
Sunday River just celebrated its
50th birthday, Mt Abram will turn 50 this year, Sugarloaf will
be 60 next season, Shawnee Peak is 72. But another Maine company
that once built ski jumps and chairlifts is celebrating 175 years.
Hussey Seating Company, based in North Berwick, is quite well known
for designing seats for NFL stadiums like the Patriots’ Gillette
Stadium and the Sea Dogs’ Hadlock Field, but few know that they
built the first chairlift in the East, and some huge ski jumps.
In 1937, The Winter Sports Engineers, a division of Hussey
Manufacturing, constructed the first chairlift in the East at
Gunstock in New Hampshire. That single chairlift was the second such
ski lift in the country following Sun Valley’s chairlift in Idaho in
1936. The Gunstock (Belknap Ski Area) construction was part of the
C.C.C. and Works Progress Act under President Roosevelt, and
included three ski jumps - the largest was 60-meters. Those jumps
built by the Hussey company still exists today, though the largest
has become a 70-meter. The single chairlift has since been removed;
an authentic single chair is on display at the New England Ski
Museum at the base of Cannon Ski Mountain.
Most skiers know that Maine was a major manufacturer of early ski
equipment – Paris Manufacturing is a well known name for its wooden
skis and sleds. Bass was the first ski boot manufacturer. But not
many are aware that the Berwick-based Hussey company built the
world’s tallest ski jump in the 1939. The monstrous ski jump in
Berlin, New Hampshire, was designed with a 172-foot trestle system
and was placed on top of a hill, it was gauged as a 65-meter jump
and attracted jumpers from Norway and around the world.
According to the Hussey History as read to me by Peter Hussey, now
retired from Hussey Seating Company, Hussey’s Winter Sports
Engineers built ski jumps in Colorado, Australia and Columbia, South
America. In an excerpt from a 1939 ad in the “American Ski Journal,”
Hussey’s Winter Sport Engineers specialized in construction of
bobsled runs, toboggan chutes, ski chairs, slalom courses, and grand
stands for viewing.
This sixth generation family owned company started as a plow company
in 1835, adapting to winter and water sports in the 1930’s, and
eventually seating manufacturing in 1982. “We don’t make chairlifts
anymore,” said Peter Hussey, “but we are still skiers.”
The Hussey family has a proud skiing heritage, Peter was manager of
the Gould Academy ski team when he was a student there, and went on
to ski on The Colby College Ski Team. Now there are five generations
of skiers in the Hussey family,
Sugarloafers in fact, including today’s company president Tim
Hussey whose grandfather Philip started the Winter Sports
Engineering division.
Peter Hussey serves on the Ski Museum of Maine Board of Directors,
and Hussey Seating Company is a major sponsor of their Fireside
Chats, a traveling narrated slideshow documenting the history of
Maine skiing.
Scott Andrews, the Portland ski journalist who researched and
narrates the fireside chats, said, “Hussey Manufacturing, and their
Winter Sports Engineering Service, was at the leading edge of the
ski industry. Hussey engineers constructed some of this country’s
landmark ski facilities in the 1930’s, including the first chairlift
in the east and the world’s tallest ski jump.”
Peter Hussey said, “Scott Andrews is a great adjunct to our Ski
Museum efforts, he is doing so much research for the fireside chats
and helping keep Maine ski history alive.”
The Fireside Chats are rich with Maine ski history, the series
called “Down-Maine and Cross-Country: 140 years of Skiing in Maine”
is being presented throughout the state with fantastic pictures of
ski jumps, like those built by the Hussey company, and Maine ski
areas that no longer exist.
Upcoming Fireside Chats include: Jan. 16 at the Down East Ski Club
at Shawnee Peak, Jan. 21 at Cumberland Historical Society, Jan. 23
at The Sugarloaf Mountain Ski Club, Jan. 28 at Sunday River, and
March 18 at The Sugarloaf Inn.
For a fun day of retro skiing,
The Ski
Museum of Maine will also host the 3rd annual Ski Heritage
Classic at Sugarloaf on Feb. 13 with
an on snow vintage ski parade followed by an après ski reception and
auction. I have attended this fundraiser and can vouch for the
outstanding ski memorabilia up for bid.
Vermont| New Hampshire |Canada | Rockies | Sun n'Sea Travel
All Stories by Heather Burke
All Photography by Greg Burke.
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