History of Skiing

The oldest ski on record, being 1.10 m. long and 20 cm. broad c. 2500 BC was found in a bog in Hoting (Sweden). The oldest pictorial representation of skiing is a carving on a rock at Roedoey, Tjoettta in N. Norway, showing two men on skis hunting elks, c. 2000 BC. Early skiing was not of a recreational nature but basically used as a means of transport, hunting or during miliary manoeuvres. Arnold Lunn (1952)1 has provided research of the formation of early clubs which were primarily devoted to the advancement of the sport eg.

1861
Norway - Trysil Shooting and Ski Club
1861
Telemark Ski Club
1867
La Porte (California)
1877
Oslo, Norway (the Norwegian Ski Association was formed in 1883)
1879
Stockholm (Sweden)
1891
Munich (Germany)
1893
Glarus (Switzerland)
1900
Foundation of Ishpenning Club which "is the oldest ski club in the U.S.A. with a continuous history to the present day." (Lunn 1952)
1903
Ski Club of Great Britain
1909
Kosciusko Alpine Club, which remains Australia’s oldest, continuously operating ski club and is affiliated with the Ski Club of Great Britain

 

References:

1 Lunn, A. (1952) The Story of Ski-ing, London: Eyre & Spottiswoode

Hunter, P. "History of the Australian Ski-ing Clubs", Australian Ski Year Book, 1928.

Kosciusko Alpine Club Handbooks: 1968, 1972, 1974, 1979 and 1989.

Kosciusko Alpine Club Handbook Inserts: 1974/75, 1976/77.

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