2005 Vermont Ski Museum Hall of Fame Induction
Frederick Henry Harris (1887-1961)

Founder of the Brattleboro Outing Club (1921) and the Dartmouth College Outing Club (1909); Pioneer of ski jumping - designer of Harris Hill and organizer of the Harris Hill Jumping Tournament (1922); co-founder of USEASA (1922); Lifelong advocate for the improvement of winter sports.
"The Man Who Put America on Skis"
Born 9/8/1887 Charles and Elizabeth Harris in Brattleboro, VT
Investment securities for Baker, Young, and Co. Boston
Co-founder of USEASA, officer in the National Ski Association, 3 time official at the Winter Olympics (1932 and 1960)
Tennis - New England intercollegiate champ 3x, all New England champ 4x, 30 state titles
Sailor - organized the Lake Spofford Yacht Club
Question asked by Harris as founding Dartmouth Outing Club 1909 - "'What is there to do at Dartmouth in the winter?'. Purpose of the outing club: 1. to stimulate interest in the out of door winter sports 2. to have sort cross country runs weekly and one long excursion each season (say Mooselac). 3 to build a ski jump and to hold ski jumping contests. 4. to hold a meet or field day during February at which a program of event similar to the following may be contested : 100 yard dash on snowshoes, cross country run on snowshoes, obstacle course run on snowshoes, 100 yard dash on skis, cross country fun on skis, ski jumping contests, and other events that may be suggested.. By taking the initiative on this matter, Dartmouth might well become the originator of a branch of college organized sports hitherto undeveloped by American colleges."
1910 - Winter Carnival at Dartmouth - help from Vermont Academy who had begun Winter Carnival in Vermont in 1909 by James Pop Taylor
Dartmouth class of 1911. From David Bradley, Ski January 1959 "No, there was already small but lively tradition of winter sports at Dartmouth - What the tradition needed most was a dominant figure, an organizer, and this was Fred Harris."
Fred Harris, Ensign US Naval Reserve Flying Corps, With his own plane: Volume 27, 1922, The Vermonter: Author :Aviation in Southern Vermont part of the first NY to Vermont flight May 10, 1920
"I believe firmly that nothing can stop the progress of commercial aviation and that a few ears hence we will see planes used for business and sport purposes. The general public is still skeptical and will have to be shown."
Harris Hill $2000 to build in 1921: ".He financed, designed and built Brattleboro's ski jump, new this year, on which all New England, Eastern US, and Eastern Canadian ski records were broken with a jump of 1581/2 feet."
Feb 4 1922 1 st Vermont State Championship Ski Jump at Harris Hill 3000 spectators
Feb 21 1922 - elected president of the new USEASA; first annual meeting Jan 19, 1923
1929 Vice Pres of the National Ski Association
1930 US FIS rep in Oslo
USEASA funded 1938 Olympic team, started individual record cards, report sheets for tournaments, and registration card system, FH helped divided country into regional divisions
National ski jump championships at Harris Hill 1924, 20, 38, 42, 51
Married Helen M. Choate Feb 25, 1950
Sandra Kathryn born March 21, 1952
Warren "Winger" Chivers (1914-2006)
1937 National and 1938 Intercollegiate Nordic Combined Champion; 1937 Dartmouth Ski Team Captain; 1936, 1940 Nordic Combined Olympian, Alternate to Alpine Team; Vermont Academy Ski Coach- four events 1939-1980.
"My object in living is to unite/ My avocation and my vocation/ As my two eyes make one in sight." Robert Frost
Born Hanover, NH Dec. 12, 1914 - all four boys four event skiers
Father Arthur H Chivers '02 is Dartmouth professor
Competed first in the Dartmouth Children's Carnival at age 12
Played hockey, football and baseball at Hanover High in 1932 he went to Deerfield where he played football, hockey, skiing, and track
Skiing career started when Dartmouth ski coach Otto Schniebs challenged him to run cross country due to his shoulder and general strength, so he entered the Dartmouth-Lebanon dual meet, which was practice for choosing the Carnival Team - he won and his skiing career changed.
1936, 1940 Olympian, DOC Racer - 4 event skier
Coach for the Vermont Academy - 4 events, focus on developing Nordic program, ski lodge named for him there
1971 Inductee into the US Ski Hall of Fame
1935 sick at Olympic tryouts and finishing in 4 th for combined and langlauf
1935 won Michael Fosch Jumping Trophy at Lake Placid
1936 Olympics in Garmisch-Partenkirchen he finished with the best time of any American on the relay team; named captain of the Dartmouth ski team
1937 Pan American championships in 1937
1936-37 winning the US National Championships in cross country and combined
in Minneapolis and the inter-collegiate event in St. Marguerite, Canada
Represented the American downhill-slalom team which went to Chile (1937)
1938 he won the international intercollegiate combined championship.
Won the 1940 Olympic try outs in jumping and cross country
1939 teach at Vermont Academy
1941-1946 navy air force
1940 American International Team
Marry Jeanne stubs 9/3/46, return to VA and remained there since
Faculty advisor to clubs including outing club with 100% participation
Starts building a new jump in 1949 thanks to Don Cutter '41 and others
John Caldwell
1952 Nordic Combined Olympian; Cross country coach - Putney School 1953-1988, US Olympic and FIS teams 1966-1988; Author - eight editions of The Cross Country Ski Book ; Founder - New England Nordic Ski Association, president first six years.
"When you're on a long race course you will have plenty of time to ask yourself if you trained hard enough for this event."
1952 XC/NC Olympian
Wrote Cross Country Ski, first published 1964, 8 printings
Ski coach to athletes such as Ned Gillette, Mike Gallagher, Bob Gray, and Larry Damon
Class of '46 then math teacher and ski coach at the Putney School (mid 50s-1989)
4 event competitor at Dartmouth
US Ski Team Coach 1960-1972, coach of three Olympic teams - Grenoble 1968, Sapporo 1974, Sarajevo 1984; coach of Australian team 1980 Olympics
US Ski Hall of Fame Inductee 1983
President of the New England Nordic Ski Association, stepped down 2002
Martha Rockwell

