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1943 Stevens Pass ski-chase film
- Lowell_Skoog
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Hank Seidelhuber (the skier in all photos except the one at lower-right) eludes the hounds in the 1943 "fox chase" filmed at Stevens Pass.
With Stevens Pass celebrating its 75th anniversary, here are scenes from a ski-chase film made at the pass during the 1942-43 ski season. That was only the sixth season of operation at Stevens, following installation of the first rope tow in 1937-38.
The ski-chase film was made by Harold D. Smith, probably in cooperation with the Penguin Ski Club. According to the ending credits, the film was unfinished due to World War II.
Notes about the film and a complete video can be found on The Mountaineers History Committee website:
mountaineers.org/history/notes/movie/hds...3-stevens-chase.html
Thanks go to Tom Allen of the Ancient Skiers for donating a VHS videotape of this film to The Mountaineers. The location of the original color film is unknown. (If anybody knows more, please contact me.)
This film shows the influence on early Northwest skiing of ski-chase films made by Arnold Fanck and Hannes Schnieder in Europe a decade earlier. In particular, see the 1931 film, "Der Weisse Rausch," a.k.a. "White Ecstasy." That film can be purchased on DVD (with subtitles) from the New England Ski Museum. A rather poor video is available on the following Google site:
video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8714331582485135777
Stevens Pass ski fans may be interested in the 75-year history book recently announced by the ski area:
www.stevenspass.com/Stevens/tickets-pass...5th-anniversary.aspx
The 1943 Stevens Pass ski chase stars Hank Seidelhuber. Here's more about him from a July 13, 2007 obituary in the Seattle Times:
Henry "Hank" Seidelhuber
May 3, 1916 ~ July 10, 2007
Age 91, lived a long and happy life in the Seattle area where he was born. He died after a valiant battle with congestive heart failure at Overlake Hospital in Bellevue.
Last August he celebrated the hundredth anniversary of his company, Seidelhuber Iron Works, which was founded in 1906 by his father, Frank J. Seidelhuber. Working with his wife and family, Hank fabricated metals for thousands of Puget Sound Area landmarks including the original Pike Place Public Market, the aluminum facade on the Volunteer Park Art Museum, Boeing wind tunnels, the nationally distributed Seidelhuber water heater, and the 2001 reconstruction of the Pioneer Square Pergola as well as thousands of public and private projects in Washington and Alaska.
Hank was an avid ski racer with the Penguin Ski Club, racing the Mt. Rainier Silver Skis and Sun Valley Harriman Cup races. He starred in the Penguin Ski Club Ski Chase movie and was a stunt man in "It Happened in Sun Valley," performing ski scenes acting as both Sonia Heney and Milton Berle. He also competed in ski jumping and loved mountain climbing. He and Ome Diaber conducted a mountain search for a WWII military aircraft crashed in the Olympic Mountains.
At Camp Hale, Colorado, Hank taught skiing to the 10th Mountain Division troops in preparation for the WWII assault of the Italian Alps. He later served as First Lieutenant in the South Pacific and Koreo. He relished recent reunions with his friends in the 10th Mountain Division.
A charismatic life force and inventor of sorts, Hank had many many friends, and all his life he loved outdoor activities, including golf, fishing, hunting, water skiing, sailing, and he later even enioyed surf sailing and skate boarding.
He will be desperately missed by his loving wife of 64 years, Elsie Nelson Seidelhuber, daughter, Heidi Seidelhuber and son-in-law, Terry Seaman.
A Service will be held in his memory and in witness to the resurrection of Jesus Christ at University Presbyterian Church, 4540 15th Ave. N.E., Seattle at 2:00 p.m., Tuesday, July 17. A Graveside Ceremony will be held at Sunset Hills Memorial Park, 1215 145th Place S.E., Bellevue, 425-746-1400, at 10:30 a.m., Wed., July 18.
Hank's wife Elsie Nelson Seidelhuber passed away just a few weeks ago. Her obituary in the Seattle Times prompted me to contact Tom Allen to track down the film he showed me a decade ago. As time goes by, the value of these old films becomes more acute.
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- hyak.net
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- alecapone
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a must watch for aspiring tele freestylists.
Thanks for the post lowell. Can't wait to get a copy of the 75th anv book.
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