Martha Rockwell (born April 26, 1944) is a retired American cross-country skier and coach, who competed at the Winter Olympic Games in 1972 and 1976. She has been cited in the U.S. as a "pioneer" and a "legend" in women's cross-country skiing, having been the U.S. women's cross-country ski champion 18 times between 1969 and 1975 as part of the first U.S. national cross-country ski team for women.
Video Martha Rockwell
Personal life
Rockwell was born on April 26, 1944 in Providence, Rhode Island to Barbara (née Webb) and Henry Benson "Ben" Rockwell. She graduated from the Putney School, where her father was headmaster, and Bennington College. Rockwell raced in Alpine skiing events in high school at Putney and in cross-country races where she raced on the boys' team under coach, John Caldwell. Upon graduation from college, she briefly pursued a graphic arts career in Manhattan prior to starting her career in cross-country ski racing.
Her October 2000 Vermont civil union and other aspects of her life leading up to it were the subject of coverage in The Washington Post. At the time of The Washington Post story, Rockwell was raising dairy goats in partnership with her sister in Cabot, Vermont.
Maps Martha Rockwell
Athletic career
In her entry with the Vermont Sports Hall of Fame, Rockwell is cited as a "pioneer in the United States in women's cross country skiing".
Soon after the organization of the (then) United States Ski Association women's cross-country ski team in 1966, Rockwell was the first women's national cross-country ski champion. Rockwell and other promising skiers, including Bill Koch, received the attention of coach Marty Hall, who was instrumental in their further development as skiers and their exposure to the international racing circuit. Hall said of Rockwell, "She took our program from zero to Mach 1 in just a couple of years."
She was a member of the USA women's Olympic Nordic ski team in 1972--the first year women competed in cross-country skiing in the Winter Olympic Games. She raced in the 5K, 10K and Nordic relay events at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Japan. She also competed at the 1976 Winter Olympics. She won 18 U.S. championships in the period, 1969 through 1975. Rockwell's FIS international racing career included a 1973 win in a 7.5K event at Castelrotto, Italy, followed by five wins in six European races in 1975, making her 10th overall in the FIS Cross-Country World Cup standings. Rockwell retired from ski racing after her 1976 season.
In 1979, Rockwell set the women's record for running the Mount Washington Road Race at 1:19:14, a record which stood until 1985.
Rockwell coached the women's cross-country ski team of Dartmouth College from 1979 to 1987.
Honors
Rockwell was designated "U.S. Nordic Skier of the Year" for 1975 and 1976 by Ski Magazine; in its 1995 Skiing for Women issue the same magazine cited Rockwell as a skiing "legend", along with Andrea Mead Lawrence and Maria Bogner. She was inducted into the U.S. Ski Hall of Fame in 1986 and into the Vermont Ski Museum Hall of Fame in 2005. She was inducted into the Vermont Sports Hall of Fame in 2017, along with former coach and cross-country skier, John Caldwell. Sports Illustrated included Rockwell in a glamor photo shoot of six noted skiers in 1970.
References
Further reading
- Shinn, Peggy (2018). World Class: The Making of the U.S. Women's Cross-Country Ski Team. Lebanon, New Hampshire: University Press of New England. p. 248. ISBN 9781512601817.
- Rosin, Hanna (October 11, 2000). "Same-Sex Union Divides Small Vermont Community". Washington Post. Washington, DC: Washington Post Co.
External link
- Sports Illustrated images of Rockwell and other U.S. skiers in 1970
Source of the article : Wikipedia
