McSorley Hill
McSorley Hill Bush Street Ski Jump | |
---|---|
Location | Red Wing, Minnesota, US |
Coordinates | 44°33′38″N 92°31′19″W / 44.56056°N 92.52194°WCoordinates: 44°33′38″N 92°31′19″W / 44.56056°N 92.52194°W |
Opened | 8 February 1887 |
Size | |
K–point | K30 |
Hill record | 31.4 m (103 ft) Torjus Hemmestveit (15 January 1893) |
McSorley Hill (also: Bush Street Ski Jump) was a K30 ski jumping hill located in Red Wing, Minnesota, United States, opened in 1887.
History[]
On 8 February 1887, a ski jumping hill owned by Aurora Ski Club opened with ski jumping competition often cited as first ever on US soil.[1] Mikkjel Hemmestveit set the first ever American record at 37 feet (11.3 metres).
Two official world records in ski jumping were set on this hill. In 1891 Mikkjel Hemmestveit set a record at 102 feet (31.1 metres) and two years later was improved by Torjus Hemmestveit to 102.5 feet (31.4 metres).[2][3]
On 17 February 1894, Torjus Hemmestveit made a world record distance jump at 120 feet (36.6 metres), but he fell and it didn't count as a record.[4][5][6]
Ski jumping world records[]
No. | Date | Name | Country | Metres | Feet |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
#6 | 9 March 1891 | Mikkjel Hemmestveit | Norway | 31.1 | 102 |
#7 | 15 January 1893 | Torjus Hemmestveit | Norway | 31.4 | 103 |
F | 17 February 1894 | Torjus Hemmestveit | Norway | 36.6 | 120 |
Not recognized! Crash at world record distance.
References[]
- ^ Johnson, Frederick L. (2003) Sky Crashers: A History of the Aurora Ski Club Red Wing: Goodhue County Historical Society Press ISBN 9780961719753
- ^ "On Monday, Hemmestveit broke world record at 102 feet (column 1)". Little Falls Transcript. 13 March 1891.
- ^ "A remarkable Feet (page 3, column 5)". Public Ledger. 16 January 1893.
- ^ "A jump of 120 feet (page 2, column 6)". The Weekly Register. 21 February 1894.
- ^ "page 5". Nordisk Tidende. 23 February 1894.
- ^ "page 100". Norsk Idrætsblad. 21 March 1894.
External links[]
- McSorley Hill skisprungschanzen.com
- Red Wing, Minnesota
- Ski jumping venues in the United States
- Landforms of Goodhue County, Minnesota