sport at the bowl.” In three hours, the participants got all the skiing they wanted and arrived back in Seattle at 1:00 a.m. The night’s record was 12 runs for a total of 3,600 feet of skiing, and the average was six or seven runs.

The Snoqualmie Ski Bowl closed for the season on March 17, 1938, after hosting 11,000 skiers over 11 weekends.

Ski Lessons

For 1939, the Milwaukee Road improved its resort, including scraping the hills and gullies “smooth as the skin you love to touch” so skiers could ski soon after the first snow. The lodge was doubled in size, and the covered concourse from the train platform to the lodge was lengthened from 100 to 400 feet. The ski lift had been speeded up and the bugs taken out of the mechanism. With the new addition, the top floor of the lodge was used for lounging, dancing, and viewing “the entire panorama of ski action on the five slopes fanning away from the lodge” through large windows. Railroad ads promoted skiing at the Bowl, saying “Double-Size Lodge, new ski runs, improved facilities.”  The railroad had a three-year plan and promised to keep expanding the Bowl’s facilities.

Two 14-car trains brought skiers to the “big opening” on January 7, 1939. Activities included a girls’ style show with a $50 prize for the girl who was “the most attractively and intelligently constumed for skiing,” a yodeling contest, and a giant slalom race. The Night Ski Train left Milwaukee Station at 5:30 p.m., returning at 11:00 p.m. The business college band was on board, and there was a wiener roast in the snow.

A Queen Anne-Garfield Ski Day was held the last weekend of January 1939,  a “very busy” day for Ken Syverson and his instructors. More than 225 registration cards had been distributed to Seattle schools for the ski classes, which “were snapped up by the skiers,” according to Margaret Odell, ski adviser at Queen Anne High School, who added, “They’re thoroughly sold on your school idea.”

In the first two weeks, 365 students took ski lessons. No more than 20 students per class were allowed, so each skier could obtain the maximum personal instruction. Classes were from one-and-a-half to two hours in length, depending on conditions. Syverson described the students’ progress:

“It is in the fundamentals of skiing. NOT pell-mell, center of the road wing-dinging, but in how to turn, how to control, how to catch the joy of skiing, because you have the feeling of skiing. … You saw rhythm take the place of jerk. You saw body swing replace a spill. You saw class after class of juvenile skiers catch on. They began to understand what controlled skiing, one of these days, will do for them.”

Ski school advisers Margaret Odell of Queen Anne and Harry Cunningham of Garfield were delighted with the instruction. Odell said:

“We’re glad to see skiing taught to them so sanely and effectively. … Another thing, the presence of the Milwaukee’s special agents on the train as supervisors is an excellent idea. That is a remarkably well-controlled ski special.”

By March 1939, Syverson said, “we’ve developed some skiers.”  At the Queen Anne, Broadway, and Garfield day at the Bowl, a queen was elected. Garfield skiers led the day’s competition, including jumping events held on a “hastily constructed snow-hill.”   After the morning’s class, the skiers demanded more, so Max Sarchett took the “top-notchers on a hill-climbing tour.”  All who went up came down, although they had to worry about sunburn from the blazing sun. There were “sunburned lads and lassies flitting from one end of the ski special to the other on the jaunt home.”  Margaret Odell was shown with six trophy cups for the winners of the  races that celebrated the end of the ski season.

It was a light-hearted day at the Bowl, with the instructors who had been working with the nearly 500Times School skiers helping show them how to run their first slalom race, and attempting to “prove” it, which means running it at high speed outside of the competition itself and frequently falling.

Ski Jumping

The following season, on January 21, 1940, “Kuay day” honored Queen Anne High School students. Some 576 students had signed up for ski lessons, and each week a different school took charge of organizing the activities. 200 Queen Anne students were in charge “under the guidance of Miss Margaret Odell, Kuay Ski Club adviser.” An electronic phonograph provided music on the train trip to and from the Pass, creating “infectious swing-time dancing and singing aboard the train that set the tempo for the day.” The student in charge of the phonograph described the scene on the train:

“I can’t keep up with ‘em, he declared. Too many requests, not enough ‘hot’ records. They love to ski and they love to dance in their ski clothes. I’ll bet I’ve played ‘Oh Johnny, Oh Johnny’ fifty times. That’s the best thing about this trip to the Bowl; you not only have the fun learning to ski, but you have fun on the train too.”

