Discover The History Of Figure Skating!

Learn all about the fascinating world of figure skating history with Skate Guard Blog. Explore a treasure trove of articles on the history of figure skating, highlighting Olympic Medallists, World and National Champions and dazzling competitions, shows and tours. Written by former skater and judge Ryan Stevens, Skate Guard Blog also offers intriguing insights into the evolution of the sport over the decades. Delve into Stevens' five books for even more riveting stories and information about the history of everyone's favourite winter Olympic sport.

From Carnations To Kale: The Curious History Of Figure Skating's Flower Throwing Tradition

Bouquet of flowers

The tradition of throwing flowers on the ice at figure skating competitions was actually predated by the tradition of throwing shade. 

Back in the day, when things were being thrown, they were usually directed at the judges. At the 1952 World Championships in Paris, an unruly audience threw bottles at a judge who gave Jacqueline du Bief, who fell twice, a perfect 6.0. Four years later in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, when Sissy Schwarz and Kurt Oppelt controversially defeated Canadians Frances Dafoe and Norris Bowden, oranges were their weapon of choice.

But where did the tradition of throwing flowers to the skaters start? Perhaps inspired by the centuries old Japanese tradition of throwing clothing in tribute to Dengaku performers, for centuries it has been a long standing custom in the theater and dance worlds to throw flowers to artists that moved audiences. A wonderful 2012 article by Judith Mackrell from The Guardian explains that it was "a tradition apparently started by a man who bought boxes of old or spoiled blooms at markets, carried them to the top of the theatre, and then, with the help of other fans, threw them down on to the stage. Other fans threw flowers from the stalls, often weighted with lead or Plasticine to give a better aim. These cascades of carnations, daffodils and roses (depending on the season) would form a carpet at the dancers' feet." Theater directors hated it. The practice of throwing flowers to performers was actually banned in Viennese theaters in the nineteenth century as 'an intolerable nuisance.' The December 11, 1886 issue of The Garden asserted that English theatres were considering doing the same and that "thirty years ago, it is said, the directors of the Imperial theatres at St. Petersburg had a serious conference with Count Orloff as to the expediency of abolishing the offering of bouquets over the footlights." In addition to being a fire hazard with the gas lit lamps, these flower bouquets often contained jewels offered to female performers with the expectation of 'something more' in return. Scandalous!

As skating became more recognized for its artfulness and more competitions were held indoors in large stadiums, European audiences in the fifties and sixties started throwing flowers to skaters. It caught on in North America and blossomed as a part of the skating zeitgeist. Florists made a killing and soon the bundles of roses became too much for the skaters to gather on their own as they awaited their marks. Competitions got delayed; people tripped on rose petals more than their toe picks. Something had to be done. Enter the flower children.

These unheralded youngsters were more often than not young skaters from the cities in which competitions were held and hand picked by local organizing committees of events. Many top skaters got their first taste of the big leagues by picking up flowers. Among the list of former flower children? Olympic Silver Medallist Liz Manley was a flower girl at 1978 World Championships in Ottawa. Flower retrievers have increased in numbers over the years. At the Innsbruck Olympics, four young girls helped Dorothy Hamill gather flowers thrown by a crowd of nine thousand people. By the 1988 Olympics in Calgary, there were dozens.

But these kids weren't just picking up roses and carnations. Skaters have been showered with flowers, enormous plush toys, love letters, books and candy over the years. Katarina Witt received a Rolex watch; Jeffrey Buttle a Louis Vuitton bag. In a January 21, 2010 interview with ESPN, two time Olympic Silver Medallist Elvis Stojko claimed, "I've had lingerie thrown on the ice before. I remember at one competition the panties came out on the ice after my short program and the top came out the next night after the long program, with a phone number and name attached." After performing prior to a minor league hockey game in Reno, Nevada in 1997, Tonya Harding was thrown flowers... and collapsible batons.

Debi Thomas quipped that she wished people would throw pizza pie instead of flowers. She got her wish at the 1987 World Championships in Cincinnati. American Open Champion Doug Mattis told me, "I told her to look for me so I could get on TV. She came over and I handed her a full-on Domino's pizza, in box." No anchovies, extra cheese and to the kiss and cry in thirty minutes or less. Mattis recalled, "One year ('83, I think), they tied fishing wire to a bouquet of flowers and when (maybe it was?) Jill Watson went to go pick them up, they yanked them away from her. Another time someone built a three foot tall Energizer Bunny, put it on skates, and slid the thing past Holly Cook while she took a bow after her free skate."

It was all fun and games until skating officials stepped in. In 1988, the USFSA started discouraging the throwing of flowers onto the ice and cited the image the sport projected as part of the reason. Hugh Graham promised that "the TV interview area in competitions that we control will project a sporting image rather than a frilly flower garden." The delays of flower cleanup and hazards of foreign objects on the ice led organizers of the 1989 U.S. Championships to ban the selling of flowers at the Baltimore Arena. Fans responded by simply visiting their friendly neighbourhood florist on their way to the rink.

The boom of skating's popularity in the nineties meant more flower showers than ever before. At the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, the flower children were instructed to "take lemon-flavoured cod-liver oil every day. And don't forget to smile", scan the ice for errant bobby pins, jewelry and sequins and return the skaters skate guards with "a grand bow." The skaters, aged seven to eleven, were hand-picked for their jobs by a German skater living in Norway named Heidi Vermond.

In 1996, the USFSA tried to bill organizers of the Riders Ladies Figure Skating Championships for a "sanction fee" of one thousand dollars per flower child for any skater who was a member of a USFSA club skating on to the ice to retrieve flowers at a professional competition. The organizers of the professional competition balked at the amateur organization's outrageous fee, countered one hundred dollars and then replaced the flower retrievers with skaters who weren't USFSA members. In the March 9, 1997 issue of the Eugene Register, Morry Stillwell said of the drama: "While somebody may feel that a little kid, five little kids, are not worth the difference between $100 and $1000, that's the way it is. I feel there is a moral responsibility to help develop the sport."

By the late nineties, the shift of federations and event organizers to 'encourage' fans to throw plush toys was in full swing. If flowers were to be thrown, they had to be fully wrapped in cellophane and taped up right some good. Safety first, right? Not so much. In 2008, legendary coach Frank Carroll got bopped in the head with a large stuffed penguin after Evan Lysacek's short program at the U.S. Championships in St. Paul Minnesota. In his interview with Allison Manley on The Manleywoman Skatecast, he said, "Actually, the one at Nationals was really dangerous because it had a recorder in it. It spoke or sang or did something and you know, the boy standing next to me was the Razzano boy from Phoenix and he had to skate right after Evan, so when Evan came off this thing flew down and luckily it hit me instead of him but you know, it really dazed me and I had to go to the medical afterwards." Not even an injury to the coach of Michelle Kwan could stop skating fans from chucking everything that wasn't nailed down.

