Encyclopedia Dubuque
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DUBUQUE SKI CLUB: Difference between revisions
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DUBUQUE SKI CLUB. Learning | DUBUQUE SKI CLUB. Learning [[SKIING]] in the Swiss Alps near the Austrian border, Ernie Keller came to the United States in 1919. He lived in Dubuque a short time before moving to Chicago. He returned to Dubuque in 1929. Keller began the Dubuque Ski Club in 1931. (1) Everyone over the age of 16 was eligible with the promise of keeping the entry fee at a minimum. Instructors included Ernest Keller and Max Buechlar. (2) | ||
Using the city-built hill on Kaufmann Avenue near Bunker Hill, the longest jump through March 1932 was 62 feet made by Keller. He believed jumps of 80 feet were possible. The club in 1932 had an estimated twenty members. It was believed that more people would have joined had there been a better snowfall during the season. (3) | Using the city-built hill on Kaufmann Avenue near Bunker Hill, the longest jump through March 1932 was 62 feet made by Keller. He believed jumps of 80 feet were possible. The club in 1932 had an estimated twenty members. It was believed that more people would have joined had there been a better snowfall during the season. (3) |
Revision as of 03:44, 29 October 2017
DUBUQUE SKI CLUB. Learning SKIING in the Swiss Alps near the Austrian border, Ernie Keller came to the United States in 1919. He lived in Dubuque a short time before moving to Chicago. He returned to Dubuque in 1929. Keller began the Dubuque Ski Club in 1931. (1) Everyone over the age of 16 was eligible with the promise of keeping the entry fee at a minimum. Instructors included Ernest Keller and Max Buechlar. (2)
Using the city-built hill on Kaufmann Avenue near Bunker Hill, the longest jump through March 1932 was 62 feet made by Keller. He believed jumps of 80 feet were possible. The club in 1932 had an estimated twenty members. It was believed that more people would have joined had there been a better snowfall during the season. (3)
Keller was a member of the Dubuque Jump Club which included Joe Danner, Ernie Mareske, Bill Koch, Frank Darrow, Jack Powers, and Bernadine Lange. In 1962, sponsored by the City Recreation Department, Keller was giving free ski lessons as he had since 1945 the Kaufmann ski hill. (4)
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Source:
1. Brueske, Frank. "Ski Safety Rules Simple," Telegraph Herald, January 1, 1962, p. 14
2. "More Members Are Sought by Ski Club," Telegraph-Herald and Times-Journal, November 13, 1931, p. 4
3. New Ski Hill is in the Spotlight," Telegraph-Herald and Times-Journal, March 24, 1932, p. 14
4. Brueske