Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
December 1970 | Volume 22, Issue 1
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
December 1970 | Volume 22, Issue 1
What may come as a surprise is that this swell swoop has been going on for over a century. It was just about a hundred years ago that a relatively unsung hero named Tommy Todd, of Howland Flat, California, was clocked at fourteen seconds for 1,806 feet from a standing start—which averages out to well over eighty-seven miles an hour. Since this was at a time when even crack express trains hadn’t made eighty miles an hour yet, there is every reason to think that Tommy was the fastest man alive in 1870.
It all started, apparently, when a few Norwegian-American gold miners, contemplating the Sierra Nevada’s overabundant snowfall, decided that their native method of mastering this element made sense in California. The Norwegian ski —which they translated, somewhat quaintly, as “snowshoe”—was originally a utilitarian device designed to distribute a man’s weight and enable him to travel in deep, soft snow without sinking. Fashioned out of long slats of California pine or spruce, skis worked well to that purpose in the Sierra mining camps. By 1858 they were in use in several mountain areas, apparently sometimes as a means of transporting otherwise unobtainable mail to snowbound miners.
Postal service on skis gave rise to one of the legendary figures of the Far West: Showshoe Thompson. Born in Norway in 1827 as Jon Thorsen Rue, he lived there long enough as a boy to become adept at the native art of gliding through snowy mountain country on skis. When his family migrated to the American Middle West in 1837, changing their name to Thompson, he grew used to the flat prairie land; but he never forgot the mountains—or the skis. In 1851 he lit out, a bit late, to join the California gold rush. He ended up, after much labor and little luck, farming in the Sacramento Valley.
Thompson’s nostalgia for powder snow had plenty to feed on there. The white peaks of the Sierra Nevada loomed on the eastern horizon, and it was only eighty miles or so to mountain passes where the winter drifts were often twenty feet deep. In 1855 he quit farming and moved to the mining community of Placerville, in the foothills of the Sierras. There he made himself some crude, heavy skis and started practicing. After a few weeks of that, and improvements in the design of his skis, he found that he could maneuver the ten-foot “shoes” up, down, and across almost any type of snow terrain that the Sierras presented in that region. Early in 1856 he started carrying sacks of mail and sundries back and forth between Placerville and Genoa in Carson Valley, Nevada—something nobody had ever managed to do before in winter, though many had tried it on horses or mules or with ordinary webbed snowshoes.
Snowshoe Thompson’s speed, endurance, and fearlessness mightily impressed the mining camps on both sides of the mountains, and the dependability of his “snowshoe express” soon