Kale me crazy but I think the reigning World Champions might win the 'crazy things thrown on the ice' contest in recent years. Meagan Duhamel told me she "got a bundle of kale thrown on the ice last year at Canadians. I also got a jar of peanut butter many years ago." Not to be outdone, Eric Radford recalled being thrown "a six-foot long homemade stuffed snake!"

Flower retriever auditions for the 2016 Canadian Tire National Skating Championships in HalifaxFlower retriever auditions for the 2016 Canadian Tire National Skating Championships in Halifax

For a sneak peek into the world of flying projectiles, I headed over to the Scotiabank Centre today for the 2016 Canadian Tire National Skating Championships Flower Retriever Auditions. At the event, thirty skaters from the ages of nine to thirteen from local skating clubs auditioned for a minimum of twenty spots for 'flower retrievers' at the 2016 Canadian Tire National Skating Championships which will take place from January 18 to 24 here in Halifax. Skaters had applied online through a call for volunteers on Skate Canada's website. If they met the criteria, they were invited to today's tryouts.


An hour long process evaluated the skills of the skaters and their suitability through circuit exercises. Three judges made the difficult decision of who to select. I spoke to Jill Knowles, who has been the Executive Director of Skate Canada Nova Scotia since 2003 about the process. "They are looking for skating skills," she explained. "When we are live on TV, the skaters have to be very, very proficient. They have to be able to skate well, gather the flowers, stuffed animals and all those things in really quick succession. They also have to sit quietly when they're not in use because there is a lot of dead time where it will be interesting for them to watch the skaters, but they will have to sit quietly and behave themselves." We talked about how this really was a once in a lifetime experience for many of these young skaters. Jill explained that the "age window to be a flower retriever is quite small. The last time Canadians were hosted here was 2007. In 2007, many of these children wouldn't have even been in school yet, let alone skating. By the time we have Canadians here again or another international event they will probably be too old to be doing it at that point in time." As for crazy things thrown on the ice in Halifax, Knowles remembered Craig Buntin being thrown Tim Hortons coffee.

When the ice at the Dartmouth Sportsplex was littered with red roses after the last figures in international competition were skated here at the 1990 World Championships, it was probably one of the few times that school figures were ever rewarded with a flower toss. You honestly just never know what will happen in Halifax, home to some of the most lively skating audiences in Canada. Why don't you come find out for yourself? Tickets are on sale to the 2016 Canadian Tire National Skating Championships.

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of the figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

Move Over Mary Poppins: Ellen Dallerup, The Skating Zeppelin


Practically perfect in every way, Julie Andrews delighted as the nanny who flew around via umbrella in the 1964 film "Mary Poppins". She wasn't the first one to fly in the air and delight audiences though. Skaters had been doing it for decades... and the one we're going to focus on today is Denmark's Ellen Dallerup, a contemporary and cast mate of Charlotte Oelschlägel who in her own way made a quite an impression on audiences in her day.

Photo courtesy Bibliothèque nationale de France

Ellen performed alongside Charlotte in the ice ballets that were part of the massive "Hip, Hip Hooray" and "The Big Show" productions at New York City's Hippodrome Theatre. Like Charlotte, Ellen was discovered by New York City theatrical producer Charles Dillingham as a performer in the early twentieth century Eisballets at Admiralspalast in Germany, which were essentially combinations of pantomime and musical comedy acted out on ice skates. Although Charlotte became the big star, Ellen too earned her own following in these shows. The February 13, 1916 edition of "The Oregonian" praised her highly: "Hilda [Rückert] and Ellen Dallerup share with Charlotte the titles of 'Queen of the Ice.' While Miss Dallerup goes further and is 'Queen of the Film Ice Skaters', acting for the Paramount Pictures as mannequin for their swell skating costumes, and giving a few sample glides and curves. If the skill as well as the costume showed upon the screen, dressmakers could ask fabulous prices for the wonderful creations designed for ice skating." Furthermore, the September 9, 1916 "Brooklyn Life" review of "The Big Show" compares Charlotte with Ellen: "There probably never was a woman skater of so much feminine charm combined with so much masculine agility and muscular strength, but in grace of execution she is surpassed by Ellen Dallerup."


Ellen continued to gain attention in her next gig, a production called "Jack o'Lantern". This too was a show produced by Dillingham and it played both in Philadelphia at the Forrest Theatre and on Broadway at The Globe. The show was again a mixed music/acting/skating hodge podge and was well received by critics. Circus performer Fred Stone even learned to skate specifically for this production. The book "That Moaning Saxophone : The Six Brown Brothers and the Dawning of a Musical" by Bruce Vermazen describes the show's grand finale and Ellen's big moment in detail: "A snowstorm is falling on an ice rink that covers most of the stage. Costumed in 'blue silk set off with white fur', a beautiful young woman (Ellen Dallerup during the 1918-19 season, Katie [Schmidt] the following year) enters, a marvelously graceful and brilliant skater who pirouettes and whirls all over the ice, who dances and leaps and glides as though skating was the easiest and most natural game in the world."



After stints in a couple of other American shows, Ellen returned to Europe and skated with Phil Taylor, a notable speed skater and Ice Capades stilt skating performer in St. Moritz, Switzerland. At one point during her early career, she even skated with a prop zeppelin attached to her, as pictured above. As I said before, move over Mary Poppins! 

Later, Ellen turned to coaching in Great Britain and was actually the second coach of four time World Champion Jean Westwood! I was able to find little more about her later life beyond a coaching stint in Manchester in the late forties, but if she flew through life with the grace with which she appears to have skated, I'm sure she passed life's tests with flying colours.

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of the figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

The Roots Of Trophée Éric Bompard


As the Grand Prix action continues to heat up with the fourth stop on the six part competition tour in Bordeaux, France, one might be a tad curious about the origins and history of this competition. Although France had certainly been home to many major figure skating competitions - Olympics, World, European and World Junior Championships aplenty over the years in fact - earlier in the country's skating history other invitational competitions such as the Grand Prix St. Gervais and the Morzine Trophy were the most prominent annual international competitions France boasted.

In response to the other more prominent invitationals being offered at the time like Skate Canada, Skate America, NHK Trophy, Novarat Trophy in Hungary, Ennia Challenge Cup in Holland and St. Ivel in England, France decided to get in on the game in 1987 by introducing the Lalique Trophy. Although good ol' Wikipedia refers to this event in its early years as the 'Grand Prix International de Paris' all primary sources indicate it was indeed called the Lalique Trophy (or Trophée Lalique) until 1994, when the Trophée Lalique name was briefly lended to a professional competition in France that was judged by a live audience, similar to The Great Skate Debate and Rowenta Masters On Ice professional competitions later in the nineties professional skating boom. During this time period, the amateur event was known for two years as Trophée de France, resuming its use Trophée Lalique name from 1996 to 2003. In 2004, when cashmere company Éric Bompard took over from the Lalique glassware company as the title sponsor, the name officially changed. The event, of course, has been a mainstay of the Grand Prix from its early days as The Champions Series until now.

