Luetscher: Snow, Sun and Stars.

Page 1


Contents Prologue by Adolf Ogi: Success and sustainability .. ........................................................................................... 7 Introduction: Taming the great outdoors ............................................................................................................. 8

Pages 11— 41

IN THE BEGINNING WAS THE LIGHT Tuberculosis patients travelled to the Alps to bene�t from its winter climate, and winter sports enthusiasts soon followed. Switzerland: Land of freedom, paradise on earth ................................................................................................ 13 Johannes Badrutt: A technophile who believed in god, guests and the climate ........................................ 14 Skeleton: Ice and steel .................................................................................................................................................. 28 Elizabeth Main: A particularly active guest

...........................................................................................................

32

Melchior Ragetli: From dogsbody to concierge via London ............................................................................. 36 Pages 43 — 67

TWO BOARDS CREATE A REVOLUTION How skiing made more out of a winter in the mountains. Ski fashion: From long skirts to stirrup pants ....................................................................................................... 47 Victor de Beauclair: A ski pioneer from Brazil . . ..................................................................................................... 50 Henry Lunn: The ski pioneer who never skied . . .................................................................................................... 53 The founding years: The 1920s was the decade that launched the classic ski races ................................. 58 Ski school: Skiing goes to school ............................................................................................................................... 65 Pages 69 — 85

GETTING UP THE MOUNTAIN No winter tourism without railways and cableways. Rosa Dahinden: The woman behind the Rigibahn’s winter service............................................................... 77 Arnold Annen: A farmer builds a cable car . . ........................................................................................................... 81 Aeroport St. Moritz: The airport on a lake ............................................................................................................... 82 Pages 87—103

WINTER SPORTS GO OLYMPIC The Winter Olympics held in St. Moritz in 1928 and 1948 were a sign of the increasing social recognition of winter sports. Ice hockey: Tour de Suisse in the eternal ice . . ....................................................................................................... 94 1948 Olympics: The memories of legendary sports reporter Sepp Renggli ............................................... 99 Nino Bibbia: A delivery boy won Olympic gold in skeleton racing – the sport of the rich .................... 102 Pages 105 —129

WINTER SPORTS EVERYWHERE How winter leisure activities and competitions became a national pastime and part of the country’s defence strategy. Bobsled racing: Bob on the tracks and on the streets ......................................................................................... 110 Hollywood in Switzerland: Charlie Chaplin and other stars visit St. Moritz ................................................ 117 Alpine neighbours: Winter tourism takes over the entire Alpine region ..................................................... 122 Giovanni Testa: The saddler who developed a new skiing technique and new business models

. . ......

125


Pages 131—149

GREETINGS FROM PARADISE Posters were the medium of choice for attracting people to winter sports resorts. Badrutt’s bet: A good story makes history .............................................................................................................. 133 St. Moritz’s directors of tourism: Shining guardians of the brand .. .................................................................... 137 Pages 151—167

WINTER SPORTS — A WEALTH OF DESIGN How the production of sports equipment developed from a craft to an industry. Association for Osteosynthesis: Plates and screws instead of disability bene�ts . . ...................................... 155 Karl Molitor: Ski racer and shoe manufacturer

....................................................................................................

156

The Davos sledge: Plain and simply a sledge . . ....................................................................................................... 160 Architecture: Form follows function......................................................................................................................... 164 Pages 169—197

A NEVER-ENDING BOOM Following the Second World War, winter sports experienced a boom that lasted for decades, with skiing at the forefront. Zermatt: One village’s late arrival as a winter sports hot spot . . ....................................................................... 174 Fridli Wyss: The reminiscences of a ski instructor

. . ............................................................................................

181

The Engadin Ski Marathon: A marathon lasts the distance ................................................................................ 186 Walter Gurtner: The master butcher who developed a ski resort . . ................................................................. 191 Art Furrer: A cowboy on skis ....................................................................................................................................... 195 Sapporo is at the heart of Switzerland . . .................................................................................................................. 196 Pages 199— 219

EXTENDING THE WINTER Glacier summer ski areas and snow-making machines extend the winter season, which in some locations is all about luxury. Polo on snow: A summer event adapted to winter

.............................................................................................

Hartly Mathis: The pioneer of gourmet gastronomy on the slopes

................................................................

Gstaad vs. St. Moritz: What unites and distinguishes the two high-society destinations

.......................

205 208 210

Leo Jeker: The Alpine snow-making pioneer . . ..................................................................................................... 215 Pages 221— 235

BACK TO THE ROOTS The snowboard reinvents snow sport, while sleds, ski tours and winter hiking experience a revival. Evelyne Vuilleumier: Snowboarding as a way of life ............................................................................................ 225 Xtreme: How much ice and rock can you handle? . . ............................................................................................ 228 Patrouille des Glaciers: An ironman in the snow.. .................................................................................................. 233

Epilogue: Two sides to every story .......................................................................................................................... 237 A look ahead: Trend researcher David Bosshart on the future of winter tourism .................................. 240 Afterword by David Moran: Britain’s fascination with Switzerland was crucial for winter tourism . 243 Appendix: Notes, Bibliography, Picture credits, Index, Special thanks, Authors and Co-Authors . 245


TAMING THE GREAT OUTDOORS Introduction by Michael Lütscher

One hundred and �fty years ago, the Alps were an undiscovered country for almost everyone born beyond its borders. Buried under ice and snow, an entire world was waiting to be discovered. Although most passes were also used for transporting goods by sledge in winter and the snow certainly helped farmers move tree trunks and hay bales, the slopes and meadows were left untouched. When tourists began to discover the delights of the mountain in summer, the idea of spending the winter at these altitudes was still quite un­ imaginable. The locals in Chur tried to stop Johann Heinrich Mayr, an industrialist from Thurgau, from journeying through the Engadin in the winter of 1834. He would be blinded and freeze to death if he tried, they said. But Mayr, who already had a considerable journey behind him, was determined to escape the fog that clouded the valley; he ignored their advice and discovered a land of brilliant sunshine and crisp, clear air. Heinrich Mayr was only a herald of the changes that were about to descend upon – or rather ascend to – these undiscovered heights. Winter sojourns in the Alps began in 1865 when doctors in England and Germany sent their tuberculosis patients to the Alps for a good long dose of winter sunlight and fresh mountain air. It worked. The patients gradually turned into tourists, who admired the beauty of the winter landscape, described it in countless travel reports and – once they had convalesced – began to actively explore its possibilities. The English indulged in their passion for games and competitions and were soon racing all over the slopes and surfaces on skates and sledges, building ice rinks and tracks, and inventing new sports like bobsleighing and skeleton. The concept of winter sports was born. And when the Norwegian technique of skiing arrived in the Alps, the race to explore and exploit the potential of the snowy slopes began. Small groups of international visitors were the �rst to winter in St. Moritz and Davos. Their numbers rapidly increased. They stayed for months, or even years, and some even set up businesses there. Switzerland in the 19 th century was a country of open borders. The creation of winter tourism was an act of international cooperation, a product of the �rst phase of globalisation in the 19 th century. Doctors and clerics promoted the refreshing 8 Introduction

bene�ts of mountain air on the body and soul, while the local farmers, tradesmen and hoteliers found inventive solutions to meet the needs of these new guests from England, Germany and Holland, who then teamed up with the locals to make their time in the mountains as entertaining as possible. Swiss winter tourism began in the mountains of Graubünden for a number of reasons. Firstly, St. Moritz already had a long tradition as a health resort. Shortly before the concept of winter tourism emerged, the resort’s summer business had experienced a sudden boom, which inspired pioneering hotelier Johannes Badrutt to move there. A second reason was the geographical location of Switzerland. Compared to Scandinavia, where Nordic skiing had been pursued as a sport since the 1860s, the winter days in the Alps were far longer. A third reason was the amount of literature that had already established Switzerland in the public imagination as a place of outstanding natural beauty and civil liberty whose attractions could be visited in summer. And �nally, the political situation in Europe helped the Swiss tourism industry on its way: Alexander Spengler, a political refugee who was granted asylum in Switzerland and who set up a medical practice in Davos, was the �rst to see that the mountain air might be just what tuberculosis patients needed, particularly in winter. While Davos soon developed into an international health resort with one sanatorium lined up next to the other, St. Moritz became the world’s favourite winter playground from the late 19 th century to the outbreak of the First World War. It was the de�nitive resort, whose “natural splendours, childish amusements and social Darwinism” made it a prime target for British tourists, as a contemporary bon mot claimed. The Engadin had produced a large number of confectioners who had emigrated to Italy and become successful entrepreneurs with many international connections. They were far closer to the neighbouring country of Italy than their German-speaking compatriots, and were used to dealing with foreigners. “The people of Engadin are good at the art of serving and getting rewarded for it”, says physician Peter Berry of St. Moritz, whose great-­grandfather played an important part in developing the winter season as the health resort’s physician. Remarkably, it was the locals who �nanced St. Moritz’s advancement as the world’s leading winter resort; in this early phase other resorts relied much more on external investment.


Although tourism in Switzerland was referred to as “Fremdenverkehr” (foreign tra≈c) until the 1980s, from the time of the Second World War, domestic tourists played a very important role in winter tourism. When foreign tourists stopped coming to Switzerland during the war, the industry beseeched the Swiss population to take up winter sports – with government support. “A nation on skis!” declared the posters that were later to establish the sport as an integral part of Swiss national identity in the 1960s and 1970s. The enthusiasm for skiing that took hold everywhere in the years following the Second World War soon established winter tourism as the main pillar of the economy in many places in rural Switzerland, far more lucrative than summer tourism had ever been. The lonely wilds of the snowy mountains became ski areas with railways and cableways, ski lifts, and prepared pistes. The mountains had become the “playground” of E ­ urope

and the world, a metaphor coined by Leslie Stephen, an in­ trepid author and climber, who observed the behaviour of summer guests in Switzerland in the early 1870s. The fact that the numerous railways and cableways, roads and second homes constitute a massive encroachment onto the mountain landscape is incontestable, but these are essential for the vital industry of tourism. Compared to the far greater level of development on the Swiss Plateau, they seem quite innocuous. The mountains still oΩer the thrills that enchanted those adventurous pioneers to venture to these heights in winter 150 years ago – the dazzling light, the clear air and the bright, white snow. The mission of this book is to recall the emotions the Swiss Alps have evoked for all those years and to unravel the story of how this winter wonderland developed.

9



WINTER SPORTS EVERYWHERE Winter sports became a national pastime in the 1920s and 30s, and phrases like winter wonderland were on everybody’s lips. During the Second World War, Switzerland de�ned itself as a nation on skis .