For the 1940 ski season, a giant ski-jump was built at the Ski Bowl for the jumping events of the National Four-Way Ski Championships in March. A new lift was built to hoist skiers to the top of the jump. The Class A hill had a greater-than-200-foot capacity, and Class B and C hills were constructed as well. The Milwaukee Road spent $15,000 on the big hill, designed by one of the most accomplished jumping hill designers.

The National Four-Way Championship was held between March 13 and 17, with events split between three different areas. Downhill and slalom races were held on Mount Baker; the cross-country race was held on Snoqualmie Pass; and the jumping competition at the Ski Bowl. Skiers from all over the country came to compete.

The biggest event was the jumping competition. Alf Engen, an Austrian ski instructor at Sun Valley, and Torger Tokle from Norway faced off on the big jump. Tokle was looking for revenge after Engen beat him in the National Jumping Championships at Berlin, N.H.

Sigurd Hall of the Seattle Ski Club won the downhill race at Mount Baker. Engen was third in the downhill, but won the slalom, beating two dozen racers. The skiers left Mount Baker for Snoqualmie Pass where the cross-country and jumping events were held.

Special trains took spectators to the Pass, leaving every half hour beginning at 8:30 a.m., and huge crowds were expected. Expectations were high that one of the jumpers would beat the national  record of 257 feet set that year at a meet in Wisconsin. Twenty competed on the Class A jump on the Bowl’s Olympian Hill. Others competed on the Class B jump. The jumping event overshadowed the cross-country competition, a rough 11 mile course in which Engen finished fourth.

The Seattle Times published a picture of Tokle jumping over the Ski Bowl, with a headline saying “Torger Tokle Rides out of the World.“ Tokle had longer jumps than did Engen, but Engen was the winner as Tokle “failed to display the form” shown by Engen. In ski jumping, points are awarded for form as well as distance. Engen, “the stocky skiman from Sun Valley went off with the works,” winning the overall title in the Four-Way Competition. “The newsreel boys expressed disappointment that they only had one spill to film in the jumping event, as only the first jumper fell, and the rest rode out their leaps.”

The Ski Bowl ended the 1940 season on March 27, with only 18 inches of snow remaining.

Fourth Season

The Bowl opened its fourth season on  January 4, 1941. Fare for the ski train was reduced to $1.25 for adults, and $1 for students. One train left Seattle at 8:30 a.m., returning at 5:00 p.m. “You can enjoy endless thrills and healthful fun at the beautiful snow fields at the Milwaukee Road’s popular Milwaukee Ski Bowl. With its facilities improved every year, the Ski Bowl is better and more popular than ever.” The Seattle Times ski lessons were offered again under the supervision of Ken Syverson. The Pacific Northwest Ski Association offered ski jumping lessons to juniors at the new ski jump at the Ski Bowl.

On January 12, the Ski Bowl hosted a giant slalom race for 75 of the best skiers in Washington and Oregon. The race was nearly a mile long, and was watched by 1,249 spectators who rode two “specials” to the Ski Bowl. Scott Osborn, “veteran Northwest ski racer,” won the race by four seconds.

Ski jumping was the passion in 1941. The first jumping competition was at Leavenworth in February, where Tokle had a “mighty leap of 273 feet,” setting a new North American record.

Excitement was great for the National Jumping Championships at the Ski Bowl on March 3. Tokle’s new record  made him a favorite, but the competition was tough. Last year’s winner, Alf Engen, had made a jump of 267 feet in Michigan, which would have set the record but for Torkle’s jump at Leavenworth.

On March 3, Tokle, “the human sky rocket from New York,” jumped 288 feet, setting another North American record in front of an excited crowd of 5,500 fans. Engen was second, and Arthur Devlin of Lake Placid was third. Tokle said that he wanted to come back next year, and if the takeoff was moved back 30 feet, he could jump 325 feet.  

World War II and After

The United States entered World War II on December 7, 1941, changing everything in the country, although it took some time for the full effects of the war to be felt.

The 1942 ski season started as planned at the Milwaukee Bowl. The Ski Bowl opened on January 3, and 800 boarded the trains on January 10, for Garfield day. Skiers who went to the Bowl found new improvements, including work done on the surface of the Bowl to smooth out its runs. Times ski lessons were given another year and Olav Ulland offered a junior jumping program. But some changes had to be made. Limits were placed on ski trains to comply with wartime demands, so there was only one train per day going to the Bowl, and it was limited to 70 skiers. A special “defense” ski evening ski event was held for Boeing and shipyard workers in late January.