The winner of the first Lalique Trophy women's title in November 1987 was none other than Jill Trenary. "The Palm Beach Post" noted that after winning figures, "The U.S. Champion had marks of 5.2 to 5.8 for her two-minute program with seven basic free skating moves. Skating to 'Irma La Douce', she had a difficult triple flip-double toe combination in her exercise that counted for 20 percent of the total score. with today's final free program left, she had 1.0 ordinals." Maintaining a strong lead after winning the short program and surviving a fall in her free skate to easily topple France's Agnès Gosselin and West Germany's Patricia Neske. Canada's Diane Takeuchi was fourth with 5.2 points and another Canadian, Lyndsay Fedosoff of Mississauga, Ontario, was sixth. In the pairs event in 1987, the brother/sister team of Natalie and Wayne Seybold of the U.S. held onto their short program lead over the Soviet pair of Julya Bystrova and Alexander Tarasov to take the title. Lauren Collin of Burlington, Ontario and John Penticost of Chateuaguay, Quebec finished third in both the short and long programs to take the bronze medal. In the men's event, Petr Barna outskated Angelo D'Agostino of the U.S. and Great Britain's Paul Robinson for the gold, with St. Bruno's Jaimee Eggleton in fifth and Port Moody, B.C. native Brad McLean in seventh. The ice dance winners were Italians Lia Trovati and Roberto Pelizzola with Susie Wynne and Joseph Druar in second and France's Corinne Paliard and Didier Courtois in third. A young Evgeni Platov finished fourth with then partner Larisa Fedorinova and Canada's only entry, Kim Weeks of Calgary and Curtis Moore of Wingham, Ontario, finished in a disappointing seventh and last place.

Over the years, so many wonderful moments have taken place at this competition. For instance, in November 1989, Susanna Rahkamo and Petri Kokko made history when they won the bronze medal at Trophée Lalique. In doing so, they won Finland's first ever ice dance medal in any international competition. The winner of the women's event that year was Surya Bonaly.


The event has also been the source of many major upsets. In 1995, Josée Chouinard beat the reigning World Champion Lu Chen. Two years later, it was Laetitia Hubert's turn to unseat another reigning World Champion, Tara Lipinski. Past winners read like a who's who of figure skating: Kurt Browning, Michelle Kwan, Yuna Kim, Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze, Ilia Kulik, Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir, Paul Wylie, Joannie Rochette, Todd Eldredge, Artur Dmitriev with both of his partners, Alexei Yagudin, Marina Anissina and Gwendal Peizerat, Evgeni Plushenko, Jeffrey Buttle, Patrick Chan, Mao Asada... that's just the tip of the iceberg. With a formidable who's who crew (see what I did there?) in Bordeaux this week, perhaps it's high time some new names got added to that prestigious list. Don't think for a second skating history isn't in the making. It is every day.

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of the figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

Soldiering On: Inspiring Skaters From World War I and II


In the 2013 Skate Guard blog "Finding Peace On The Ice: Figure Skating And World War II", we first explored some of the figure skating connections to the second World War. From the stories of Hanni Sondheim Vogelweit to Freddie Tomlins to Anne Frank, the horrors that were World War I and II continue to pop up time and time again. They have swooped in almost like some inescapable tornado without notice whenever I go to research new topics to write about.... and there's no doubt in my mind they will continue to. As we remember this Remembrance Day, let us look back on yet more stories of inspiring wartime skaters. Lest we forget.


ALBERT HORACE HAKE AND THE GREAT ESCAPE

In 1963, John Sturges' film "The Great Escape" was nominated for both Academy and Golden Globe Awards. It was based on Paul Brickhill's 1950 book of the same name, which was also adapted to television in a 1951 episode of The Philco Television Playhouse. "The Great Escape" told the story of the daring and dramatic escape of British and Commonwealth prisoners of war from a German POW Camp in what is now Poland during World War II. The real life "Great Escape" from Stalag Luft III took place overnight from March 24 to 25, 1944 and saw seventy seven men make their way through tunnels dug by the prisoners to initial freedom from the POW Camp. It was one of the most extensively and thoroughly planned escapes in history. Unfortunately, the final man to crawl through the tunnel was spotted by the Germans and surrendered and seventy three of the seventy six who escaped were later recapatured, fifty of which were executed. Sadly, one of those escapees who was caught and killed by the Nazis was a skater.

Albert Horace Hake was a twenty seven year old Warrant Officer from Sydney who served in the No. 72 Squadron of the Royal Australian Air Force. Jonathan F. Vance's book "A Gallant Company: The Men Of The Great Escape" explained that "early in 1940 Al's life received a boost thanks to an outing at a local ice-skating rink. A friend from work introduced him to a striking brunette named Noela Horsfall, and Al was instantly taken by her gay smile and cheery eyes. They started going out together and spent every weekend hiking, surfing or picnicking. More frequently, though, they returned to the skating rink where they had first met. On March 1, 1941, they were married." Having enlisted on January 4, 1941, Albert and Noela's wedding actually occurred on a four day leave from his training. On his enlistment papers, he actually listed skating as one of his sporting pursuits, according to David Edlington's article "The Great Crime" in the official newspaper of the Royal Australian Air Force.

Hake actually played an integral part in the masterminding of The Great Escape as he was the brains behind the compass-making operation. He manufactured two hundred compasses all bearing the false inscription "Made in Stalag Luft III. Patent pending." for the men to use once they had escaped from the tunnels, so they would not be shot as spies if recaptured. Unfortunately, after escaping, the ice he so loved to skate on actually came back to haunt him and he suffered severe frostbite after soldiering on through the snowy landscape before he was recaptured by The Gestapo not far from Sagan, where the POW Camp was located.

According to Edlington's article, Hake was seen "hobbling with a group of prisoners and a Gestapo escort to a black car outside the Gorlitz civilian prison on March 30. The man renowned for lively renditions of songs, including Waltzing Matilda, on guitar at Stalag Luft III, was never seen alive again." Hake was murdered on March 31, 1944 by Gestapo Chief Dr Wilhelm Scharpwinkel and his associate Lux, cremated at Gorlitz and is buried at Poznan Old Garrison Cemetery in Wielkopolskie, Poland. The courage and ingenuity this young man showed in thinking not only of his own self-preservation but of the dozens of other men plotting their escape was profoundly human and one can only hope that Hake and his wife Noela who passed away in 2004 are now Waltzing Matilda on the ice of The Other Side.


THE RED-HAIRED SKATER

Evelyn Monahan and Rosemary Neidel-Greenlee's book "And If I Perish: Frontline U.S. Army Nurses in World War II" retells the story of an unnamed skater who served in the second war whose misfortune seemed to continue while recovering from the injuries he sustained on the frontline: "About a week later, one of the ambulatory patients, a large, red-haired man who had been a professional ice skater in civilian life and had lost one of his legs in combat, decided to take Glant for a ride in his wheelchair. The two went visiting around the Quonset huts but got bogged down in the rocks and gravel between the metal buildings. They finally flagged down some help, were retrieved from the rocks, and returned safely to their own ward." The book explains that the man named Glant that the skater was taking out for a ride was Private Berchard Lamar Glant, a man whose arm was amputated after he suffered gangrene from his wounds. His wounds had apparently been so severe that he was counted among the DEAD when he was transported from the Mussolini Canal to the hospital by medics by jeep.


