Induction Year: 2006

Marthinius “Mark” Strand

Marthinius (Mark or M.A.) Strand, born in 1887, emigrated from Norway in 1910. He has been recognized as the “father of organized skiing.” He established the first ski club in the Intermountain Region – the Norwegian Young Folks Society – in 1915, the same year he staged the first ski jumping tournament in the region. It was the forerunner for numerous Strand-promoted world class jumping competitions in the 1920s and 1930s that attracted more than 10,000 spectators to Ecker Hill.

Strand helped organize the Intermountain Ski Association and was its historian for many years. Later he became vice president and then honorary director for life of the National Ski Association of America (NSA) (now the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association). In 1939 he was one of three men who envisioned a ski lift at Alta’s Collins Gulch, a vision that resulted in his building the first chairlift in Utah. He was a member of the U.S. Olympic Committee and was the U.S. representative at the International Ski Congress in Stockholm, Sweden. He was a ski jumping official for national collegiate and NSA tournaments as well as a board member of the NSA National Ski Museum. When he was inducted into the U.S. National Ski Hall of Fame in 1959 he was called “the foremost man in the Intermountain Ski world.”

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