The Seattle Ski Club hosted a jumping competition at the Ski Bowl with the proceeds going to the Red Cross War Fund. Torger Tokle, “the human airplane,” competed along with 20 other of the West Coast’s best jumpers. Tokle won the event but did not set a new record. He thought a 300 foot jump was possible given the existing setup.

March 27 was the final weekend  for the 1942 season.

Conditions had changed by the winter of 1942-1943. The Milwaukee Road decided not to operate the ski train, because the Office of Defense Transportation ordered that no sports specials could run for the duration of the war, and Times ski lessons were canceled. In December 1942, the Milwaukee Road shut down the Ski Bowl and committed its resources to the war effort.

Skiing started again after World War II ended. In 1945, lights for night skiing were installed at the Snoqualmie Summit ski area. In 1946, the Milwaukee Road resumed operations of the Ski Bowl, changing the name from “Snoqualmie Ski Bowl” to “Milwaukee Ski Bowl” to eliminate confusion with the Snoqualmie Summit ski area. The first high-capacity ski lift on Snoqualmie Pass was installed at the Ski Bowl in 1946, a surface lift that could carry 1,440 skiers per hour.

In 1947, the Milwaukee Ski Bowl hosted the Olympic Ski Jump Trials for the upcoming 1948 Olympic games, bringing in competitors from around the world. A new jumping record was set at the trials.

The year 1948 was a busy one for Snoqualmie Pass. The Ski Bowl hosted the U.S. ski-jumping championships. A new ski area, Ski Acres, opened one mile east of the Snoqualmie Summit, which had the first chairlift on the Pass. The Mountaineers built a lodge on land between the Ski Acres and Summit ski areas to replace their earlier building, which was lost to fire during World War II.

On December 2, 1949, tragedy struck as the Milwaukee Ski Bowl Lodge caught fire and burned to the ground. The only thing left standing was the fireplace, where “thousands of young enthusiasts once warmed themselves.”  The Milwaukee Road had spent as much s $30,000 the prior summer to prepare a new ski run and cut new trails, to make the bowl the “best all around ski center in the state.”

The railroad adopted a temporary solution for the 1950 season. A temporary building was built with rest rooms, first aid, and space for the ski patrol. A new spur line was constructed, on which several train cars were located for use as a kitchen and warming hut to accommodate the 200 skiers taking Times ski lessons.

After the 1950 season, the Milwaukee Ski Bowl closed for good as the railroad decided not to rebuild the lodge and to get out of the ski resort business. The Ski Bowl remained closed until 1959, when the Hyak Ski Area opened in its location. Hyak never generated the same excitement as did the Ski Bowl, and it was overshadowed by the ski areas at the Snoqualmie Summit, Ski Acres, and Alpental.

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John Fry

Photo: Gary Cooper (center) with Clark Gable (right) on Dollar Mountain, with their instructor, Sun Valley’s Sigi Engl. Sun Valley photo.

Imagine a small-size ski area with a 200-room hotel and a crowd of week-long guests hanging around – say, Robert Redford, Bruce Willis, Tom Hanks, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Stephen Spielberg, Bill Gates. Okay, you can only imagine it. But seven decades ago, such a place really existed.

It was Sun Valley. The Idaho resort brilliantly exploited the public’s fascination with celebrities to promote an exotic new kind of American vacation — skiing with chairlifts. Averell Harriman, the resort’s founder, hired New York-based publicist Steve Hannagan to prod Hollywood stars to go to Sun Valley. Pictures of them mastering the slopes on seven-foot skis appeared in millions of copies of newspapers and magazines. Gary (Sergeant York) Cooper and Clark (Gone with the Wind) Gable skied, along with Ingrid Bergman, Claudette Colbert, Tyrone Power, Jane Russell, Van Johnson, Ray Milland, movie producer Darryl Zanuck, and automobile mogul Henry Ford.

The better skiers were Lex Barker (Tarzan), Norma Shearer (The Divorcee), and Janet Leigh, the mother of Jamie Lee Curtis. Ann Sothern even wrote into her MGM contract that she was not available on the set during the winter. After skiing, the rich and famous danced in the Sun Valley Lodge to the music of Eddie Duchin, and drank with local resident Ernest Hemingway.