Member of the 1 st American women's Nordic team (1969); US Nordic Olympic Ski Team (1972, 1976); Best American finish in FIS competition, 10 th in the 10km (1974); 18 time national champion.
"'One must have a mind of winter' and parents like ours, to grow up loving to ski. I had both." Quote from The Snow Man by Wallace Stevens
1972, 1976 US Nordic Olympic Ski Team
Holds the best US female international race result - 10 th in an FIS race
Successes well documented in press of the time
1986 Inductee into the US Ski Hall of Fame
Holds 18 national championship titles
Tim Caldwell

Competitor in 4 Olympics and 3 World Cups 1972-1984; Member of 1976 record setting Nordic relay team; 1st in 1982 World Cup Nordic relay; 2nd in 1983 World Cup 15km; 7 individual national titles.
"Skiing is in my blood. It became my passion, and continues to play a central role in my life, critical to my spiritual and physical wellbeing."
1972, 76, 80, 84 Olympian
FIS competitor 1982-83
By 1977, has 4 national titles, one in every discipline from 15-50km and the relay
Won 1975 North American Championships in the 50k
1981 - 2 nd in World Cup
1973 - 2 nd in Holmenkollen Junior 15k, 10 th in eastern junior championships, Finlandia Trophy for outstanding US Nordic skier
1976 - 6 th place in relay team, 3 rd fastest time on the 2 nd leg, top finishing US relay team
Bill Koch

Nordic Olympian (1976, 1980, 1984, 1992); Silver medalist (1976); Bronze medal in FIS (1982), First to use skating technique in competition (1982).
"The more people who cross country ski the better off the whole world would be."
1976, 1980, 1984, 1992 Olympian
1976 Silver medalist
1982 Bronze medal in FIS race
First to utilize the skating technique
Helped to found the Bill Koch Ski League for 5-13 year olds
Promoter of skiing on sand
1976 Inductee into the US Ski Hall of Fame
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