105  Classic fun on the ice: Ice-skating in Davos, 1920s.


I

n 1931, the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) published a small map of Switzerland advertising “cheap winter sport trips”.1 The map featured 180 diΩerent destinations to which the Swiss Federal Railways were oΩering a return ticket for the price of a single journey. The list of places included wellknown resorts such as St. Moritz, Davos, Engelberg, Grindelwald and Zermatt, as well as villages like Fleurier in the canton of Neuchâtel, Gänsbrunnen in the canton of Solothurn, Oberdiessbach in Emmental, and Speicher in the district of Appenzell. In 1930, the winter sports region in Switzerland extended from the edge of the Swiss Plateau, the Jura and the foothills of the Alps. Only a few resorts were equipped with ski lifts or mountain railways in those days. But the winter sports enthusiasts were quite content to crowd onto the trains with their cheap tickets and squat down between the “bulging rucksacks” in compartments that smelt of “freshly polished shoes”, “sausages”, “tar-�avoured wax”, “freshly baked bread and all sorts of tobacco”, as the SBB-Revue reported.2 The passion for winter sports, and skiing in particular, had spread like a virus through broad sections of the population by 1930. “Skiing has become all the rage in our country and may soon become our national sport”, enthused the President of the Swiss Ski Association Karl Dannegger.3 Surveys suggest that by the end of the 1930s, 500,000 of the total Swiss population of four million had taken up skiing.4 Gym squads soon discovered the delights of skiing, and willingly exchanged their evening training sessions in unheated gyms for the brilliant sunshine of the slopes.5 The working classes were equally keen on the new sport. In 1933, the Schweizerische Arbeiter-Turn- und Sportbund (the socialdemocratic Workers Gymnastics and Sports Federation) founded a ski association in Olten.6 Skiing also became part of the school curricula, even in the cities. In Zurich, schools started organising ski camps from 1924. The accommodation was very basic, almost Spartan, and the schoolchildren slept on straw mattresses.7 People even took to skiing in the cities themselves. Marcel Ditzler from Basel, the son of a chauΩeur, remembers being given a pair of skis by his godfather on his seventh birthday. He tried them out in the city centre, and performed a few im106  Winter sports everywhere

pressive Christiania-style manoeuvres – which he had taught himself – on the river banks. Later, he and a friend would catch a tram to the suburbs and walk up the hills near Arlesheim or Dornach and ski back down.8 Alpine skiing was the trendiest winter sport of the pe­ riod. But it was certainly not the only attraction the glittering winter mountains had to oΩer. All the sporting genres introduced or developed in the Belle Époque, such as the team games on ice, the so-called gymkhanas, including the carnival and ice-skating, were still going strong. British guests still loved curling and the locals soon developed a taste for this entertaining game and set up their own clubs. The �rst curling hall was built in Engelberg, giving players a certain independence from the weather.9 In St. Moritz, guests continued to play tennis in winter, but had moved into a purpose-built hall in the Palace hotel. People sailed across the ice on skids, and a round track for speed skating modelled on Davos was erected on the lake, an example that was soon followed in Engelberg.10 Inspired by St. Moritz and Arosa, winter horse races were also held in Gstaad in Saanenland, but on solid ground rather than frozen lakes. Skikjöring was also hugely popular; in St. Moritz an English aristocrat even attempted to replace the horse with a small aeroplane.11 In many places where tra≈c was not a problem, people still went skikjöring on the streets, or used the roads as bobsled tracks, widening curves and building up walls. In the 1920s, 34 Swiss resorts were equipped with at least one bobsled track, which was also sometimes used for skeleton racing (see “Bob on the tracks and on the streets”, p. 110).12 Bob tracks could also be found in St. Imier in the Jura, Champéry in the Lower Valais, and Schindellegi in the canton of Schwyz, where the track leads down the road to Pfä≈kon on the banks of Lake Zurich.13 In the 1920s, temperatures in winter were an average 0.7 degrees lower than they are now.14 Ski jumps were a huge attraction everywhere. Every winter sport resort had one, and so did other places that could lay no comparable claim to fame like Berne’s local mountain, the Gurten, or Langnau am Albis, Weissenstein and Sainte-Croix in the Jura.15 It was an age when one world record followed another. In Villars VD, Sigmund Ruud from Norway leapt a stunning 84 metres from the Bretaye ski jump in January 1933, a world record at the time. The record was broken just one


106

106  Relaxing in the sun on the slopes above Arosa in the 1940s.

107


107

month later by Henri Ruchet of Switzerland, who jumped 87 metres.16 Ski jumping was the “craziest thing the winter mountains had to oΩer”.17 Spectators crowded to watch the �ights of the daredevil stuntmen, whose jumps were visually far more spectacular than the sober V-style of today. They thrashed around wildly with their arms, as if they were trying to use them as propellers. The photographers usually chose the most photogenic moments when the jumpers’ arms were stretched high above their head. Illustrated magazines lavished pages of spectacular pictures on this new sport, as well as bob and ski races, and the sculptures that graced the streets of many winter resorts: ibex, bears, wolves, ice hockey or curling players carved in ice and snow. “Switzerland as a winter paradise” is how the SBB-Revue, the illustrated monthly published by the Swiss Federal Railways, summed up the winter sporting landscape in 1927, a view echoed by international publications everywhere. “The Elysium of snow”, wrote an English article in the SBB Revue just one year later 18, while a Dutch article reported “Zwitserland, het Winterparadijs” – “Switzerland, the winter paradise”. “No country is as rich in attractions for skiers as Switzerland, whose fame as a tourist destination and excellent transport facilities enables the visitor to indulge in a sumptuous feast of natural beauty and sporting delights”, reported a travel guide to the Alpine skiing areas in 1932.19 108  Winter sports everywhere

108

107  Ploughing through the snow: Corviglia above St. Moritz, 1936. 108  Horse racing in Gstaad, around 1920.


109


BOB ON THE TRACKS AND ON THE STREETS Invented in St. Moritz and Davos around 1890, bob-sled racing quickly became a hugely popular outdoor pursuit, whose heyday was between the wars. preferred to remain seated like the men in top hats in the photograph, 25 as did most others who tried the new sport. Bobsled racing was more about fun than competition and was defined, in an early protocol of the St. Moritz Bobsleigh Club (SMBC), founded in 1897, as a “social sport for guests of either gender and all ages”. For this reason, the SMBC decided that the sport did not require a track of its own like the Cresta Run. 26 They preferred to stick to the roads and dashed down from St. Moritz to Celerina on compacted snow instead. The new sport found many enthusiasts in Arosa and Davos before 1900, and the passion soon spread to other places. People bobbed from Les Avants down to Chamby above Montreux, from Leysin

109

down to Aigle, from Engelberg to

The picture on the right features six men

racing. The first to produce a bob was the

Grafenort.27 In the Engadin, people even

in top hats and white pullovers sitting

American Stephen Whitney. He bolted

bobbed over the Albula, Bernina and

on a long, flat sled in front of a rather im-

two flat “American” sleds together with a

Maloja passes.28 There was hardly any

posing building. Looking jauntily into the

wooden board and equipped the front

traffic on the roads in winter, especially

camera, they are clearly about to set off —

one with a steering mechanism. He tried

since the railways connections had ex-

but where to? Were they going on one

it out for the first time in late 1888 on the

panded and improved.

of the traditional horse-drawn sledging

track from Davos to Klosters. He was so

The railways were one reason why

parties known as Schlitteda? Far from it!

fast that his sled was excluded from the

the members of the St. Moritz Bobsled

They were about to compete in the first

International Races in February 1889. 21

Club decided to build a bob track in 1903

ever bobsled race.

Whitney entered the race with a standard

after all.29 The Rhaetian Railway was ex-

sled and won it just the same. 22

tended to Celerina that year, which meant

The men hadn’t donned their top hats for the benefit of the photographer. They

there was more traffic on the road up to

kept them on all the way down the Cresta

Bob smith

Run, where the race took place. The local

Whitney probably modelled his invention

water, which soon iced over in the cold.

newspaper reported: “The crew caused

on contraptions used by North American

It was inaugurated on 1 January 1904 as

some amusement by wearing top hats.”20

lumberjacks, who transported tree trunks

the first bob track in the world. 30

In its early days, bobsled racing

by putting the top of the trunk on one

St. Moritz. A run was built of snow and

This example was soon followed

was a sport for gentlemen, pursued by

small sled and the bottom on another. 23

elsewhere. Bob tracks were built in

the English aristocracy, although a team

Once he was seen dashing down the

Davos, Pontresina, Caux and Montana. In

of locals participated in the first race too,

slopes with his fancy invention, Whitney

Les Avants, Mürren and Engelberg, spe-

led by a young member of the Badrutt

soon had many imitators. The local smith

cial mountain railways were built to carry

hotelier clan.

in St. Moritz, Christian Mathis, who had

passengers and their bobs up the moun-

made the first steel skeleton in 1889, bolt-

tain (see “Getting up the mountain”, p. 69).

For the first race, the bobsled racers were allowed to use the Cresta Run

ed two of them together using a wooden

The longest artificial run of 4.2 km

in St. Moritz. The skeleton season was

board. The contraption was steered with

was built in Grindelwald — almost three

already over, so the damage inflicted

ropes. That was the first real bob, which

times the length of the track in

on the track by the rake-shaped brakes

came to be known as a bobsled.24

St. Moritz.31

that were slammed on at every corner was deemed immaterial. Skeletons and their prototypes provided the basic inspiration for bobsled

110  Winter sports everywhere

At the first bobsled race, only a few

J. J. Astor, the American investor,

contestants dared copy the skeleton

­inventor and hotelier, donated the Astor

­racers and risk taking the track in a head-

Cup to St. Moritz in 1899.32 More ambi-

first, belly-down position. Most of them

tious teams were identified by uniform


clothing, usually pullovers marked with a

and the Bachmann brothers in Val de

them going. Increased winter traffic also

particular symbol, such as a giant beetle.