Sun Valley eerily anticipated the 21st Century’s celebration of celebrity . . .and took it to the bank. 

 

 

 

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Seth Masia

In 1977, a fake sheik fooled the crowds — and the press — at Winter Park.

In the winter of 1977, a pro-am charity race atWinter Park,Colorado, made international headlines for its unexpected celebrity competitor. It wasn’t Ingemar Stenmark, who dominated the World Cup season. It was Sheik Abdul Haddad, who swept through the slalom gates atWinter Park, robes and burnoose flapping, and captured his fifteen minutes of fame.

Clint Eastwood, Olympian Bruce Jenner, and Sheik Abdul Haddad

Sheik Abdul showed up unannounced to compete in the Pro-Am charity race held during the First of Denver Pro Race weekend. The fundraiser supported Hal O’Leary’s innovative Winter Park Handicapped Program. The sheik was placed on the team captained by pro racer Jake Hoeschler (who was also director of skiing atWinter Park), with Heisman Trophy-winning football player Doak Walker and Andy Love, son of former Colorado Governor John Arthur Love. As the sheik flapped and fluttered across the finish line, the press corps clustered around him. The sheik was a sensation: in the aftermath of the OPEC crisis, the very idea of an oil sheik carried the aura of vast wealth and veiled threat. The press wanted pictures, and quotes. All the VIPs wanted to meet him. The sheik’s bodyguard and translator intervened, explaining that Haddad spoke no English.

It turned out he spoke no Arabic, either. When photos and stories about the skiing sheik went out over the AP and UPI wires people inDuluth,Minn., chuckled. Color photos of Sheik Abdul made the papers inParis, Moscow and Tokyo. But the Duluth papers quickly identified him as George S. Haddad, 56, owner of the Haddad Family Shoe Store and of Lebanese descent. The shoe store was located a few doors up from the Continental Ski Shop, where George was a frequent customer. He was also a well-known figure at Lutsen and other local ski areas, where he often skied in his “Arab” robes, no doubt avoiding entanglement in rope tows. The robes had been sewn by his wife, Dorothy Marie Haddad. Haddad even owned a U.S. patent on a bit of ski equipment he had designed: a retractable crampon to help a skier climb.

When the Duluth papers had their say, the story unwound. Hoeschler had arranged for Gerald Ford, Ethel Kennedy and Clint Eastwood to ski in the Pro-Am, but when Winter Park shifted the dates, Ford and Kennedy cancelled in favor of previous obligations.

Jake Hoeschler, George Haddad and "translator" George Abdullah

A few days of panic ensued, and then Hoeschler, passing through Continental Ski Shop, spotted a poster of Haddad skiing inAspen, robes and all. If he couldn’t get an ex-president onto Eastwood’s team, Hoeschler figured he could get a sheik.

And so, with the complicity of Winter Park President Gerry Groswold, Sheik Haddad arrived at Winter Park in a limousine. He came with a bodyguard in the person of Jim Bach of the Continental Ski Shop, and with translator George Abdullah, who taught at Drake University in Iowa. Haddad later claimed he was scared to run the course: With oil prices so high, he was afraid “some fanatic” might take a shot at him.

When the Duluth papers broke the story of the hoax, officials at AP and UPI were furious. UPI, in particular, had been burned in 1976 when Vail sent them a photo of a blizzard that had been taken two years earlier. They felt that the reputation of the press was at stake. But no one from any of the papers or wire services had bothered to fact-check any of the “oil sheik” stories.

The fallout for Hal O’Leary’s program was spectacular. People around the world saw the story and felt inspired to send checks to the handicapped ski team. “We raised 20 times as much over the course of the year as we had ever done before,” O’Leary told Hoeschler.

Haddad went back to his shoe store, and to Lutsen, where he was now a local hero. Hoeschler ran out his contract with Winter Park and returned to his law practice in Minneapolis.

A year passed. Ingemar Stenmark won the World Cup Championship for his third and last time. Groswold invited Haddad, and Hoeschler, back to Winter Park for the Pro-Am. And Dorothy Marie sewed up a new set of robes, edged in gold.

Today, of course, skiing sheiks are a dime a dozen. They all own homes in Aspen. But there’s not a burnoose to be seen: they wear Bogner.

This story appears in the May-June 2013 issue of Skiing History magazine. To read more of Skiing History, subscribe today.

 

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