CECILIA, YOU'RE SAVING MY HEART

Winning her World title in 1937 may have been one of the biggest bright spots in the life of 1936 Olympic Silver Medallist Cecilia Colledge but what happened next had to have been one of the scariest. During World War II, she drove an ambulance in the Motor Transport Corps during The London Blitz (which killed forty to forty three thousand people) and saved many lives undoubtedly in the process... although there was one she couldn't. Her 2008 New York Times obituary explains "(she) drove a civilian ambulance in London during the blitz, and her brother, Maule, became a flight lieutenant in the Royal Air Force. He never returned from a September 1943 mission over Berlin. Colledge became a pro skater in the late 1940s, appearing in ice shows, then settled in the United States, coaching elite athletes at the Skating Club of Boston from 1952 to 1977. She never married and had no immediate survivors. Long after the war years, Colledge evidently remained tormented by the loss of her brother in combat. Asked once if she would return to Britain, she replied, according to The Independent newspaper, 'There was nothing left for me there except unhappy memories.' She sometimes wore a brooch designed from Royal Air Force wings willed to her by a colleague of her brother's who also died in World War II."


Despite the evidence of her own grief, Colledge never wavered in her dedication to leaving figure skating better than she found it. She coached in Massachusetts until 1995, among her many students U.S. Champions Ron Ludington and Lorraine Hanlon.


EDITH CAVELL

British nurse Edith Louisa Cavell was a pioneer of nursing in Belgium who once said, "I can't stop while there are lives to be saved". When World War I broke out, her nursing facility became a Red Cross hospital. She is remembered for her dedication to caring for both Allied and Axis soldiers without discrimination and helping around two hundred Allied soldiers escape from Belgium (which was occupied by Germany at the time). Her brave effort sadly cost her her life. She was tried for treason and sentenced to death by firing squad on October 12, 1915. The History's Heroes website explains that "When Edith was a girl, one of her favourite winter pastimes was ice skating. There was a moat behind the church where the Cavell sisters and brother would skate when it froze - and Edith had also been seen skating down by the fort at Intwood." Fittingly, Mount Edith Cavell in Jasper, Alberta overlooks Pyramid Lake, a popular outdoor skating spot for tourists and locals alike.

THE OTHER MELITTA

As a singles skater, Austria's Melitta Brunner won the bronze medal at the 1929 World Championships. However, her biggest success was arguably her Olympic bronze at the 1928 Winter Olympics in pairs skating with Ludwig Wrede. Together, the pair won another three World medals to boot. However, ANOTHER Melitta's story is every bit as impressive. Melitta Anderman was born in 1929 in Vienna (the year Brunner won medals in both ladies and pairs skating at Worlds) and was the only daughter of a well-to-do Jewish haberdasher and his wife. Her family all managed to survive the World War II annexing of Austria by Nazi Germany and flee to the U.S. with their lives, despite her father being arrested and spending time in the Dachau concentration camp for a year. In her "Viennese Memoirs" on file with the Leo Baeck Institute's Center For Jewish History, Melitta describes her skating connections: "My best after school times were spent with my mother skating in the Wiener Eislaufverein (Vienna's largest ice skating rink which is now adjacent to the Intercontinental Hotel). For whatever reasons, my mother named me after a popular Viennese ice skater, Melitta (Bruner). Though I was no figure skater, I loved the feeling of gliding on the ice and was pretty good. I participated in a skating festival and again had a chance to wear my snowflake costume. My mother also had her a little excitement there when she broke an arm during one of our afternoons on the ice." Like in Anne Frank's story, Anderman related that "Jewish discrimination laws came out overnight. We were no longer allowed to go to public parks, theatres, movies and any congregation was forbidden." This included skating. The enthusiastic skater describes Kristallnacht in November 1938, her father's arrest, the loss of their home and scarcity of food and her mother being detained and later released while the family was onboard a train to Paris. She started a new life in New York City with the Metropolitan Opera Society and married a pharmacist. They now call Manhattan home. She concluded her memoirs by saying "I thought the past was gone and a new shiny world would rise around me. I tried that for over fifty years. I also thought I had no scars but I am riddled with them. But this is all part of who I am, where I come from and where I'm going - I presume that's life." Want to hear Melitta's entire story in her own words? A wonderful audio interview with her from 2012 can be listened to here. I think you'll find her candor and story just amazing... and you'll never guess her husband's name: Ludwig!


TRICK SKATER EXTRAORDINAIRE

Speed skater, barrel jumper, stilt-skater and showman Phil Taylor served in the Canadian Army during World War I. Returning from service with a partially amputated leg, the Saskatoon Public Library's records tell us that like JUST LIKE fellow skater and Saskatchewan native Norman A. Falkner whose story we visited in the third episode of the Axels In The Attic series, "he continued his figure skating and was considered the 'best fancy skater in Saskatoon'. Like Falkner, Taylor was successful in parlaying his athletic prowess into a career as a 'show skater' despite the obstacle of having to overcome the loss of a leg. He was still performing his one-man show at the Dreamland Rink in San Francisco around 1947. He later married an Australian and moved to Australia, and thereafter kept on skating." With a prosthetic leg, Taylor toured with Ice Capades and performed regularly in ice shows with his daughter. He was also one of, if not the first, professional skaters to perform an exhibition at an amateur competition when he stilt-skated at the 1932 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid.


BLACKMAIL BY SKATES

In her memoir "Memories of the Crystal Night", Holocaust survivor and psychotherapist Dr. Ursula Falk shares her painful story from World War II: "With the help of my beloved mother, 'ole vescholom', my father escaped to Belgium by night and fog. We fled to Breslau with my two siblings, ages two and eleven. There we lived in a cold apartment with my single aunt. Again, because of my Mom's courage and exceptional faith and intelligence, to say nothing of her generosity, she assisted my two cousins to escape the country. One took his new bride to Sweden, the other went with skis to Czechoslovakia and from there to Israel (then called Palestine). The landlady in the apartment, an avid Nazi, took the one toy, a pair of skates, and blackmailed us for the last possessions we had. Nazi SS came armed with swords on Kristallnacht and ran their sabers through the couch and stuffed chairs looking for 'weapons', of which we had none. They held me out of a multi storied window and threatened to toss me out of it. For some unknown reason the one Nazi pulled me back inside. Children were screaming out of other windows and I held my breath and could not look. My voice was stilled within me. Previous to these horrors I had already been raped by an unsavory Nazi criminal who rode his bicycle into the apartment downstairs hallway and stilled my voice with stuffing a dirty handkerchief in my mouth. From a distance the next day we saw fires and learned that Jewish books (any book written by Jewish authors) were being burned in the streets. The smoke and flames seemed to be reaching the heavens. We must never, never forget Kristallnacht and the everlasting destruction and death that followed! Shalom u’vracha." Being blackmailed over a pair of ice skates is nothing compared to the horrors that Falk endured, and one can only admire her determination through her words and profession to help others. It's astounding.

