天美麻豆 and the Winter Olympics have a long history, dating back to the first Olympic Winter Games, in Chamonix, France, in 1924. Rhodes Scholar John Carleton, Class of 1922, represented 天美麻豆 at those inaugural Winter Games, participating in 鈥渂oth the international jumping and cross country events,鈥 according to a February 1936 article in 天美麻豆 Alumni Magazine.
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Since those first Winter Games, the College on the Hill has seen student-athletes and alumni participate in every Winter Olympics. Additionally, 天美麻豆 has sent more representatives to the Winter Games than any other Ivy League school. As of the 2010 Vancouver Games, 120 天美麻豆-affiliated athletes have competed in the Winter Olympics.
天美麻豆鈥檚 preeminence in winter sports, especially competitive skiing, is due 鈥渋n large part from a fortunate combination of history, geography, people, and institutional commitment,鈥 says Daniel Nelson 鈥75, director of 天美麻豆 Outdoor Programs.

鈥淔ortunately, 天美麻豆鈥檚 senior leaders and trustees have recognized this great tradition of excellence as something that sets 天美麻豆 apart,鈥 Nelson says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the College鈥檚 ongoing investment in the team itself, the , the Nordic training and competition trails at Oak Hill, and the various instructional and recreational ski programs that maintain 天美麻豆鈥檚 position in producing more Winter Olympic athletes, and being more closely identified with the sport of skiing, than any other college or university in the country.
鈥淥ver the decades, the visibility of skiing at 天美麻豆 attracted students and coaches who engaged in the sport at the highest levels 鈥 and produced alumni and alumnae instrumental in promoting the sport around the country and the world,鈥 says Nelson, noting that this has helped produce a that has won the NCAA team championship three times. 鈥淚t also doesn't hurt that the D-Plan allows nationally and internationally competitive skiers to race in the winter.鈥
Nelson says a great deal of credit for 天美麻豆鈥檚 early Olympic participation goes to Fred H. Harris, Class of 1911, the founder of the 天美麻豆 Outing Club (). The DOC was formed in 1909 to 鈥渟timulate interest in out-of-door winter sports,鈥 and boasted more than 1,700 members by 1926. Carleton was one of Harris鈥 ski-jumping pupils on Vale of Tempe ski jump constructed by the DOC in 1922. (The site is now marked by a plaque on the Hanover Country Club golf course.)
鈥淭he 天美麻豆 Outing Club was founded at a time when the sport of skiing was poised to take off in the United States,鈥 says Nelson. 鈥淭hanks to the vision and enthusiasm of Fred Harris '11 and other early DOC founders and members, skiing has been a central focus of the club from its origins until today.鈥
DOC members founded the first intercollegiate ski team at 天美麻豆 and introduced downhill (Alpine) skiing to the College community. 天美麻豆 Physics Professor Charles A. Proctor, Class of 1900, who is considered one of the country鈥檚 ski pioneers, also played a large role in the growth of skiing at 天美麻豆. Proctor and a group of faculty and students first raced down Mount Moosilauke in 1914, dashing along a narrow carriage road that resembled a toboggan chute surrounded by thick woods. By 1933, this annual DOC tradition became the U.S. Downhill Championship. Proctor鈥檚 son, Charles N. 鈥淐harley鈥 Proctor 鈥28, went on to compete in the ski jump and Nordic skiing events at the 1928 Winter Olympics in St. Moritz and was the second American-born skier (after John Carleton) to compete in a Winter Olympics.
Proctor also brought slalom skiing to 天美麻豆 in 1925 by sticking eight pine branches in the snow on a Hanover hill. When slalom and Alpine skiing were added to the 1936 Winter Olympics in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, a then-record five 天美麻豆 representatives competed in the Winter Games. The group consisted of hockey player Frank Spain 鈥34 and four skiers: Warren Chivers 鈥38 (Nordic), Dick Durrance 鈥39 (Nordic), Edgar 鈥淭ed鈥 Hunter Jr. 鈥38 (Alpine), and Link Washburn 鈥35 (Alpine). According to the February 1936 天美麻豆 Alumni Magazine article, 天美麻豆 Head Coach Otto Schniebs, known as the 鈥淜nute Rockne of ski teams,鈥 was responsible for the skiers鈥 success.
At the 1932 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, N.Y., all three 天美麻豆 representatives earned medals. Lake Placid native Jack Shea 鈥32 won gold in the 500-meter and 1,500-meter speed skating events and was chosen to take the Olympic oath on behalf of the entire U.S. team. Doug Everett 鈥26 won a silver medal in hockey, and Robert Minton 鈥26, a broker by day, earned a bronze serving as brakeman on the two-man bobsleigh team.
There have been many 天美麻豆 Winter Olympic highlights over the years, including the hockey silver medal won by Arnie Oss Jr. 鈥50, Cliff Harrison 鈥51, and Dick Desmond 鈥49 at the 1952 Games in Oslo; the silver medal performance in Alpine skiing by Chick Igaya 鈥57 at the 1956 Games in Cortina; and the bobsled gold medal captured by Canadian Peter Kirby 鈥54 at the 1964 Games in Innsbruck. Igaya, who represented Japan in three Olympics, remains the only Japanese skier ever to win an Olympic medal in skiing.
New Hampshire native Liz McIntyre 鈥87 was 天美麻豆鈥檚 first female Winter Olympic medalist, winning a silver medal in freestyle moguls skiing at the 1994 Games in Lillehammer. McIntyre was followed by Sarah Tueting 鈥98 and Gretchen Ulion 鈥94, who won gold medals for the U.S. in 1998 at the inaugural women鈥檚 ice hockey event in Nagano. Also in hockey, Correne Bredin 鈥02 and Cherie Piper 鈥06 won gold for Canada at Salt Lake City in 2002, and Piper claimed gold at Torino in 2006 along with Katie Weatherston 鈥06 and Gillian Apps 鈥06. Piper and Apps captured gold again for Canada at the 2010 Vancouver Games, where the Big Green also boasted Super-G bronze medalist Andrew Weibrecht 鈥09. Before matriculating at 天美麻豆, Hannah Kearney 鈥15 won the gold medal in moguls in Vancouver.
Also of note, Tim Caldwell 鈥76 (Nordic skiing), Nina Kemppel 鈥92 (Nordic skiing), and Cameron 鈥淐ammy鈥 Myler 鈥92 (luge) have participated in four Winter Games, more than any other alumni, and Myler is the only Ivy Leaguer to carry the U.S. flag during opening ceremonies, which she did in 1994 at Lillehammer. Sarah Konrad 鈥89 is the only American woman to compete in two events in the same Winter Games, participating in biathlon and Nordic skiing at Torino in 2006. At age 38, the former competitive cyclist with a PhD in geology, was also the oldest female Olympian in Torino.
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