Travers in Neuchâtel. One of the most

meant that roads could no longer be used

For bobsledding is a question of team-

celebrated craftsmen was Karl Feier­

for the purpose. A stocktake from 1942

work and at that time usually involved

abend, a plumber and mechanic from

lists 14 bob tracks, most of which were in

five people, who leaned to the right or

Engelberg.

the Romandie 38, a great difference to the 1920s when 34 resorts still had at least

one bob track.39 A group of bob enthusiasts in Zurich went against this trend and built a new track in Girenbad in the highlands around Zurich in 1951. It closed in 1968.40 The craftsmen who made the bobsleds experienced a similar decline. The celebrated Feierabend bobs were outstripped ­technologically by Italian manufacturers Podar and Siorpaes, who were making lighter and faster models. 41 Gunter Sachs saves the bob track In the 1960s there was a time when there were only four bob tracks left in the world. 42 In Switzerland there was just one place left to practise the sport — in St. Moritz. This track survived thanks to its wealthy patrons. Industrial heir Gunter

110

Sachs took charge of the St. Moritz Bob

the left in the curves, according to the command of the driver.33

All the manufacturers were able to

Club in 1969 and financed a part of the

start exporting their products before the

infrastructure. 43 The tone in the once very

First World War, as the enthusiasm for

British-style club changed as the sport

of whether it was better to compete in a

bobsledding spread. As sports historian

­increasingly became the domain of pro-

­belly-down or upright position divided

Max Triet writes: “The influence of

fessionals. “The social life in the club is

bobsled enthusiasts into sporting and

St. Moritz caused bob tracks to mushroom

not what it once was,” admits Rolf Sachs,

lifestyle contestants. The belly-down

all over the Alpine area.” 36 In 1914, the

son of Gunter Sachs and his successor as

position was more aerodynamic and en­

first European championships were held

President of the Bob Club. Instead it has

abled contestants to reach higher

in the German resort of Winterberg. The

become “a lot more professional”.44

speeds. Because of this and the practical

International Bobsled Federation was

impossibility of braking in this position,

founded in 1923, and in 1924 the sport

pionships and the Olympic races of 1928

it was banned in 1931. 34

became an official Olympic discipline

and 1948, is now operated by the munici-

(first won by a team from Leysin), and in

palities of St. Moritz and Celerina. It has

1930 the first world championships were

become the world’s only natural ice track,

held in Caux.

which workers from South Tyrol build

From 1912 onwards the question

Swiss bobs top exports A technical innovation replacing the two ropes with a steering wheel made the

By 1930, bobsledding had reached

The Run, the scene of 20 world cham-

at the beginning of every winter with

head first, belly-down position easier to

the apex of its popularity. After that, inter-

shovels, snow and water. Racing down it

handle, in a fashion retained until the

est in the sport waned. Skiing was the

is still a breathtaking experience, with

1930s. The 1928 Winter Olympics also

great new attraction, as the Briton Hubert

speeds of up to 80 mph. And anyone can

featured a bobsled race with five-man

Martineau, President of the SMBC from

try it out under the care of experienced

crews.35

1922 to 1969, confirmed. The “social

drivers — upon request, even in a 75-year

­significance” of the sport had changed.

old Feierabend bob.

The sleds basically consisted of a thick wooden board mounted on an iron

Until 1928, practically all bobsledders had

frame with runners. A few models of the

been guests at the Palace in St. Moritz.37

sled had a small hull at the front, but most

Later aficionados stayed in less glamor-

sleds were still completely open. Some

ous establishments and stayed away from

of these early models can be admired in

many resorts.

local museums. The bobsleds were made by skilled

By the outbreak of the Second World War, many bob tracks had vanished from

craftsmen, including Christian Mathis

the Swiss slopes, as the money and

in St. Moritz, August Hartkopf in Davos,

­enthusiasm were no longer there to keep

109  French bobsleigh team take to the track belly-down at the 1928 Olympics in St. Moritz. 110  Sporting top hats, this crew gets ready for the first bobsleigh race in St. Moritz, 1892.

111


Express trains from Amsterdam, Berlin, Calais and Paris brought tourists straight to Chur, Interlaken and Spiez in the foothills of the Alps, from whence they were immediately transported up to the winter resorts in the Bernese Oberland and Graubünden.45

CONSEQUENCES OF FIRST WORLD WAR By the mid-1920s, guest numbers in St. Moritz had outstripped the boom years of the pre-war period 46 (no comparable statistics are available for other areas of Switzerland). This was fortunate indeed, for war had caused a drastic slump in revenues. The absence of tourists brought railway companies and many hotels to the brink of bankruptcy. The Belle Époque, as the pre-war era was often referred to, was a time of excess and abundance. Many hotels were heavily in debt, and the Swiss Hoteliers Association appealed to the state for relief. The national government did indeed come to the aid of the hotel industry, which accounted for four percent of GDP in 1913.47 In 1915, a regulation for the “protection of the hotel industry” was passed, eΩectively shielding insolvent hotels from the claws of impatient creditors, while also obliging hotels to obtain authorisation for extensions and new buildings. It was the �rst of several state interventions in the interests of the tourism industry.48 State loans issued by the Schweizerische Hotel-Treuhand-Gesellschaft, founded in 1921, were an important part of the support schemes. In Graubünden, a canton that relied heavily on tourism, local communities had already teamed up with the cantonal bank in 1914 to found the Bündner Kreditgenossenschaft with this very scenario in mind.49 A loan from this bank enabled Hotel Kulm in St. Moritz, the pioneer of winter resorts, to avoid bankruptcy.50 Help came too late for some businesses, though. The Dufour dynasty, which had laid the foundations of winter tourism in the Romandie, lost its hotels in Les Avants during the First World War. 51 Many pre-war guests found themselves in similar circumstances. The October Revolution in 1917 had dispossessed all the Russian princes and the aristocracy, if they were lucky enough to escape execution. The collapse of the German Kaiserreich and the Austro-Hungarian Empire was a less lethal though still humiliating feat for the rich and powerful. The 112  Winter sports everywhere

111

111  Poster for the first four-man bob world championship. 112  Bob with a view: Grindelwald, 1920. 113  Crash on the bob run in St. Moritz, probably around 1920.


112

113

113


114

114  Winter sports everywhere


GRAUBÜNDEN TOP OF THE TOURIST AGENDA Hotel stays in the main winter tourist regions

1,258

1,383

Graubünden   Bernese Oberland   Vaud Alps  Valais

1933/34

115

114  Ski-jumping in Gstaad, 1917.

1938/39

191

396 190

138

191

329

333

290

432

925

In thousands

1944/45

Source: Swiss Federal Statistical Office 52

f­ugitive Kaiser Karl of Austria checked into the Palace in St. Moritz, but the local authorities obliged him to pack his bags and leave the next day.53 It took quite a while for foreign guests to venture back into the mountain idyll. Border controls had been introduced and nationals of most states now required visas to enter the country.54 The currencies of all the countries involved in the war were in crisis, and Germany, as the country which had started and lost the war, was subjected to crippling reparation payments and had slipped into a dizzying spiral of in�ation by 1923. Banknotes were worthless almost as soon as they were printed. However, landowners and creditors bene�ted from the situation, and they now became the clients of the Swiss resorts. The Roaring Twenties were in full swing, and soon left their mark on the mountains. The aristocracy was increasingly replaced by the nouveaux riches and �lm stars. It was the age of the silver screen and its stars. Hans Albers, Marlene Dietrich, Douglas Fairbanks and Charlie Chaplin all came to St. Moritz and stayed at the Palace, which the grandson of Johannes Badrutt had turned into a VIP establishment.55 Waiters in tails and skates 115


117

118

116

116  Skating waiter, St. Moritz, around 1935. 117  Hans Badrutt, master of the Palace for 50 years. 118  Actor Hans Albers in St. Moritz, around 1930. 119  Charlie Chaplin and Douglas Fairbanks in St. Moritz in 1931.

116  Winter sports everywhere

served drinks to the guests on the ice rinks in front of the Palace and other luxury hotels. Some of the guests followed in the footsteps of the th 19 -century pioneers and set up exclusive clubs like the Corviglia Ski Club (see “Charlie Chaplin in the winter circus”, p. 117).56 In this period, the region around Gstaad developed into a second Swiss location for the rich and famous (see “Being rich together”, p. 210). The area’s proximity to the cities of Lucerne and Geneva and the direct railway connection to the tourist magnet of Montreux was one reason. The second was the fact that Le Rosey – the most expensive and exclusive boarding school in western Switzerland – moved its winter quarters to Gstaad in 1916. Sport was an important part of the school’s curriculum, designed to equip its protégés with the necessary sporting and social skills for their future lives. In the 1930s, the school counted the future Shah of Persia and the future Prince Rainier of Monaco among its pupils.57


CHARLIE CHAPLIN IN THE WINTER CIRCUS The stars of the silver screen were the new generation of aristocrats who graced the slopes of St. Moritz between the wars. “Everyone got a great surprise when the

the Swiss aviation pioneer Walter Mittel-

world famous film star Charley [sic] Chap-

holzer.68 However, the odd aristocrat was

lin walked unannounced into the Palace

still seen around St. Moritz. Chaplin re-

Hotel on Sunday afternoon,” reports the

ported sharing a lift with the former heir

English-language guest newspaper Al-

to the German throne, who had appeared

pine Post in December 1931.58 The little

in comic guise in his movie Shoulder

tramp with the bowler hat, hooked cane,

Arms.69

bushy moustache and waddling gait was

The Engadin Express & Alpine Post-

an international sensation. In fact, he al-

still published the guest lists of all the ho-

ready had a double waiting for him in

tels every week. The stars rather enjoyed

St. Moritz — figure-skater Harry Witte, who

the publicity, as Marcella Maier reports of

regularly dressed up in the style of the

her encounter with Hans Albers.70 Despite

greatest star of the silent screen.

their occasional forays among the folk,

59

The real Chaplin turned up in

the rich and famous formed a closed soci-

St. Moritz at the invitation of his friend

ety, whose feathers were not even ruffled

and business partner, fellow actor Doug-

even by the economic crisis and the

las Fairbanks. “I’ll order fresh snow for

Great Depression. These were “glamorous,

your arrival. Am expecting you,” reads

guilt-ridden, escapist years”, when the

the telegram Fairbanks sent to Chaplin.60 That seemed tempting enough, even to

beau monde partied away the days and

119

nights at the Palace. Gustav Doebeli,

the self-confessed egocentric, who had

lene Dietrich and Luis Trenker were just

legendary barman of the Palace, would

had previously expressed his aversion

some of the famous names to grace the

open no less than one hundred bottles

to the “ominous presence” of the moun-

winter slopes.

of champagne for the evening apéro,

tains, which gave him a “feeling of

The stars all flocked to the Palace

futility”.61 Chaplin had planned a two-week so-

while Teddy Stauffer’s jazz band encour-

hotel, which was run by Hans Badrutt

aged the stars and their entourage to

( 1876 —1953 ), grandson of the Kulm’s

take to the dance floor.71

journ, but was so pleasantly surprised

founder, Johannes Badrutt. The Palace at-

In 1930, the gaudy mix of the haute

that he ended up staying in St. Moritz for

tracted a cosmopolitan crowd of interna-

volée in St. Moritz decided to assume an

over two and a half months, from mid

tional celebrities, a contrast both to the

official social form with the Corviglia

December 1931 to early March 1932.62

stuffy “British establishment club”, which

Ski Club. Invited by the Spanish Duke of

On Fairbanks’ insistence, he learnt to ski,

the Kulm and Suvretta House had be-

Alba and the Italian Prince di Sangro,

which he found a lot more complicated

come, and the “Temple of Mammon”, as

100 guests were present at its foundation,

than expected but tremendous fun. He

the neighbouring Grand Hotel was nick-

including fashion designer Coco Chanel

watched the bob and skeleton races, but

named.

and auto manufacturer Edoardo Agnelli.

didn’t dare have a go himself. He made

66

The house next to the mountain station of

up for it by diving into the social life with

Glamorous escapism

its panoply of dinners, balls, fashion

The collapse of the German Kaiserreich,

sive meeting point for celebrities on

shows and charity events.63

the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the

the piste, a character it still retains today

Russian Empire at the end of the First

(see “Being rich together”, p. 210 ).