Each of these stories has one thing in common... the fact that - with the exception of Cavell, who sadly didn't make it out of the war alive - these people fought through their hardships and persevered, just like all great skaters do. Whether we skate or not, there's a lesson in that we all too easily seem to forget. The world may be cruel at times, but whatever it may throw our way we have it in our hearts to soldier on and keep on living.

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of the figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

Ethel Muckelt: The Oldest Olympic Women's Figure Skating Medallist In History


Many unique stories colour the fabric of figure skating's history but perhaps none so literally as Ethel Muckelt. Born May 30, 1885, Ethel was the youngest daughter of Mary Ann (Hanway) and John Muckelt. She had two older brothers (John and Richard), four older sisters (Bertha, Annie, Edith and Lily) and two younger brothers (Frank and Harold). Although it's incredibly hard to wrap your head around having that many mouths to feed, the 1891 UK Census tells us that the family lived at 112 Edge Lane, Stretford in Manchester, England. Manchester's wealth was actually built on the textile industry and the Muckelt family were right at the center of that boom. Out of their home, Standish House, John Muckelt ran Logan, Muckelt & Co. and manufactured and exported indigo blue dyes and printers for the African textile market.


By age fifteen, Ethel was living in a boarding school in Heaton Norris Parish and while she studied, developed an interest in figure skating. Honing her craft at the Manchester Ice Palace in Cheetham Hill, her life would have changed drastically when her father passed away in 1904 at the age of fifty seven and her two oldest brothers were forced to take over the family business. However, the 1911 UK Census tells us that Ethel continued to live comfortably in Sale, Cheshire (not far from Manchester) and focus attention on skating. She benefited from geography. Manchester's rink was the only one open in England during the Great War, as many were converted to munitions factories or used for storage. The famous Westminster Ice Rink wouldn't reopen until 1927 and living in Sale would have absolutely offered her training opportunities other skaters in England wouldn't have had at the time.

Ethel Muckelt and Kathleen Shaw

Although Ethel competed regularly in singles competitions at home in England (her main competition being Kathleen Shaw), BIS historian Elaine Hooper asserted, "Although Ethel did skate singles, we regard her as a pairs skater." Her first international competition was indeed in pairs. She finished fifth with Sidney Wallwork at the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp, Belgium at the age of thirty-four. When that partnership dissolved, she entered the 1923 World Figure Skating Championships in Vienna, finishing in last place behind Herma Szabo and Gisela Reichmann of Austria and Sweden's Svea Norén. One would think that in her late thirties, Ethel would have been discouraged and give up but this she was actually just getting started.

Ethel Muckelt and Jack Ferguson Page

This late bloomer forged a partnership with Jack Ferguson Page and entered the pairs event at the 1924 Winter Olympics in Chamonix, France. They finished just off the podium finish in fourth but earned their only first place vote from British judge Herbert Ramon Yglesias. No national bias there! Ethel wasn't done there. She entered the women's competition as well and won the Olympic bronze medal behind Szabo and American Beatrix Loughran. Her medal win was absolutely credited to her top three finish in the school figures, as she finished seventh of the eight competitors in free skating. In all credit to her ability as a free skater though, if you compare the video of her free skating performance in Chamonix to her pairs performance with Jack, it's like watching two different skaters. She seemed far more polished and at ease skating pairs. In fact, at the 1924 World Championships, Ethel and Jack had the best international result of their career together in winning the silver medal, receiving praise for their fine shadow skating.

Ethel Muckelt and Jack Ferguson Page

Ethel's last appearance at the World Championships as a singles skater was in 1925. After finishing a disappointing fifth, she focused her attention entirely on her pairs career with Jack. Together, they won the Johnson Trophy for pairs skating in England (donated by two-time World Champions James and Phyllis Johnson) an incredible nine times together while Jack continued to skate singles with varying success. However, T.D. Richardson told an amusing anecdote about Ethel's partner: "He was an extremely fine school figure-skater, but he had absolutely no musical ear at all the sort of man who has to be told to stand up when the National Anthem is being played. While this was undoubtedly a great handicap he was, on the whole, badly treated by Continental and World judges. I had him first on my card at Davos in 1927, when he was the only skater who did not fall at least once most of them, including the winner, were tumbling about in the high wind and driving snow. But nothing could disturb Jack Page, and as Böckl the winner himself said afterwards: 'If ever anyone deserved the title Jack did so on that occasion.'"


After finishing sixth at the 1926 World Championships, Ethel and Jack reappeared at the 1928 Winter Olympics in St. Moritz, Switzerland. By this time, Jack was twenty-eight and Ethel forty-two. They skated exceptionally well at this event, but placed only seventh out of thirteen teams. Perhaps the most special moment of their careers came at the World Championships in London that followed, when they finished fourth and skated in front of the King and Queen of England. The July 3, 1928 issue of the "Cumberland Argus And Fruitgrowers Advocate" noted that "when they appeared they were enthusiastically applauded" by the royals. An interesting anecdote from that particular competition came from this very same article, which noted that after the competition concluded, Jack, Maribel Vinson, Sonja Henie and Willy Böckl teamed up to give an exhibition of fours skating for the audience and dignitaries present.


Although those 1928 World Championships were the last time Ethel would compete internationally, she continued to compete (and win) domestically in pairs skating with Jack into the thirties.

Charles Campbell Emmett, M.P. and Ethel Muckelt in 1935

After living in Timperley (also not far from Manchester), Ethel moved to the affluent area of Altrincham in Greater Manchester and became a national and international level skating judge. Among her international assignments were the 1939 World Championships held in Budapest, Hungary just months before World War II broke out.

Fabric samples from Logan, Muckelt & Co.

The War obviously slowed Ethel's judging career, but her family's business survived, selling both dyes and dress fabric in West Africa both during and after the War. Articles from the "Kenya Gazette" assert that her family's business continued to operate in Nairobi well into the sixties. However, after surviving the horrific air raids of The Manchester Blitz, Ethel passed away a "spinster" (according to the England & Wales, National Probate Calendar Index of Wills and Administrations, 1858-1966) on December 13, 1953 at the age of sixty-eight at the General Hospital in Altrincham. She remains to this day, at the age of thirty-eight, the oldest woman to win an Olympic medal in figure skating history .

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of the figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

The Luminous Lottie Dod

Pioneering female skating stars are no stranger to Skate Guard if the glimpses at the contributions to the art of Madge Syers and Mabel Davidson were any example. This particular blog looks at the story of an equally unconventional pioneer in skating, whose contributions to sports in general are quite frankly nothing short of mind blowing.

