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Uphill
History
Boyne Mountain, the Midwest’s largest ski resort, has a further
distinction: it is virtually a museum of lifts. The collection started
in 1948, according to lift historian Kirby Gilbert, when Boyne’s
shrewd, machinery-savvy owner Everett Kircher bought the original 1936
Dollar Mountain chairlift, the world’s first, from Sun Valley.
He had it dismantled and then moved it by rail car to his brand new
Boyne Mountain ski resort in northern Michigan.
Three years later, Kircher converted the lift from a single
to a double chair. You can still ride it up the Hemlock Run, as former
President Gerald Ford used to do when he was a Michigan Congressman
in the 1950s. The top and bottom terminals are the originals made for
the world’s first chairlift.
One day in 1962, as Kircher was planning his new Boyne Highlands ski
area, he and his wife found themselves squeezed on a double chair with
their six-year-old son John, who today is president of Montana’s
Big Sky ski resort. Why shouldn’t there be a three-seater chairlift?
Kircher asked. And so the Riblet company made one for him. You can still
ride it today on the Heather Run at Boyne Highlands.
The triple chair was so popular that Kircher decided to ratchet the
chairlift up by another seat, and a year later the Heron company installed
the world’s first quad lift on Boyne Mountain. It’s still
in service on Boyne’s Meadow run.
Not to be outdone, even by himself, Kircher in the early 1990s learned
of a six-seat chairlift in Quebec, and for the winter of 1992-93 the
Doppelmayr company built the first six-seater in the U.S.A. at Boyne
Mountain. Today, you and five friends can ride it up the McLouth slopes.
-- John Fry
Previously: KT-22, Squaw's Olympic Mountain
Whistler/Blackcomb: Skiing
the 2010 Olympic mountains
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| JOURNAL OF ISHA, THE INTERNATIONAL
SKIING HISTORY ASSOCIATION
The International Skiing
History Association is a not-for-profit corporation, whose mission is
to preserve and advance the knowledge of ski history and to increase
public awareness of the sport's heritage.
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Copyright 2004-2010 International Skiing History Association
Reproduction in any medium forbidden without prior written consent.
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