Chaplin found himself among a host of celebrities. These included automotive

World War obliged the luxury hotel seg-

manufacturer André Citroën, who showed

ment to find its customers elsewhere.

him his new caterpillar vehicle; Lady

Victors and profiteers were regular guests

Edwina Mountbatten, wife of the future

in the 1920s, as well as glamorous eccen-

Viceroy of India,64 and Hollywood diva

trics like the Greek arms dealer and philanthropist Basil Zaharoff.67 Representa-

Gloria Swanson, who claimed never to wear the same article of clothing twice.

the Corviglia funicular became an exclu-

65

The list of film stars who visited

tives of industries as extravagant as they were flourishing, like cosmetics pioneers

St. Moritz in winter in the 1920s and 30s is

Helena Rubinstein and Elizabeth Arden,

as long as the railway track down to the

were also among the guests. The press

valley. Mary Pickford, Adolphe Menjou,

titan Lord Beaverbrook even had himself

Alfred Hitchcock, Paulette Goddard, Mar-

flown to the mountains from England by

117


120

AVALANCHE RESEARCH — A consequence of winter tourism Avalanches were a serious impediment to the development of winter tourism in the mountains. In 1917, an avalanche buried a train near Davos, killing eleven people.72 The need for year-round access to railways and roads, electric cabling, and the popular passion for skiing required the tourism industry to find out more about avalanches. Simply avoiding the avalanche paths, as mountain inhabitants had traditionally done, was no longer an option. The national government had issued recommendations for building avalanche protection barriers in the late 19 th century, but until after the First World War, knowledge about the workings of avalanches had been limited to regional and subjective experiences.73

121

It was Wilhelm Paulcke, a German with a strong attachment to the Swiss mountains, who made the decisive move to put research on snow and avalanches on a scientific basis. 74 He was a professor of geology at Karlsruhe University who had learnt to ski in Davos and later became a pioneer of the sport. Upon his urging, government representatives, the ETH Zurich, the railways and various power stations founded an Expert Commission for Avalanche Research in 1931. The Commission was based in Davos and conducted its research in five different places.75 Attempts were made to shoot down avalanches with trench mortars.76 From winter 1936 / 37, the Swiss Ski Federation broadcast infor-

mation on snow conditions and avalanche hazards, and the army began to take an interest in research results.77 In 1942, the Commission became the Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research. Unimpeded by the disruptions of wartime, it grew into the world’s leading institute of its kind.78

118  Winter sports everywhere

The presence of such illustrious boarding schools in the Saanenland soon led the pupils’ parents to discover the pleasures of the Alpine foothills for themselves. The Royal Hotel and Winter Palace, a fairy-tale castle that towered above the village with its simple farmhouses, provided them with suit­ able accommodation.79 The winter season soon became all the rage in Gstaad, St. Moritz and entire regions of Switzerland. In the winter of 1930/ 31, Graubünden, the country’s most popular winter sports region, attracted more tourists than in summer. However, the rise in winter tourism came at the price of a slump in summer – some guests had simply switched the season when they chose to visit Switzerland.80 The number-one holiday destination had also begun to attract competition. Neighbouring Alpine states like Germany, Italy and Austria had also discovered the winter goldmine and started to invest in its potential. In some places, the ­railways and hotels were now of a more modern standard,


198  One hat for all: Zurich school children at ski camp, all wearing the SKA hat. 199  Everybody’s skiing: The ­record sleeve of Vico Torriani’s ­well-known hit single, 1963. 200  A star in the snow: Film a ­ ctress Romy Schneider on Corviglia in St. Moritz, 1960. 200

The Thiokol vehicles were imported by Ratrac, who sold them under its own brand name.67 The name Ratrac soon became synonymous with piste-bashing machine . These mechanical caterpillars were most useful after fresh snow had fallen; on steep slopes, however, the grooves carved out by the skis would quickly expose the natural bumps in the ground again. In order for the snowcats to traverse the pistes unhindered, these needed to be free of obstacles. Bulldozers are used in the summer to �atten the slopes.68 In the 1950s, sporadic eΩorts were made to remove rocks and rubble from the ski �elds, as well as felling individual trees, removing bumps in the ground, and �lling in dips.69 Blowing up rocks and moving earth and rubble with bulldozers seemed to be the summer entertainment programme in the ski areas.70 Every �attened, bashed and groomed piste and every new cableway spelt the arrival of more skiers. Typically, there were always more people wanting to ski than could be accommodated. On Sundays, the valley stations of many cableways were crowded with eager skiers who queued for hours; at least the queue tickets issued at the Corvatsch and Diavolezza cableways and several others made the wait less arduous.71

It would seem that easy-listening artist Vico Torriani got it right with his 1963 hit Alles fährt Ski: Everybody’s skiing, the whole nation’s on skis. Skiing was a populist sport, and it helped post-war Switzerland to recapture its national identity. Skiing also oΩered an aura of exclusivity – not unlike the pop music that was conquering the world at the time.

STARS ON THE SLOPES In 1965, one of the biggest stars of pop made it onto the pistes of St. Moritz – John Lennon of the Beatles. Lennon, his wife Cynthia and his producer George Martin stayed at the Palace Hotel for two weeks.72 Movie hero James Bond also took to skiing. Mürren and its new aerial cableway to the Schilthorn were used as a �lming location for On Her Majesty’s Secret Service in 1968 / 69. The villain of the story took up residence in the revolving panoramic restaurant atop Piz Gloria , as the Schilthorn was known in the �lm. Bond pursued his antagonist across summits and glaciers and even down the bob run, which had been rebuilt especially for the �lm.73 In the real world, the rich and powerful also took up residence in Switzerland’s Alpine wonderland. The Shah of Per183


201  Curling with James Bond: During the filming of On Her ­Majesty’s Secret Service on the Schilthorn, 1968. 202  The Shah on a sled with his wife Farah Diba and their children in St. Moritz, 1975. 203  John Lennon on the pistes of St. Moritz, 1965. 204  Gunter Sachs with his future wife Mirja (l.) and Gita Wranding, presenting clothes from the ­Micmac boutiques owned by Sachs, St. Moritz, 1969. 201

sia, whose wealth and in�uence was based on his country’s geostrategic importance and vast oil reserves, had purchased a pied-à-terre in St. Moritz, the Villa Suvretta located next to the luxury hotel Suvretta House. Together with his wife Farah Diba and their children, the Shah journeyed to St. Moritz every winter in the 1960s and early 1970s for skiing (as well as receiving dignitaries such as British prime minister Edward Heath).74 Because of his strict authoritarian rule and his complicity with US politics, the Shah provoked strong reactions from supporters of the political left; his 1967 trip to Berlin caused riots and was one of the triggers of Germany’s 1968 student protest movement. Even in St. Moritz, the Persian ruler was confronted with protests in 1968: on the Schulhausplatz square, skeleton teams demonstrated against Iran’s in�ated caviar prices.75 Nevertheless, the Shah and his glamorous wife remained at the top of St. Moritz’s proli�c high society (see Being rich together , p. 210). This also included the uncrowned king of Italy, Fiat owner Gianni Agnelli. The Italian was revered as the most stylish man of his time, and indeed, Gunter Sachs once described him as made of style .76 Oil was what the fortunes of the jet set were based on. Even Marc Rich, the decried commodity trader who sold oil 184  A never-ending boom

to all and sundry involved in the Cold War, was eventually to settle in St. Moritz. Saudi Arabia’s oil minister Ahmed Zaki Yamani, who headed the OPEC oil cartel and exerted a tight stranglehold over the West’s oil habit, frequently resided in Gstaad.77 So did also Adnan Kashoggi; he had achieved both wealth and notoriety with arms trading.78 Much less controversial but much more suitable for the media spotlight were the royals. In Gstaad, one might encounter Prince Rainier of Monaco and his wife Princess Gracia, former US movie star Grace Kelly. King Hussein of Jordan also loved skiing in Gstaad or St. Moritz.79 Of course, skiing wasn’t the only winter sport on oΩer, at least not in St. Moritz. For two weekends every February (three weekends from 1980 ), horses races were held on the frozen lake (see White Turf , p. 202). Also, every year from the end of December to the beginning of March, the Bob Run and Cresta Run were kept busy. One of those responsible for reviving these older winter sports was Gunter Sachs. The heir to a powerful German family of industrialists, Sachs embodied both the history and the future of St. Moritz. Both his grandfathers – automotive tycoon Wilhelm von Opel and inventor Ernst Sachs – were regular visitors to St. Moritz,


202

203

204

185


A MARATHON LASTS THE DISTANCE The annual Engadin Ski Marathon, first held in 1969, was a clear sign that there’s more to skiing than downhill racing. It is a memorable sight: thousands of

marathons were already a mainstay

everyone in the country was very familiar

brightly attired cross-country skiers

in Scandinavia, with Sweden’s Vasaloppet

with cross-country skiing. Other mara-

traversing the Upper Engadin lakes like

and Norway’s Birkebeinerrennet. They

thons soon sprang up, such as the

a line of ants.

were also sporadically held in Switzer-

­Gommerlauf in the Valais.

The fact that its popularity and

land — the Pragellauf in Central Switzer-

The first “Engadiner”, held in March

breathtaking backdrop can be captured

land, the Alpsteinlauf in Appenzell,

1969, had a comparatively meagre 856

within a single photograph was probably

and the Morgartenskilauf in Schwyz.

participants, but this far surpassed organ-

instrumental in making the Engadin Ski

But it wasn’t until the “Engadiner” that

isers’ expectations.85 One person who

Marathon one of the biggest Swiss media

cross-country racing really caught on

didn’t compete was local champion

spectacles of the 1970s.

in Switzerland.