Charlotte "Lottie" Dod was born September 24, 1871 in Bebington, Merseyside, England and was the youngest of Joseph and Margaret Dod's four children. Joseph Dod was originally from Liverpool and had amassed a fortune in the cotton trade, and this wealth afforded Lottie and her siblings the luxury of never having to work a day in their lives. Privately educated by tutors and governesses, the Dod children all found time to pursue their mutual interest in recreation and sports. Annie Dod, Lottie's sister excelled in tennis, golf, billiards and like her sister, skating. Tony Dod was an archer, golfer and chess player. William Dod won the gold medal at the 1908 Summer Olympics in archery (Men's double York round) in a field of twenty seven. However, it was Lottie who would become known as "The Little Wonder" and be recognized by The Guinness Book Of World Records which once named her the all-time most versatile female athlete, a distinction she now shares with Babe Didrickson Zaharias.

What earned Lottie this honor? Before I get to her skating accomplishments, I want to start with a look at everything else. In 1887, she won her first of five Wimbledon tennis tournaments on her first try at the age of fifteen. She founded a field hockey team and soon became captain of that too. She later found herself on England's national team, beating Ireland in an 1899 game. Who scored the winning goals? You guessed it - Lottie! She helped establish a golf club and won the British Ladies Amateur Golf title in 1904. In 1908, she joined her brother in competing in archery at the Summer Olympics, taking home the silver medal in the women's double National round. She also enjoyed horseback riding. Oh, I'm just getting started! Those were just the summer sports.

Women's Double National Round competition in Archery at the 1908 Summer Olympics

Lottie made her way to St. Moritz, Switzerland, the winter sport (and skating) mecca during that era. While there, she became the first woman to complete the toboggan course on St. Moritz's world famous Cresta Run. Harry Stone's book "Ski Joy: The Story Of Winter Sports" explains "there was even an attempt in 1896 at playing cricket on skates. St. Moritz, always seeking out rivals, challenged Davos. Ladies included at the St. Moritz team starred Lottie Dod, a five times winner at Wimbledon. She more than proved her worth by taking five wickets for four runs." She also competed in curling. Okay, this woman is Wonder Woman, is she not? I'm telling you! This is insane!

Her accomplishments as a skater were in themselves pretty damn impressive. In 1896, she passed the St. Moritz Ladies' Skating Test in the Continental Style and then returned the next year and took the St. Moritz Men's Skating Test and passed that with flying colors too. Jean Williams' book "A Contemporary History of Women's Sport, Part One: Sporting Women, 1850-1960" tells us a tiny bit more about her skating achievement (which would have been HUGE and probably quite controversial at that time): "Dod was coached by Harold Topham to pass the men's St. Moritz skating test, training for at least two hours a day over two months in the winter of 1886-1887". Although that doesn't tell us a lot about her interest in skating, it does give us an important clue.

Lottie Dod taking the St. Moritz Men's Skating Test in 1887

Who was Harold Topham? Not "any old skating coach". He was a British mountaineer. Guess what Lottie started doing while she was in St. Moritz and wasn't skating? Mountaineering. In February 1896, she ascended Piz Zupo (four thousand and two metres), a mountain in the Bernina Range in Switzerland and Italy with Elizabeth Main (another female mountaineer and photographer) and a Swiss guide. After a long family cycling trip in Italy that took in three cities, Lottie and brother Tony headed to Norway and climbed several mountains. Watch out Julie Andrews... I think Lottie looked into the future and took that advice about "climbing every mountain" quite literally.

Lottie's non-sporting accomplishments are also absolutely worth mention. She was an accomplished contralto singer who performed with the London Oriana Madrigal Society, a piano and banjo player and during World War I received a Red Cross Gold Medal for her service at a military hospital in Speen. She also worked with youth clubs in Great Britain, including the Girl Guides, whom she taught piano and part singing.

Interestingly, Dod wasn't the only athlete to make considerable strides in multiple sports. New Zealand's Corinne Gilkison not only won national titles in ladies, pairs skating and ice dancing in her country in 1947 and 1948, but she also won several national speed skating titles, the 1948 New Zealand Women's Skiing Championships, was runner-up in her country's Nationals in doubles tennis and won two Otago Bronze Golf Championships.

Attending every Wimbledon tennis event until she was in her late eighties, Dod died at eighty eight in a nursing home in Sway, Hampshire, never having married. Amy Nutt's Sports Illustrated article "Wimbledon's First Wunderkind" purports a tale surrounding her death that I was absolutely unable to substantiate but if true makes for quite a movie-worthy ending to a life well lived: "It is said that at the time of her death, on June 27, 1960, 88-year-old Charlotte Dod was listening to the 83rd Wimbledon Championships on her radio in a nursing home in Sway, near England's southern coast. Only 70 miles away the hydrangeas were in bloom outside the All England Club, and the grass courts inside were worn from nearly a week of constant play. In just a few days the women's final would be played. At the end of the match the crowd would stand and cheer just as they had 73 years earlier for Dod..."

This piece originally appeared as part of a six-part podcast series called Axels In The Attic. You can listen to Allison Manley of The Manleywoman SkateCast and Ryan Stevens of Skate Guard's audio version on Podbean or iTunes.

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of the figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

The Kolonnade Shopping Mall Rink Collapse


I remember how absolutely heart wrenching it was to write about The Hallowe'en Holocaust 1963 explosion and I certainly can only imagine how painful researching and writing about the 1961 Sabena Plane Crash must have been for Patricia Shelley Bushman when she penned "Indelible Tracings" and "Indelible Images". When you write about tragedy - even when it's something that has happened years ago - the human element of the story tends you reach out and grip you. Here's the thing about every tragedy though. The indomitable spirit of those who do survive and are involved in the rescue efforts always seems to remind us of the fact that no matter what cards life deals us or how much bad there is in the world, there are GOOD people out there.

On December 20, 2001, the Kolonnade Shopping Mall in a suburb of Pretoria called Montana in South Africa was packed with people doing their last minute holiday shopping. The mall's ice rink was teaming with young skaters and their parents celebrating their Christmas break with a much needed skate when seemingly seemingly inexplicably, there was a huge boom that sounded to many eyewitnesses like an earthquake. The two hundred and seventy square foot section of the mall's second floor and roof directly over the rink collapsed. Initially, fifty people were trapped in the rubble... including a nine-month old baby. The power failed and icy water made conditions even more unbearable for those trapped.

I want to give you a sense of just how scary things were for the skaters and their families that day. The December 21, 2001 edition of The Star-News explained that "Twenty-one people were seriously injured... 'It was much like the World Trade Center, dense dust and people running,' said Dr. George Michael Scharfs, who was near the rink with his wife and children when the second floor of the Kolonnade Shopping Center dropped onto the lower-level ice rink. Police said three people were hospitalized with critical injuries and eighteen others with serious injuries, including concussions and lacerations. Many more were cut by shards of glass from a shattered rink wall... Dr. Scharfs said he helped rescue a 2-year old girl pinned beneath a steel post... Parents frantically tried to dig their children out of the rubble. They were joined by about three hundred police and soldiers."

