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John Carleton (skier)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John P. Carleton
The first U.S. Olympic ski jumping team, 1924
Personal information
Full nameJohn Porter Carleton
BornSeptember 13, 1899
Hanover, New Hampshire, United States
DiedJanuary 21, 1977
Manchester, New Hampshire, United States
Alma materDartmouth College, Magdalen College of Oxford
Sport
SportNordic skiing, tennis
ClubDartmouth Outing Club
Achievements and titles
Olympic finals1924 Winter Olympics

John Carleton (September 13, 1899– January 21, 1977) was an American lawyer and competitive skier from New Hampshire. He competed in cross-country skiing and Nordic combined at the 1924 Winter Olympics in Chamonix.[1] He was also a pioneer of alpine skiing in the United States.[2]

Scholastics

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Carleton graduated from Hanover High School, Phillips Academy in Andover, Dartmouth College and Magdalen College, Oxford.

While at Dartmouth, he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity, vice-president of Palaeopitus, vice-president of the Dartmouth Outing Club and member of Cabin and Trail, and the Casque and Gauntlet senior society.

In 1922, he won a Rhodes scholarship, and graduated with a law degree from Oxford's Magdalen College in 1925.[3]

Sports

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Gustav Paulsen from Berlin N.H. taught Carleton to somersault on skis off a ski jump, which he first performed as an exhibition at the Dartmouth Winter Field Day in 1910.

At Dartmouth he competed on the tennis team each year, and was a 1919 New England doubles champion. Carleton was captain of the ski team, competing for three years, and was an intercollegiate ski jump champion in 1919 and 1921. He was also on the varsity football team for three years. In 1922 Carleton won the Beck trophy at Lake Placid,[4] and set two New England ski jumping records in N.H. and the Vermont state championship.[5][6]

As a member (and 1925 captain) of the Oxford ski team, in 1923 he took part in two Oxbridge Ski Races held in Switzerland. He competed for the U.S. in cross-country skiing and Nordic combined at the 1924 Winter Olympics.[7]

In April 11, 1931 along with Charles Proctor, Carleton made the first ski descent of the headwall at Tuckerman Ravine.[8]

In 1932 he competed in the first Eastern Amateur Ski Association downhill race held on Mount Moosilauke.[9]

As Chairman of the New Hampshire Ski Trails Committee of the State Development Commission in 1933, he oversaw the planning of 40 miles of new ski trails cut by the CCC reaching across the state of New Hampshire from the Vermont line to the Maine line.[10][11]

Military service

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  • World War I U.S. Army Sergeant
  • World War II U.S. Army Air Corps Captain, promoted to Major

Profession

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Carleton was partner in the Manchester, N.H. law firm of “McLane, Carleton, Graf, Green & Brown" and an Assistant Attorney General for N.H. from 1939–45. He also worked as campaign manager for the unsuccessful Sherman Adams N.H. 1946 Gubernatorial race[12] and was an alternate delegate to the 1948 Republican National Convention from New Hampshire.

Family

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He married Alice Prescott Skinner on July 1, 1931 in Paris, France.

Honors

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References

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  1. ^ "John Carleton" at IOC Athletes
  2. ^ "John Carleton". Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
  3. ^ "John P. Carleton Awarded Rhodes Scholarship" Dartmouth Alumni Magazine
  4. ^ photo D.C. Sunday Star Graphic section
  5. ^ "National Amateur Ski Record" Brattleboro Daily Reformer pg 1
  6. ^ "Scenes at Opening of Brattleboro's Ski Jump" Brattleboro Daily Reformer pg 4-5
  7. ^ "Yankee Ski Team" D.C. Sunday Star Part 4 cover
  8. ^ Dawson, Louis W. (1998) Wild Snow Golden: American Alpine Club ISBN 0930410815 pp229,233,235
  9. ^ "Carleton" at U.S. National Ski Hall of Fame
  10. ^ "Winter Sports Boom Seen With New Ski Trails" Manchester Union, Thursday November 30, 1933
  11. ^ "Preparing the Way" Journal of the New England Ski Museum, 2017 v105 pg 13
  12. ^ "Gubernatorial recount" Waterbury Democrat pg 5