­Albert Giger. “If you were a professional

Cross-country touring takes place

ski racer, you simply didn’t participate

in spread-out areas, typically hidden in

Haas and Wisel show how it’s done

forests and remote valleys. With the pub-

The 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble

ensuing popularity of the marathon

lic eye firmly focused on Alpine skiing,

triggered Switzerland’s renewed interest

made him reconsider; the following year

cross-country practically fell off the map

in the sport. Sepp Haas, a farmer from

saw both Giger and Kälin signing up.

in Switzerland. In the early 1960s,

Entlebuch, was the first Swiss person to

“cross-country racing was a fringe sport

win an Olympic cross-country medal —

fessionals made the Engadin marathon

at best”, recalls former cross-country

he came third in the 50 km race. And Alois

even more popular. By 1976, the race had

champion Albert Giger.80

“Wisel” Kälin of Einsiedeln won silver

more than 10,000 skiers on the track.86

in public races”, he recalls. However, the

The opportunity to race against pro-

in the cross-country section of the Nordic

Before long, it became a platform for par-

the Upper Engadin at the time included

combined, to the delight of everyone

ticipants to promote themselves, with

mailman Dölf Cadonau and sports retailer

back home.82

economic leaders and politicians using it

Other cross-country enthusiasts in

Albert Scheuing. In 1964 / 65, Scheuing

1969 also saw the founding of the

was operating a small cross-country ski

Einsiedler Volksskilauf marathon in Kälin’s

Marathons such as the Engadiner were

school, and in 1967 he established a short

home region.83 A Lucerne-based commit-

precursors to the endurance sports craze

cross-country race from St. Moritz Bad to

tee started the “LLL” promotional cam-

yet to come, which included mountain

Lej da Staz and back. In 1969, they got

paign — “Langläufer leben länger”

marathons, triathlons, and gigathlons.

together to launch the Engadin Ski mara-

(“Cross-country skiers live longer”).84

thon over the classic marathon distance of 42 km from Maloja to Zuoz.81 Public ski

Thanks to the ubiquitous stickers produced as part of the campaign, soon

as an opportunity to prove their mettle.87

Giger, who won the Engadiner five times and has been its director since 1991, attributes its enduring popularity to

its relative ease. “Detractors refer to it as the gentlest downhill run in the world”, says Giger. The first half of the track traverses the Upper Engadin lakes and is ­almost entirely flat, while the second descends very slightly. Between the two is a short ascent and a short downhill run. Marathons with more tiring topographies never proved as popular, and they eventually disappeared. Nowhere is the catchphrase of “cross-­ country skiers living longer” truer than at the Engadiner — this race really is lasting the distance. It still attracts over 12,000 participants. And it wouldn’t be

possible without an army of 1,500 volunteers.

205

186  A never-ending boom


THE BRITISH ENTHUSIASM FOR SWITZERLAND WAS CRUCIAL FOR WINTER TOURISM Afterword by David Moran

Switzerland is undoubtedly one of the most beautiful countries in the world. I frequently hear people say their country is aiming to become “the new Switzerland”. But the real thing remains unmatched, and tourists from all over the world still �ock to Switzerland to experience the splendours of its mountains for themselves. The Engadin and St. Moritz are particularly cherished jewels in the Swiss crown, and played an important part in developing the winter tourism industry. British tourists love Switzerland. O≈cial statistics report that almost 700,000 Britons visited Switzerland in 2013. Many of them regularly spend their holidays there, continuing a tradition of British enthusiasm for Switzerland that goes back to the 19th century and the very beginnings of the Swiss tourism industry – the winter season in particular, which British visitors were instrumental in developing. Britain has a great tradition of intrepid explorers and adventurers. In the early 19th century, when British mountaineers discovered the Swiss mountains, the race was soon on to climb them. Indeed, some people regard Alfred Wills’ successful ascent of the Wetterhorn in 1854 as the beginning of modern mountaineering. Long before the British arrived, Swiss mountaineers had climbed 20 of the highest peaks, including the Piz Bernina and the Jungfrau. After 1850, British mountaineers developed an even more ferocious determination to conquer these heights, and by 1865 they had successfully climbed 31 of the 39 remaining peaks in the Swiss Alps. Most of the tourists who visited Switzerland in those days were quite well oΩ. Mass tourism as we know it today was inconceivable. Nineteenth-century tourists were met with quite diΩerent conditions to those we are familiar with today. Switzerland was a deeply rural country, and the foreigners who strayed into the mountain villages were few and far between. The locals must have been more than a little surprised by the newcomers and their peculiar tastes and desires. The transport and accommodation infrastructure was very rudimentary. But this only heightened the sense of adventure the �rst tourists were undoubtedly seeking in the wild beauty of the mountain landscape. They were simply delighted to be there and enjoyed the opportunity to spend time on the shores of a mountain lake, admiring the scenery. The Swiss were not long in adapting the supply to the new demands. The arrival of the British tourists stimulated the tourism industry and the local economy, and soon led to improvements in infrastructure. While only 58,000 beds were available for tourists in 1880, this number had tripled by 1913, when it totalled 170,000 beds. As time went on, the middle classes also began to be able to aΩord journeys to the mountains. Around 1930, all this foreign interest in their country also inspired the Swiss to begin travelling and thus discovering their own country in a quite diΩerent way to any previous generation. Bilateral ties between the two countries deepened and grew into a genuine friendship. In 1909, the Association of British Members of the Swiss Alpine Club was founded. They wanted to thank the Schweizer Alpen-Club (SAC) for welcoming them to the Alps and in particular for making their Alpine huts available to them, and so the Brits began to raise money for a new Alpine hut. By 1912, the Britannia hut above Saas-Fee was ready. It still oΩers mountaineers from all over the world shelter, and has been expanded several times. A shared enthusiasm for winter sports has also brought top-level politicians together for many years. In 1956, a tradition was established whereby members of the British and Swiss parliaments come together for a week’s skiing every year. Over the course of time, a number of British MPs really have managed to prove that they can slide down a mountain slope on a pair of skis. This tradition of shared 243


fun in the snow has nurtured many friendships over the years and many of us are already looking forward to the 60-year anniversary of the Skiwoche in 2016. Winter tourism in Switzerland has come a long way. The country has become one of the world’s leading tourist destinations and continues to attract visitors from all over the world while successfully retaining its old friends. A modern transport and hotel infrastructure and excellently trained staΩ have kept the industry competitive and abreast of the latest developments. The industry only accepts �rst-class standards, which I am pleased to say includes many British travel agents and service providers. Yet the mountains remain the country’s central attraction and the guarantee of its enduring fascination. By focusing on sustainable tourism, Switzerland has made an important move to protect this heritage, and I am convinced that the next 150 years of tourism will be quite as varied and fascinating as the �rst. David Moran Ambassador of the United Kingdom to Switzerland and Liechtenstein

244 Afterword


Picture credits

Cover ¬¬ Front page: Swiss National Museum LM-101378.1 ¬¬ Back page: Christof Sonderegger/ swiss-image.ch Sleeve ¬¬ Katharina Lütscher In the beginning was the light ¬¬ Collection Diserens: 31 ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek Davos: 9, 10 ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek St. Moritz: 3, 5, 12, 14, 18, 33, 38 ¬¬ grindelwaldgeschichten.ch: 30 ¬¬ Martin and Osa Johnson Safari Museum, Elizabeth Main: 11 ¬¬ Keystone: 4, 15, 26, 32, 37 ¬¬ Kulturarchiv Oberengadin: 16 ¬¬ Elizabeth Main: 8, 17 ¬¬ Swiss National Museum LM-101356.1: 20 ¬¬ St. Moritz Tobogganing Club Archive, London: 6, 21, 22, 27, 34, 36 ¬¬ Frederick Bligh: 19, 24, 25 ¬¬ G. R. Ballance: 23, 35 ¬¬ Ullstein Bild: 1, 2, 7, 13, 29, 39 Two boards create a revolution ¬¬ ¬¬ ¬¬ ¬¬ ¬¬ ¬¬ ¬¬ ¬¬

¬¬ ¬¬ ¬¬ ¬¬ ¬¬ ¬¬

¬¬ ¬¬

Die Alpen 1931: 46 Yvonne Gozon-Amstutz collection: 58 Dokumentationsbibliothek Davos: 48, 53 Dokumentationsbibliothek St. Moritz: 40, 44, 45, 61 Fotosammlung Landesarchiv des Kanton Glarus: 47 grindelwaldgeschichten.ch: 56 Keystone: 43, 54, 57, 59 Kulturarchiv Oberengadin: ¬¬ from the Pinösch-Gredig estate: 51 ¬¬ Gustav Sommer: 52 Museum des Landes Glarus, Freuler­ palast, Näfels: 50 National Portrait Gallery, London: 49 Ringier: 55, 66 Yvonne Gozon-Amstutz collection: 58 Albert Steiner, Collection Bischofberger, Switzerland: 63 St. Moritz Tobogganing Club Archive, London: 41 ¬¬ G. R. Ballance: 42 Underwood Archives, Getty Images: 65 Ullstein Bild: 60, 62, 64

Getting up the mountain ¬¬ Ruth Annen: 79 ¬¬ Flüela Foto + Verlag archive: 76

¬¬ Berry Museum, St. Moritz: 69 ¬¬ Brügger collection, Swiss Alpine Museum, Berne, photographer unknown: 77 ¬¬ Martin Horath collection: 75 ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek Davos: 73 ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek St. Moritz: 67 ¬¬ ETH-Bibliothek, Zurich, Image Archive/Stiftung Luftbild Schweiz: 80 ¬¬ grindelwaldgeschichten.ch: 71 ¬¬ Adi Kälin: 74 ¬¬ Keystone: 72, 82, 83, 85 ¬¬ Kulturarchiv Oberengadin, from the Pinösch-Gredig estate: 68 ¬¬ Médiathèque Valais – Martigny: 78 ¬¬ Albert Steiner, Collection Bischofberger, Switzerland: 81 ¬¬ St. Moritz Tobogganing Club Archive, London: 70 ¬¬ Tal Museum Engelberg: 84 Winter sports go Olympic ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek St. Moritz: 86, 88, 93, 99 ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek St. Moritz: II. Olympische Winterspiele, St. Moritz, 11.– 19. Febr. 1928, Hugo Laubi 101.5 × 64 cm: 91; La Suisse vous appelle aux Jeux olympiques d’hiver, St. Moritz 30. 1./ 8. 2. 1948, Alois Cari­ giet OCST Zurich, 102 × 64 cm: 101 ¬¬ Keystone: 87, 89, 90, 92, 94, 95, 97, 98, 102, 103, 104 ¬¬ Ringier: 96, 100 Winter sports everywhere ¬¬ Bibliothèque de Genève, Championnat du monde de bobsleigh, Caux s/Montreux, 25 – 26 janvier 1930, Jacomo, pseudonym of Jacomo Müller, 90.5 × 64 cm: 111 ¬¬ Arosa-Schan�gg Cultural Archives: 122 ¬¬ Berta Czegka, Poster Arlberg Ski School, circa 1930: 126 ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek St. Moritz: 107, 118, 119, 131 ¬¬ Keystone: 105, 106, 108, 114, 116, 120, 121, 125, 127, 129 ¬¬ Museum Grindelwald: 112 ¬¬ Ringier: 117, 124 ¬¬ Renato Testa collection, provided: 128 ¬¬ Swiss National Library: Das ganze Volk fährt Ski!, 1943, Oskar P�ster, 127.5 × 90 cm, SVZ: 130 ¬¬ Gesunde Jugend, wehrkräftiges Volk durch Wintersport, 1940, Hans Thöni, 127.5 × 90 cm, SVZ: 123 ¬¬ St. Moritz Tobogganing Club Archive, London: 110, 113 ¬¬ Ullstein Bild: 109