However horrific the scene at that South African day just months after the September 11 attacks in New York, the stories of everyday people to risked their own safety to help strangers on that day were every bit as awe inspiring. The December 21 edition of The Guardian shared some of those stories of bravery: "One 68-year-old man, Aubrey Welcan, who was playing bingo nearby when the roof caved in, helped pull two children out of the rubble. He told the South African Press Association (Sapa) the water was bitterly cold, and he could not see anything. 'It felt as if my feet would fall off,' he said. 'It was all dust. One could not see in front of you.' Marius Du Plessis rushed to the scene after hearing of the collapse on the radio. His 21-year-old son Morne was working in a clothing store near the ice rink. 'I have been trying to contact my son on his mobile phone, but there is only voice mail,' Mr Du Plessis told Reuters. Shiraaz Osman, who owned a shop above the rink, said he pulled his eight-year-old son Yusuf out moments before the roof collapsed. 'My son was on his way to the store. I saw the floor cracking and I rushed him outside. If it had been two minutes later we would have been in there,' said Osman. 'Outside, I hear a mega-loud bang and saw people running.' He said there was nothing left of his store. 'There is only water.' Dries Strydom said his two-year-old daughter and mother-in-law were sitting next to the rink when the roof fell on them. 'They did not know what happened. They just heard a loud bang.' The young girl was trapped for about an hour-and-a-half. Mary Kekane said her mother, sons, sister and niece were Christmas shopping when the roof collapsed on them. 'As result of the impact, they told me, they fell to the bottom floor.'" The Kekane's were freed by emergency personnel although Mary Kekane's young daughter had a nasty gash on her forehead and her mother suffered a back injury. The injury toll by the end of it all climbed to between forty five and fifty, depending on which accounts you read.

Although miraculously no one died in the Kolonnade Shopping Mall rink collapse, it was later revealed by the Tshwane City Council that an occupational permit had not been issued for that section of the mall but they had it up opened two months before the disaster anyway. The fact that the wrong steel was used and the rink's main supporting girder gave way was the determined as the ultimate cause of the accident. In eProp Commercial Property News, South African Institution Of Civil Engineers President Ron Watermeyer reflected on the bigger picture of the 2001 disaster (which ironically wasn't the ONLY similar incident at that time): "I would venture to suggest that South Africa's buildings are only as safe as is the competence and integrity of the engineers entrusted to certify compliance with the national building regulations. In South Africa, the tendency has been to confuse competence with professional registration. Professional registration is intended to manage integrity and to recognise the attainment of minimum standards of education and training and an ability to work independently. It does not assess competence to verify that a building complies with performance-based building regulations."

Regardless of who or what was to blame, the fact that everyone managed to make it out of that rink that day alive is really nothing short of incredible. Freak things happen in this world and we never know when they will... but how we respond and how we fight back when we are faced with the most horrific of challenges shows us just what we are made of. In Pretoria, they REBUILT that Olympic size rink and got back out there and skated on it until the rink was relocated to The Grove Mall in 2013. No matter how bad things get in life, there's one thing you can count on: you just can't keep a skater from the ice.

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of the figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

The First Figure Skating Competitions In Africa


When I started learning a little about the very first international figure skating competition held in Africa, I was just dying to learn more and more about this historic milestone... and believe me, the story of this event did not disappoint. I want to start by saying that owe a huge thanks to Irvine Green and the South African Ice Skating Association for their invaluable assistance in helping me bring this particular blog to you!

Okay, let's start with the basics. Although the 1947 South African Championships in Africa were the first official figure skating competition to be held in Africa, they of course were not an international affair. It wasn't until three decades later, when the South African Ice Skating Association organized an international event in 1973 that skaters from outside of South Africa would travel to the country to compete. This was huge stuff. Due to the political situation in the country, the ISU had as of the late sixties stopped accepting entries from the country at the World Championships and Olympics and this of course was in response to the apartheid in the country. That didn't stop South Africa from bringing the world to Johannesburg to compete at this small international meet that featured nineteen skaters from South Africa, the U.S., Luxembourg, West Germany, Austria and Great Britain.

Carlton Sky Rink, December 1974 (Irvine Green photo)

The success of the 1973 event led to the first Skate Safari competition, which was first held from April 2-4, 1975. In an effort to forge ties with the ISU, the guest of honour was the organization's then First Vice President John Shoemaker. The event also marked the first visit to the country by esteemed London sportswriter Howard Bass. Two other factors contributed greatly to making the event a success, the first being the introduction of television to the country that year and the second being the fact that 1975 was the first year that the South African federation employed a public relations director. The event got significant publicity and media attention... but the real question was to whether the skaters would succeed or were be haunted by past failures. I forgot to mention where in Johannesburg this competition was held! Remember the haunted Carlton Hotel Sky Rink from last year's Skate Guard Hallowe'en Spooktacular? You got it!
Courtesy South African Ice Skating Association Archives

Over twenty skaters from Austria, Great Britain, South Africa the U.S. and West Germany participated in Skate Safari in 1975. Unsurprisingly, the largest contingent came from the host country. The event was presided over by ISU referees Pierette Devine and Max Staub and judges were Ludwig Gassner of Austria, Mollie Phillips of Great Britain, Estelle Daniel, Gerald Hansmeyer and Sylvia Strasheim of South Africa, Elaine DeMore of the U.S. and Erika Schiechtl of West Germany. No ice dance competition was held but the other three disciplines were hotly contested.


The pairs event was compromised of five teams: Austria's Michael and Ursula Nemec, Great Britain's Ruth Lindsey and Alan Beckwith, South Africa's Jane Howard and Peter Swemmer, America's Emily Benenson and Jack Courtney and West Germany's Sylvia Jaeckle and Axel Teschemacher. The gold medal went to the only one of the five teams who had competed at the 1975 World Championships in Colorado Springs, the brother/sister team of Ursula and Michael Nemec of Austria, leaving the American and West German teams to finish second and third. It appeared early on that the Commonwealth countries were out of luck. 

In the ladies event, there were eight entries. West Germany was represented by Vera Burding and Petra Wagner, the U.S. by Barbie Smith, South Africa by Lynne Rayner and Marijke Swierstra, Great Britain by Yvonne Kavanagh and Gail Keddie and Austria by Sabine Winkler. The winner was future U.S. Silver Medallist Barbie Smith and the silver medallist West Germany's Petra Wagner. The Commonwealth's luck turned around when British Silver Medallist Yvonne Kavanagh was able to best Gail Keddie, who had defeated her at that year's British Championships and earned the sole British ladies spot at Worlds.


