Anne Heggtveit

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Anne Heggtveit
— Alpine skier  —
Ann Heggtveit 1960.jpg
Heggtveit with her Olympic gold medal
Disciplines Downhill, Giant Slalom,
Slalom, Combined
Club Ottawa Ski Club
Born (1939-01-11) January 11, 1939 (age 85)
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Height 5 ft 3 in (1.60 m)
Olympics
Teams 2 – (1956, 1960)
Medals 1 (1 gold)
World Championships
Teams 4 – (1954, 1956, 1958, 1960)
    includes two Olympics
Medals 2 (2 gold)

Anne Heggtveit, CM (born January 11, 1939) is a former alpine ski racer from Canada. She was an Olympic gold medalist and double world champion in 1960.[1][2]

Early years

Born in Ottawa, Ontario, Heggtveit was raised in New Edinburgh, a northeast suburb. She was encouraged into alpine skiing by her father, Halvor Heggtveit (1907–1996),[3] a Canadian cross-country champion who qualified for Winter Olympics in 1932,[4] but did not compete.[5] His parents had emigrated from Norway to North Dakota.[6] She learned to ski at Camp Fortune ski area[7][8] in the nearby Gatineau Hills of Quebec, northwest of Ottawa, and was a student at Lisgar Collegiate Institute in Ottawa. Heggtveit was a ski racing prodigy, invited at age seven to serve as a forerunner to a downhill race at Lake Placid in 1946.[9]

Racing career

At the age of 15 in 1954, Heggtveit first gained international attention when she became the youngest winner ever of the Holmenkollen giant slalom event in Norway.[10][11] She also won the slalom and giant slalom at the United States national junior championships, and finished ninth in the downhill and seventh in the slalom at the World Championships in March at Åre, Sweden.[12][13] After leading the top half of the giant slalom, she fell twice near the finish was well back in 31st,[14] which dropped her final placing in the combined to 14th.[13]

Although Heggtveit suffered from several injuries between 1955 and 1957,[5] Heggtveit still earned a spot on Canada's Olympic team at age 17 in 1956 at Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy.[15]

At a time when Europeans dominated alpine skiing, Heggtveit was inspired by the breakthrough performance of teammate Lucile Wheeler of Quebec, who won Olympic bronze in the downhill in 1956, and three medals at the World Championships in 1958 at Bad Gastein, Austria. Wheeler won gold in the downhill and giant slalom events, and took silver in the combined. Heggtveit finished in the top ten in three events, with an eighth in the slalom, seventh in the downhill, and sixth in the combined.[16][17][18][19]

At the 1960 Winter Olympic Games in Squaw Valley, California, Heggtveit won Canada's first-ever Olympic skiing gold medal.[15][20] Her victory in the Olympic slalom also made her the first non-European to win the world championship in slalom and combined. Heggtveit was the first North American to win the Arlberg-Kandahar Trophy, the most prestigious and classic event in alpine skiing.

World Championship results

  Year    Age   Slalom  Giant
 Slalom 
Super-G Downhill Combined
1954 15 7 31 not run 9 14
1956 17 30 29 22
1958 19 8 15 7 6
1960 21 1 12 12 1

From 1948 through 1980, the Winter Olympics were also the World Championships for alpine skiing.
At the World Championships from 1954 through 1980, the combined was a "paper race" using the results of the three events (DH, GS, SL).

Olympic results Olympic rings with white rims.svg

  Year    Age   Slalom  Giant
 Slalom 
Super-G Downhill Combined
1956 17 30 29 not run 22 not run
1960 21 1 12 12

Honors

Heggtveit was awarded the Lou Marsh Trophy as Canada's outstanding athlete of 1960. She was also the first recipient of the John Semmelink Memorial Award in November 1961,[21] named for her fallen teammate.[22][23] Her performance on the world stage was again recognized in 1976 when she was made a member of the Order of Canada, the country's highest civilian honor.[2]

Heggtveit was inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1960, the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame in 1971, and was among the first group inducted into the new Canadian Ski Hall of Fame in 1982.

Heggtveit has a road named after her at the Blue Mountain Ski Resort in the Town of the Blue Mountains, west of Collingwood, Ontario. She also has a ski run named after her at Camp Fortune, an extremely difficult double black diamond run.[24]

Anne Heggtveit was inducted into the Ontario Sports Hall of Fame in 1995.[25]

Personal

Following her competitive career, Heggtveit married James Ross Hamilton in August 1961,[26][27] and resided in Quebec. They had two children and later relocated to nearby Vermont in the United States.[21][28][29] She was later an accountant and photographer.[6]

References

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External links