Greetings from paradise ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek St. Moritz: 136, 137, 138 ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek St. Moritz: VII. Grosses Ski-Rennen der Schweiz, St. Moritz, 11. & 12. Februar 1911, W. Küpfer, SSV, 104 × 74 cm: 141 ¬¬ St. Moritz 1937, Amstutz & Herdeg Zurich, 127 × 90 cm: 132 ¬¬ St. Moritz, Winter in St. Moritz, Engadin 1907, Anton ChristoΩel, 68 × 99 cm: 146 ¬¬ Winter in St. Moritz, Oberengadin, Schweiz 1918, Emil Cardinaux, 128 × 91 cm: 143 ¬¬ Fotostiftung Winterthur © Fotostiftung Schweiz/Herbert Matter Estate: 135 ¬¬ St. Moritz Tourist Board: Engadine 6000ft. 1924, Carl Moos, 45 × 69 cm: 147 ¬¬ Médiathèque Valais-Sion, Verbier, Valais, Télésiège de Médran 1951, Martin Pei­ kert, © 2014, ProLitteris, Zurich, 100 × 65 cm: 156 ¬¬ Plakatsammlung ZHdK: Flums, 1940, Carlo Vivarelli, Verkehrsverein Flums: 150 ¬¬ Pontresina 1936, Herbert Matter, ­Fotostiftung Winterthur © Fotostiftung Schweiz/Herbert Matter Estate: 149 ¬¬ Ringier: 133, 139 ¬¬ Swiss National Library: Chemin de fer Aigle-Monthey-Champéry, Téléférique Planachaux, Champéry, Valais, Suisse 1947, Martin Peikert, © 2014, ProLitteris, Zurich, 101 × 65 cm: 157 ¬¬ Davos, Jahres-Kurort, 1560 m. ü. M., Touristen- & Sport-Platz I. Ranges 1901, anonymous, 100.5 × 70 cm: 144 ¬¬ FIS-Rennen, Engelberg, Trübsee, 5. bis 7. März 1938, Herbert Matter, 101 × 64.5 cm, Fotostiftung Winterthur © Fotostiftung Schweiz/Herbert Matter Estate: 153 ¬¬ Funiculaire, Les Avants-Col de Sonloup sur Montreux 1932, 110 × 80 cm: 142 ¬¬ Gstaad, 1943, Alex Walter Diggelmann, 127.5 × 90.5 cm: 155 ¬¬ La patrie des bons skieurs, Martin Peikert, © 2014, ProLitteris, Zurich, 101 × 64 cm: 154 ¬¬ Die Renntage der Kanonen, Mürren, 19.– 22. Februar, 15.– 16. März, Alex Walter Diggelmann, 127.5 × 90.5 cm: 152 ¬¬ St. Moritz 1934, Amstutz & Herdeg Zurich, 128 × 91 cm: 151 ¬¬ Winter in Davos 1914, Burkhard ­Mangold, 127 × 90 cm: 145 ¬¬ Engadin St. Moritz Tourism ­Organi­sation: 140 ¬¬ Ullstein Bild: 134 ¬¬ St. Moritz FIS Cup 1933, Walter Herdeg, 50 × 70 cm: 148

263


Winter sports – a wealth of design

A never-ending boom

Back to the roots

¬¬ AO Foundation: 163 ¬¬ Arosa Bergbahnen AG: 180, 181 ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek St. Moritz: 166, 174 ¬¬ ETH-Bibliothek, Zurich, Image Archive: 176 ¬¬ Keystone: 158, 173, 175, 178, 182 ¬¬ Christof Kübler: 160, 177 ¬¬ Helga Lutz-Weiskönig, Attenhofer Ski 1955, Werner Weiskönig, colour lithography, 128 × 90cm: 162 ¬¬ Radical Sports, Urs Homberger Arosa: 171 ¬¬ Ringier: 168 ¬¬ Schlae�i & Maurer AG: 164 ¬¬ Swiss National Library: Kandahar 1946, 70 × 50 cm: 159 ¬¬ Kandahar 1966, 128 × 90 cm: 161 ¬¬ Molitor 1967, Mark Jeker, 128 × 90.5 cm, Wengen: 165 ¬¬ Stöckli Wolhusen: 169, 170 ¬¬ Switzerland Tourism: 179 ¬¬ Ullstein Bild: 167 ¬¬ Zai AG, Disentis: 172

¬¬ Bogner: 190, 191 ¬¬ Decca Records: 199 ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek Davos: 194, 213 ¬¬ ETH-Bibliothek, Zurich, Image Archive: 186 ¬¬ Keystone: 183, 187, 193, 198, 201, 202, 203, 204, 207, 208, 217, 218, 219 ¬¬ Fridli Wyss private archive: 197 ¬¬ Ringier: 184, 185, 188, 192, 195, 196, 200, 206, 210, 214, 216 ¬¬ Christoph Ruckstuhl, NZZ Zurich: 209 ¬¬ Hans-Peter SiΩert, weinweltfoto.ch: 212 ¬¬ Switzerland Tourism: 189 ¬¬ Ullstein Bild: 205

¬¬ Marianne Fässler: 245, 246 ¬¬ Stefan Hunziker, Geneva: 252 ¬¬ Keystone: 244, 251, 253, 254, 255, 256, 258, 259, 260, 261 ¬¬ Evelyne Vuilleumier private archive: 249 ¬¬ Radical Sports: 247, 248 ¬¬ Ringier: 257 ¬¬ Peter Schärer: 250 Epilogue Christoph Niemann/Engadin St. Moritz Tourism Organisation: 263

Extending the winter ¬¬ DEPREZphoto Crans-Montana: 220 ¬¬ Dokumentationsbibliothek St. Moritz: 222 ¬¬ Beatrice Geistlich: 239 ¬¬ Keystone: 225, 226, 229, 231, 232, 233, 234, 237, 238, 240, 241, 242 ¬¬ Hartly Mathis private archive: 230 ¬¬ Ringier: 228, 235, 236 ¬¬ Switzerland Tourism: 243 ¬¬ Swiss Image: 223, 224, 227 ¬¬ Ullstein Bild: 221

Editors and publishers have endeavoured to identify all rights owners. Should any instances of copyright infringement be noted, please contact the publisher through the publishing company. All rights are reserved.

Index

A Aargau  125, 222 Academic World Winter Games  93, 159 Active service  57, 60 Addington Symonds, John  21, 36, 37 Adelboden  38, 50, 53, 55, 121 Aerial cableways  122, 123, 173, 175, 176, 183, 190, 191, 200, 216 Aga Khan, Karim  190 Agnelli, Edoardo  117 Agnelli, Gianni  102, 184, 190 Aigle  75, 110 Airbnb  242 Albers, Hans  115 –117 Albula  72, 110, 125 Aletsch area  173, 190 Allgöwer, Martin  155 Allmen, Fritz von  59, 156, 158 Alpina-Hütte  52, 164

264 Appendix

Alpine Club  31 Alpine ski racing  58, 61, 64, 102, 226 Alps ¬¬Bernese  50 ¬¬French  192 ¬¬Fribourg  170 ¬¬Glarus  50 ¬¬Vaud  40, 75, 115, 124, 170, 179, 189, 194, 200 Alpsteinlauf  186 Altenrhein  82 Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) 99 Amateur Hockey Association (AHA)  99 America, the Americans (also see USA)  28, 31, 98, 102, 110, 137, 156, 170, 175, 195 Amin, Idi  191 Amsterdam  112, 134

Amstutz, Walter  47, 50, 62, 63, 66, 131, 132, 135, 137, 158, 161 Andermatt  40, 180, 200, 216, 238, 242 Anglican church  20 Annen, Arnold  80, 81, 85 Annen, Ruth  81 Appenzell  106, 186, 215 Après-ski  153, 156, 158, 193 Architectural traditions of the canton of Graubünden  164 Architecture  164 – 167 Arden, Elizabeth  117 Aristocracy  37 Arlberg-Kandahar  58, 59 Arlesheim  106 Arolla  233 Arosa  33, 39, 40, 44, 51, 65, 77, 82, 95, 106, 107, 110, 132, 166, 167, 176, 181, 202, 216

Arosa’s Weisshorn  167, 176 Arti�cial ice rinks  95, 206 Arti�cial snow  207, 214, 216 – 219 Arx-Zogg, Nini von  157 Aspen  123, 205 Astor Cup  110 Astor, J. J.  110 Atzmännig  206, 207 AuΩm’ Ordt, Clement  82 Austin, Charles  26 Australian  23, 25, 26, 28 Austria, the Austrians  23, 25, 29, 52, 58, 63, 65, 72, 84, 96, 98, 115, 118, 122, 123, 159, 161, 172, 178, 192, 196, 200, 202, 207, 215, 237, 241, 242 Austrian Ski Association  123 Automatic heel release ­mechanism  180 Avalanche research  163, 178


B Baar  163 Bachtel  46 Bad Ragaz  20, 216 Baden  13 Badrutt family  14, 110, 133 Badrutt, Andrea  190, 210, 211 Badrutt, Anton  133 Badrutt, Caspar  14, 23, 37, 132 Badrutt, Hans  14, 101, 116, 117, 137 Badrutt, Hansjürg  210 Badrutt, Johannes  8, 12, 14 – 16, 70, 115, 117, 132, 133 Badrutt, Maria  15 Badrutt’s wager  12, 133 Baedeker  13, 132, 174 Baillet-Latour, Henri de  88 Ballaigues  53 Ban on the construction of new hotels  119 Bandi, Walter  155 Bandlin, August  33 Bandy  17, 37, 94 Barblan, Peter  61, 65 Barclay, Vera  37 Bardonecchia  123 Bardot, Brigitte  187 Barton, Susan  37 Basel  70, 90, 95, 106, 126, 156, 174, 200, 225 Bavarian Curling  23, 212 Bearth & Deplazes  167 Beauchamp Strickland, Freddie de  20 Beauclair, Victor de  50, 51 Beatenberg  33, 173 Bec des Rosses  228 Beck, Noldi  158 Beeli, Gaudenz  191 Belalp  51 Belgian  7 Belle Époque  106, 112, 128, 189 Belmondo, Jean-Paul  158 Benson, Edward Frederic  37 Berg, Leif  52, 55, 77 Berlin  82, 112, 134, 135, 184 Berne  36, 55, 71, 90, 95, 106, 152, 170, 194, 208, 218, 219, 224 Bernese Oberland  32, 51, 53, 56, 58, 66, 72, 74, 79, 112, 115, 128, 156, 170, 194, 200, 218 Bernhard, Oscar  34, 155 Bernina Pass  102, 176 Berry, Gianni  205 Berry, Peter “Pierin”  190, 205 Berry, Peter  14, 15 Berry, Peter IV  8 Berry, Peter Robert  34, 72 Bettlach  155 Bettmeralp  170, 173, 190 Beyer, Herbert  136 Biathlon  60, 101 Bibbia, Elia  102 Bibbia, Gianni  102 Bibbia, Nino  102 , 103 Bibbia, Rösli  102 Biel  71, 155 Bière  158

