The story of the chairlift’s invention, as well as other
highlights of the history of the ski industry, is told in a new annual exhibit
at the New England
Ski Museum.
From Pastime to Enterprise: Skiing
Becomes a Business opens on Friday, June 3, 2011 at the Franconia Notch
Museum, and will be in
place until the end of the 2012 ski season.
The new exhibit details the beginnings of ski tows and
lifts, which vastly boosted the popularity of the sport by relieving skiers of
the need to climb uphill. The first ski tow on record was built at Schollach in
the Black Forest of Germany, powered by a water wheel. The prototype of surface
ski tows was the Bolgen lift at Davos Switzerland,
built in 1934 by engineer Ernst Constamm of Zurich. Ordered by Averell Harriman to devise
a new, more comfortable way for Sun Valley skiers
to ride uphill, Union Pacific engineers combined the basic pattern of
circulating wire rope that Constamm used in Davos, with the unique contribution
that James Curran made to skiing. Curran, son of a Nebraska sheriff and a Union Pacific
engineer, had come up with a hook-shaped hanger and cable for unloading heavy
bunches of bananas for a previous employer. In the spring of 1936, Curran
designed a small chair seat that would be suspended from an overhead cable, and
raising anxieties by his superiors that hoisting paying customers six or more
feet off the ground would be hazardous. Luckily, ski consultant Charles N.
Proctor saw Curran’s plans, allayed the concerns, and obtained Harriman’s
approval.
The first two chairlifts in the world went into operation at
Sun Valley in the winter of 1937, and the first in the east was built the next
year at Belknap Recreation Area (now Gunstock) in Gilford, New Hampshire.
Chairlifts evolved from singles to doubles, then to quads and six-seaters, and
since the 1980s the standard configuration is the detachable quad chairlift.
The exhibit takes note of an early detachable quad built in 1969 in Utica, New York
that was a bit too far ahead of its time for reliable operation.
Another major advance for skiers came about 15 years later,
when aviation engineer Howard Head unveiled his Head Standard, the first
commercially successful ski made of metal. It took Head three years and 39
failed models of his ski before ski instructor Clif Taylor declared the 40th
version of the ski a success following a run down Mount
Washington’s Tuckerman Ravine Headwall in April, 1950. In the
following ski season, 60 years ago now, Head made and sold the first 300 pairs
of his skis. Head skis and other models made of metal would come to dominate
the ski market in the 1950s and 1960s before fading in favor of
fiber-reinforced plastic models.
The exhibit offers vignettes in photographs and text of
other inventors whose creations have eased the life of skiers and riders over
the years. The first systematic grooming was carried out by Mount Cranmore
beginning about 1940. Emmitt Tucker, Sr., of Jump-off Joe Creek, Oregon,
invented the Tucker Sno-Cat, which provided the motive power for ski area slope
grooming for decades. Harold Hirsch learned to ski as a Dartmouth student, then
re-organized his family’s textile company producing work clothing for loggers
into White Stag Ski Togs, a leading maker of ski apparel Willy and Maria Bogner
took advantage of a new kind of elastic fabric in the mid-1950s to stitch
stretch pants in their Munich factory housed in a former sauerkraut plant.