The men's field was comprised of Austrian Gerhard Hubmann, West Germany's Gert-Walter Graebner, South Africa's David Dobbie, Danny Dreyyer and Johannes Potgieter and two incredible men's skaters who would both go on to win medals at the 1980 Winter Olympic Games in Lake Placid... none other than Robin Cousins and Charlie Tickner. The event was a memorable early face-off between the future rivals. In the school figures, Tickner gained an edge he was able to maintain when Cousins faltered on a double axel/double loop combination in the short program. Although Cousins bounced back and won the long program with a triple salchow, triple toe and double axels in one of the best free skating performances he'd ever given to that point, he ultimately lost overall to Tickner in a 3-2 split. The bronze went to West Germany's Gert-Walter Graebner, who would go on to win his only West German title the next year and later become an orthopedic surgeon in Cologne.

Courtesy South African Ice Skating Association Archives

In his book "Skating For Gold", Cousins reflected on his 1975 Skate Safari experience: "Almost immediately after arriving home from Colorado Springs, I found myself being put on a South African Airways plane to Johannesburg, to compete in that city's second international competition and the first to be called Skate Safari. Various national associations had been invited to send teams, to compete in Johannesburg and then, after a safari tour around the Kruger National Park, to go on a tour of other South African cities. I was thrilled at being asked to go such a long way from home and to such a beautiful place as South Africa. It seems such a tragedy that the people should be troubled by so much political controversy. The competition was very well organized, and for the second time, I came up against Charlie, the eventual winner. I was placed second, but had the satisfaction of winning both the short and long free skating programmes. Thus, I collected one gold and two silver medals - for winning the free, coming second in the figures and second overall. It was my first senior international medal for figures and my first international free skating gold. So what started out as a competition which I was expected just to go and enjoy, without any expectations, ended up as a very rewarding international medal 'picker-upper'. The tour afterward took us to some beautiful places. We had four days in Durban to spend on the beach before our first exhibition show at the local rink, followed by similarly fascinating visits to Port Elizabeth, Pretoria and Cape Town." 

Although none of the South African skaters who competed in the 1973 or 1975 events were able to really keep up with the high standard of skating put out there by their international guests, for the vast majority this event would prove to be their Olympics as the opportunities for these skaters to go elsewhere and compete was just not a possibility in the political climate at the time.

1977 South African Champion Lynne Rayner at the Sky Rink holding the trophy for the Highest Free Mark

Skate Safari would continue to be held sporadically over the years and even be, in its eighth time being held, included as an ISU Junior Grand Prix event during the 2008/2009 season, when two of my past Skate Guard interview victims (Ricky Dornbush and Alexe Gilles) won gold medals. I've had a chance to interview some wonderful skaters from South Africa in the past but I've never visited, even though that's one place on my 'bucket list' I'd just love to go. I will unashamedly admit I'm a big fan of The Amazing Race and I'll never forget when the teams visited Victoria Falls on the show's very first season just being amazed with the beauty and diversity of southern African countries. Hopefully someday I can coordinate that bucket list visit with a Skate Safari competition. A sister can dream!

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of the figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.

Zebras, Diamonds And Melting Ice Rinks In South Africa


In the next three Skate Guard blogs, we will be taking a trip through South Africa's unique figure skating history! We'll get the party started by meeting a very unique figure in that sport's history: Josephine Dale Lace.

Back in times of yore, to call someone eccentric was often a disparaging way of saying "they have more money than they know what to do with and they aren't spendng in in a way that's socially acceptable" but sometimes the other implication of the word - that the person is a little outrageous - was also true... and I love outrageous personally. There are a lot of stories about Josephine because she wore a lot of hats during her life. A Johannesburg socialite who was married three times (twice to the same man), Josephine was at one time a would-be actress who went to London, England and was purported to be a mistress to King Edward VII! When she wasn't romantically linked to members of both British and South African high society (as she often was), she was devoted to a lavish life in South Africa afforded by her husband Captain John Dale Lace, who was a gold and diamond mining magnate. The Dale Lace's lived in a ostentatious Parktown mansion called Northwards and Josephine would have servants blow a bugle when she left the house, take milk baths in a marble tub and was often seen travelling in a cart pulled by four zebras. Yes, you read that right... zebras. Later in life when De Beers affected its monopoly over the diamond trade, things started to take a downhill turn for the power couple. The entire west wing of Northwards mansion burned in a fire believed to have started in the kitchen and the Dale Lace's lost their fortune. They moved first to England and then, later to Boschkop, north of Johannesburg. When Josephine died in 1937, she left mysterious instructions that "her body should be cremated at night and her ashes cast upon the wind". Now that you have a brief synopsis of Josephine Dale Lace's story, I want to explain her fascinating and historic connection to skating.


During the winters, Mrs. Dale Lace would travel to the resort town of Engelberg, Switzerland and study the Continental Style of skating. She also often travelled to Great Britain and would skate at the Prince's Skating Club with Winston Churchill's mother Lady Randolph Churchill. Although I doubt she brought her zebra drawn carriage on the road with her, I don't doubt for a second that she just adored skating. She actually loved it so much she was dead set on introducing the sport to the upper crust of South African society. She financed the building of a rink that was situated on Eloff Street in Johannesburg at the South African Party's club. It was so big it apparently took up an entire city block but only lasted for less than a year because without proper ice refrigeration, the ice was constantly melting and it proved to be a huge money drain... especially in a time period where the Dale Lace's vast fortune was melting as fast as the ice at their 'Niagara' rink.  

It would be over two decades until the novelty of ice skating would return to South Africa. In the uncharacteristically chilly January 1937, an ice rink was set up during The Empire Exhibition. A newspaper account of the rink at The Empire Exhibition reads: "The present Hall Of Transport has been selected as the site of this installation. The Rink will have several entrances of its own, nearly a quarter of an acre will be actually under ice, apart from a very large space, which will accommodate 2,500 spectators. An up-to-date restaurant will be run in conjunction with it. Many thrills will be here; no less than three visiting hockey teams will be competing for premier honours on the ice-field. In addition to this, Scotland is sending over a team to teach us the ancient game of Curling - I can assure you great things await all visitors, who are lucky enough to gain admission to the ice rink; many thrills and incidentally many falls will be witnessed." Ultimately, unlike the Niagara this rink proved so successful and popular that the whole setup was moved to Springfield, Johannesburg under the name 'the Wembley Ice Rink' and that same year the South African Ice Skating Association was born. Ready for more South African skating history? Stay tuned to the next Skate Guard blog! We're just get started, sweetie.

Skate Guard is a blog dedicated to preserving the rich, colourful and fascinating history of figure skating. Over ten years, the blog has featured over a thousand free articles covering all aspects of the sport's history, as well as four compelling in-depth features. To read the latest articles, follow the blog on FacebookTwitterPinterest and YouTube. If you enjoy Skate Guard, please show your support for this archive by ordering a copy of the figure skating reference books "The Almanac of Canadian Figure Skating", "Technical Merit: A History of Figure Skating Jumps" and "A Bibliography of Figure Skating": https://skateguard1.blogspot.com/p/buy-book.html.