Birkebeinerrennet  186 Bischof, Werner  136 Bischofberger, Bruno  29 Bivio  215 Björnstad, Thorleif  52, 55, 77 Black Forest  44, 50, 84, 123 Blonay, Godefroy de  88 Blüemlisalp  7 Bob runs  72, 112, 164, 167, 183, 184, 192, 207, 238 Bob tracks  14, 29, 106, 110, 111, 123, 164, 184, 190, 192 Bob world championships  93, 112 Bobsledders  75, 76, 79, 99, 111 Bobsleigh Federation  29, 111 Bobsleighs: ¬¬Bachmann brothers  111 ¬¬Feierabend  111, 123 ¬¬Hartkopf  111, 123 ¬¬Mathis  110, 111 ¬¬Podar  111 ¬¬Siorpaes  111 Bocuse, Paul  208 Bogner  47, 176 Bolgen ski lift  84, 85 Bolgenschanze  57 Bon, Hans  101 Bond, James  166, 167, 184 Bone fractures  155, 178 Bonorand, Peter  26 Bonvin, Roger  128, 175 Boss family  33 Boss, Fritz  71 Bosshart, David  240 – 242 Bottrop  207 Bracken, Bill  58 Brambrüesch  234 Brandt, Carl  132 Braunwald  81, 163 Brazil, the Brazilians  50, 238, 241 Brentel, Guglielmo  242 Bretaye ski jump  106 Breuil/Cervinia  63, 123, 175 British  22, 23, 53, 63, 100 Brundage, Avery  99 Buchs (St. Gallen)  158 Bühlmann, Christian  159 Bulpett, William Henry  25, 28, 29 Bündner Kreditgenossenschaft  112 Burger, Wilhelm Friedrich  134 C Cadonau, Dölf  186 Cairo  134 California  123 Canada, the Canadians  28, 94, 123, 181, 206 Carbon emissions  238 Cardinaux, Emil  134, 141 Caribbean  237, 240 Carigiet, Alois  101 Cars  28, 76, 81, 124, 175, 177, 191, 237 Cartier Polo World Cup on Snow  205 Carving  229, 235

Casparis, Christian  20 Cattini, Hans  95 Cattini, Pic  95 Caux  92, 95, 110, 111 Caviar  184, 203, 204, 208 Celerina  37, 38, 63, 72, 102, 110, 111 Celio, Enrico  126 Central Switzerland  13, 186, 200 Chairlifts  69, 173, 190, 207 Chamby  110 Chamonix  32, 40, 47, 53, 58, 92, 99, 122, 123 Champagne climate  137 Champéry  106, 149 Champfèr  39, 53, 181 Chandolin  228 Chanel, Coco  117 Chaplin, Charlie  115, 116, 117 Charity events  31, 117 Château d’Œx  40 Chiavenna  14, 125 Child, L. P.  28 China, Chinese  44, 138, 205, 238, 241 Christiania  44, 106 Chur  12, 14, 36, 70, 72, 79, 112, 176, 208, 234 Churchill, Winston  29 Citroën, André  79, 83, 117 Clark, Kelly  227 Climate change  199, 240 Club Méditerranée  189, 190 Coal holiday  172 Cocteau, Jean  212 Coester, Johann Carl  21, 22 Col des Mosses  124, 189 Collombin, Roland  196, 197 Colorado  123 Compagnie des Alpes  175 Comte, Alfred  82 Confectioners  8, 16, 208 Constam, Ernst  84, 85 Consumption  12, 18 Coolidge, W. A. B.  31 Cornish, Alfred  28 Corporate identity  131, 135 Cortina d’Ampezzo  123, 178 Corvatsch  180, 183, 200, 201, 214, 216, 219, 228 Corviglia  44, 52, 61, 63, 66, 79, 80, 100, 108, 116, 117, 164, 183, 202, 203, 208, 209 – 211, 226 Corviglia hut  52, 57, 61 Corviglia Ski Club  116, 117, 202 Coubertin, Pierre de  88, 89 Crans-Montana  40, 53, 56 – 58, 80, 110, 166, 171, 173, 181, 182, 189, 197, 199, 200, 216 Crap-Sogn-Gion  172, 191 Cresta Run  14, 20, 26, 28, 29, 32, 37, 63, 72, 102, 103, 110, 164, 165, 170, 184, 190, 238 Cross country  50, 55, 64, 91, 102, 154, 186 Curling  22, 23, 25, 106, 135, 136, 184, 206, 207, 211, 212 Curzon, Francis N.  29, 210 Czechoslovakia  99 Czegka, Berta  123

D Dahinden, Alois  77 Dahinden, Josef  61, 65, 77, 128, 134, 178 Dahinden, Rosa  76, 77 Dannegger, Karl  106 Danuser, Hans Peter  136 – 138, 205 Davos  7, 8, 11, 12 – 40, 44, 50 – 52, 56 – 58, 66, 70, 72, 76, 80, 84, 85, 90 – 95, 100, 105, 106, 110, 111, 118, 123, 126, 132 – 135, 138, 142, 152, 155, 157 – 161, 163, 165, 166, 170, 174 – 176, 179 – 181, 189, 192, 193, 203, 238, 241 Davos Toboggan Club  25, 28 Design  44, 60, 67, 125, 151, 160 Devaluation of the Swiss franc  119 Diavolezza  80, 82, 170, 176, 200, 214, 216, 219 Diba, Farah  181, 184 Diemtig Valley  53 Dietrich, Marlene  115, 117 Diggelmann, Alex W.  136, 149 Dimson Run  37, 40 Ditzler, Marcel  106, 128, 170, 193, 200, 237 Doctors  8, 12, 15, 19, 33, 34, 35, 126, 190, 205 Doebeli, Gustav  117 Domat/Ems  36 Dornach  106 Downhill Only Club  64 Downhill race  58, 59, 63, 64, 200 Doyle, Arthur Conan  51, 52, 160 Dracula Club  187 Dubai  206, 207, 209 Dufourspitze  174 Duke of Alba  117 Duttweiler, Gottlieb  121 Dylan, Bob  219 E Eagle Ski Club  202, 210 Earl Roberts of Kandahar  53, 57, 58 Ebnat-Kappel  179 Economic prosperity  9, 208 Edlin, Fred W.  58 Eggenberger, Johann  152 Egger, Carl  57 EHC Arosa  95 EHC St. Moritz  95, 102 Ehrat, Ariane  193, 197, 237 Eidenbenz, Hermann  153 Eiger  7, 33, 50, 228 Einsiedler Volksskilauf  186 Eiselin, Andreas  231, 232 Eisenhut, Johannes  222, 235 Eismeer  56, 60, 76, 214 Emmental  106, 222 Engadin  7, 8, 12, 20, 25, 32, 35, 40, 41, 48, 55, 61, 70 – 72, 82, 88 – 90, 99, 110, 117, 122, 124, 125, 128, 132 – 134, 137, 152, 160, 166, 186, 187, 189, 193, 200, 205, 209, 222, 232, 235, 237, 243

265


Engadin Ski Marathon  7, 186, 187, 232 Engadin St. Moritz Tourism ­Organisation  137, 193, 237, 271 Engadinsnow  228 Engel, Karl  154 Engelberg  29, 40, 79, 84, 90, 106, 110, 123, 157, 171, 182, 200 Engelhard, Paul  82 Engi, Hanns  166 England, the English  7, 8, 12 – 14, 17 – 22, 25, 29, 32, 33, 36, 40, 44, 58, 61, 65, 70, 82, 94, 106, 108, 110, 117, 119, 133, 160, 181, 207, 216, 237 Environmental impact assessment  215 Erb, Fritz  64, 101, 170, 178 Erb, Karl  193, 195 Erni, Hans  134 Ernst, Albert  190 Esco≈er, Auguste  208 Eton  53, 59 Ettinger, Jack  84, 159 Ettinger, Ruedi  160 Evolène  197 F Fairbanks, Douglas  115 – 117 Fanck, Arnold  60, 134, 135 Farman biplane  74 Farner, Mark  163, 224, 230 Fässler, Peter  222 – 224 Federal Council  7, 72, 93, 119, 126, 128, 133, 175, 197 Federal Inspectorate for ­Forestry  194 Federal Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research  118 Federalism  190 Fédération Internationale du Ski (FIS) 58, 64, 66, 93, 96, 101, 145, 149 Feierabend, Karl  111, 123 Felix, Kurt  195 Fernandes, José  224, 226 Figini, Michela  197 Figure skating  17, 89, 91, 92, 98, 136, 206, 207 Film stars  115, 117 FIS races  66, 93, 136, 145, 149 Fitzgerald, Scott  211 Flaine  192 Fleurier  106 Flims  65, 77, 79, 173, 191, 200 Flums  219 Flumserberge  176 Fondue  206, 207 Fopp, Johann Peter  152 France, the French  7, 20, 29, 50, 63, 84, 111, 122 – 124, 156, 175, 200, 208, 215, 241 Franco-Prussian War  20 Frankfurt  206 Franz Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria  34, 40, 41, 202 Freeride World Tour  228 Freeriding  221, 226, 228, 231 Freestyle  206, 207, 225 – 228 Freestyle.ch  206, 207

266 Appendix

Freiburg im Breisgau  50 Frenzel, H. K.  135, 138 Friedrich, Prince of Prussia  181 Funi  81, 85 Funiculars  69, 76, 79, 80, 83 – 85, 189, 214 Fuorcla Surlej  51, 200 Furrer, Art  125, 195, 209 G Gaberel, Rudolf  165, 166 Gafner, Raymond  95 Gänsbrunnen  106 Garmisch-Partenkirchen  58, 93, 96, 99, 123 Gasperl, Leo  62, 63 Gaudenzi, Reto  205 Gemsstock  182, 200, 216 Geneva  36, 90, 99, 116 Genoa  19, 132 Germany, Germans  8, 12, 14, 16, 19, 21 – 23, 25, 29, 40, 50, 52, 58, 65, 70, 82, 83, 98, 112, 115, 117, 118, 123, 134, 161, 170, 184, 192, 200, 207, 215, 237, 241 Gerschwiler, Hans  99 Gertsch, Ernst  58, 163, 216 Gertsch, Ulo  163 Gertsch, Viktor  59 Gessner, Conrad  13 Gibson, Harry  26, 28, 45 Giger, Albert  186 Girenbad  111, 192 Giscard d’Estaing, Valéry  208 Glacierbike Downhill  209 Glaciers: ¬¬Aletsch  50, 51, 170 ¬¬Gurschen�rn  216 ¬¬Mont Miné  233 ¬¬Silvretta  200 ¬¬Steinlimi  200 ¬¬Theodul  200, 214 ¬¬Vorab  191 Glacier Ski areas  191, 214, 225 Glarus  46, 48 – 52, 55, 152, 222 Global economic crisis  81, 83, 117 Global warming  214 Globalisation  237, 238, 241 Goddard, Paulette  117 Golden age of mountaineering  13 Golden age of skiing (races)  59, 64, 67, 226 Golf  204, 209 Gommerlauf  186 Goms  174 Gondolas  167, 171, 173, 190, 191 Gornergrat  174 Gottlieb Duttweiler Institute  242 Graf, Rudolf  59 Grafenort  110 Grand National  26, 28, 29 Grand Duke Andrei  40 Grand Duke Michael  40 Granelli, Ezio  102 Grass skiing  206, 207

Graubünden  7, 8, 28, 33, 35, 36, 38, 53, 70, 71, 74, 79, 82, 99, 100, 112, 115, 118, 124, 128, 173, 174, 192, 194, 209, 215, 218, 235 Graz  122 Great Britain  31, 33, 53, 58, 61, 98, 243 Greatheed, Francis  12, 15, 17 Greich  195 Greicheralp  173 Grimmialp  53 Grindelwald  17, 31, 33 – 35, 39, 41, 53, 56, 60, 70 – 72, 81, 106, 110, 112, 124, 128, 158, 159, 169, 170, 173, 214 Gross value added  237 Grand duke Andrei  40 Grand duke Michael  40 Grosshöchstetten  223 Gruber, Peter  58 Gstaad  72, 81, 95, 106, 108, 115, 116, 118, 149, 170, 173, 176, 184, 187, 190, 202, 210, 211, 238 Guardia Grischa  125 Guetg, Peder  215 Guinness, Loel  176 Guisan, Henri  101, 121, 126 Günthard, Jack  194 Gurten  55, 56, 106 Gurtner, Othmar  65 Gurtner, Reto  191 Gurtner, Walter  191, 192 Gut, Paul  126, 155 Gut’s clinic  155 Gymkhanas  22, 106 H Haas, Sepp  186 Hale-Woods, Nicolas  228 Halfpipe  224, 225, 227, 229 Haller, Albrecht von  13 Harrow  53, 59 Hartkopf, August  111, 123, 160 Hauri, Johannes  20 Hauser, Walter  72 HC Bellerive-Vevey  94, 95 HC Davos  95, 100 HC Les Avants  94, 95 HC Rosey-Gstaad  95 Heath, Edward  184 Heating holidays  126 Heaton, Jack  102 Heer-Bétrix, Leo  71 Heidiland  137 Heierling, Franz  157 Heierling, Hans  157 Heiniger, Ernst A.  136 Heinzenberg  181 Heliotherapy  35 Heliskiing  176, 181 Hemmi, Heini  215 Hendrik, Prince of Holland  88 Henie, Sonja  87, 89 Herdeg, Walter  131, 132, 135 – 138, 145, 147, 158 Herwig, Otto  44 Hess, Erika  197 Heyerdahl, Thorwald  44, 50 High society  210 Hitchcock, Alfred  117, 136, 137

Hitler, Adolf  123 Hitz, Luzi  158 Hnateck, Samuel  44, 152, 222 Hoch-Ybrig  192, 229 Hoek, Henry  61, 152, 158 Hofer, Polo  218 HoΩmann, Camill  38 Holidays  40, 53, 118, 121, 125 – 128, 170, 189, 190, 235, 237 Holland, the Dutch  8, 16, 25, 70, 170 Holsboer, Willem Jan  16, 17, 19, 22, 70, 72 Horseracing  7, 35, 38, 40, 58, 89, 106, 108, 202, 238 Hotel bookings  115, 175, 194, 197, 237, 238 Hotelleriesuisse  242 Hotelplan  121 Hotels: Arosa: ¬¬Kulm  65 Celerina: ¬¬Cresta Palace  22 Crans-Montana: ¬¬Crans-Ambassador  189 Davos: ¬¬Belvedere  17, 18, 21, 23 ¬¬Buol  25 ¬¬Flüela  40 ¬¬Kurhaus  13, 16, 20 Davos-Wiesen: ¬¬Kurhaus Bellevue  20 Grindelwald: ¬¬Bear  33– 35, 71, 128 Gstaad: ¬¬Palace  81, 118, 210, 211 Klosters: ¬¬Silvretta  25, 26 Les Avants: ¬¬Grand-Hotel  31 Mürren: ¬¬Palace  53, 58 Rigi: ¬¬Bellevue  77 ¬¬Grand Hotel  77 St. Moritz: ¬¬Badrutt’s Palace  14, 17, 32, 37, 53, 83, 101, 106, 111, 115 – 117, 132, 134, 137, 183, 190, 202, 208, 210, 211, 212, 238, 241 ¬¬Carlton  37, 241 ¬¬Crystal  190 ¬¬Grand Hotel  41, 117, 128, 129 ¬¬Kempinski Grand Hotel des Bains  241 ¬¬Kulm  12, 14 – 17, 19, 21 – 23, 25, 26, 29, 31, 32, 37, 61, 70, 71, 88, 112, 117, 132, 133, 164, 165, 187, 190, 208, 210, 238, 241 ¬¬Kurhaus  16 ¬¬Neues Stahlbad  189 ¬¬Pension Flugi  15 ¬¬Reine Victoria  189 ¬¬Suvretta House  37, 64, 65, 101, 117, 181, 184, 208, 212, 238, 241


Zermatt: ¬¬Mont Cervin  174 ¬¬RiΩelalp  174 ¬¬Zermatt  174 Huitfeld, Fritz  154 Huntford, Roland  52, 161 Hüppi, Mirko  206 Hussein, King of Jordan  181, 184 Hyperin�ation  83, 115

Jungfraujoch  41, 65, 77, 137, 200, 214 Jura  40, 53, 106, 159, 170

I Ice fall climbing  235 Ice hockey  17, 37, 92 – 96, 99, 101, 102, 108, 123, 135, 136, 206 Ice hockey association  94, 99 Ice rink building Davos  165, 166 Ice rinks  14, 17, 22, 31, 38, 90, 98, 116, 122 Ice skating  17, 32, 76, 89, 91, 92, 105, 106, 136 Ice skating style, english  17 Ice stadium  14, 99 – 101 Ice yachting  25 Iceripper Snowboard Club  225 Igaya, Chiharu  195 Iltios  176 Immigrant background  240 Imperialism  40 Imseng, Josef  44 India  53, 117, 132, 210, 238 Indoor ice rinks  206 Inferno race  58, 59, 170 International Eisschubverein  23 International Olympic Committee  88, 90, 93, 96, 99, 101 International races  25, 26, 28, 110, 225 International Snowboard ­Federation (ISF)  225 Interwar period  121, 123 Iselin, Christof  46, 48 – 52, 55, 222 Italy, the Italians  8, 14, 19, 26, 29, 58, 72, 84, 102, 118, 123, 125, 133, 156, 175, 200, 208, 215, 241, 246, 253

K Kainz, Josef  13 Kälin, Alois  186 Kandahar binding  153, 156, 158, 159 Kandahar Challenge Cup  57, 58 Kandahar downhill race  200 Kandersteg  7, 40, 53, 223 Karajan, Herbert von  125, 190 Karl, Kaiser of Austria  115 Kashoggi, Adnan  184 Kasper, Peter  133, 137, 170, 190 Kelly, Grace  184 Kennedy, Thomas S.  12 Kessler, Charly  95 Kessler, Hansjürg  163 Kessler, Herbert “Hertli”  95 Kilomètre lancé  62, 63, 226 Kipp, Karl-Heinz  242 Kitesur�ng  22 Kitzbühel  122, 202, 205 Kjelsberg, Olaf  46 Klammer, Franz  196 Klein Matterhorn  175, 214 Kleine Scheidegg  56, 63, 71, 218, 219 Klewenalp  176 Klosters  25, 26, 38, 53, 70, 76, 110, 172, 173, 200 Knickerbockers  29, 47, 67, 94 Kobelt, Karl  128 Koch, Robert  34 Koch, Valentin  164 Konol�ngen  224 Krippendorf, Jost  194 Küblis  58, 160 Küderli, Hans  189 Küderli, Robert  189 Küpfer, Walter  134, 139 Kurhotellerie (hotels dedicated to health and spa treatments) 70 Küsnacht  225

J JablochkoΩ candle  14 Jackson, N. Lane  23 Jacober, Josef  49, 60, 152 Jacober, Melchior  48, 49, 152 Jacomet, Simon  163 Jakobsbad  207 Jakobshorn  176, 226 Japan  96, 98, 156 Jeker, Leo  214 – 216, 219 Jerusalem  53 Jet set  184, 187 Joch Pass  171 John, Elton  219 Jones, Digby  160 Jucker, August  74, 82 Julen, Severin  175 Juliana, Queen of the Netherlands  177 Julier Pass  26, 70, 72, 119, 124 Jungfrau  7, 31, 51

L La Neuveville  156 Laax  172, 180, 191, 192, 200, 204, 216, 227 Lake Placid  98, 123 Lakes: ¬¬Biel  156 ¬¬Davos  82 ¬¬Geneva  13, 32, 33, 92, 94, 95, 170, 227 ¬¬Lucerne  13 ¬¬Sils  25, 32 ¬¬Silvaplana  204 ¬¬Stazer  20 ¬¬St. Moritz  37, 39, 74, 82, 83, 176, 202, 204, 205, 238 ¬¬Thun  13, 33 ¬¬Walen  176, 187, 194, 197 ¬¬Zurich  106, 225 Landquart  70 Langnau am Albis  106

Lantschner, Gustav  63 Lanz, A. B.  162 Lauber, Daniel  174 Lauberhorn, Lauberhorn Races  58, 59, 156, 163, 219 Laubi, Hugo  90 Lauenen  81 Lausanne  95, 174, 228 Lauterbrunnen  58, 70, 71, 74, 119 Le Corbusier  135 Le Rosey  81, 95, 116, 210 League of Nations  53 Lebrument, Hanspeter  191 Lennon, Cynthia  183 Lennon, John  183, 184 Lenzerheide  40, 50, 52, 53, 70, 79, 81, 190 Les Avants  20, 31, 33, 34, 52, 79, 94, 95, 110, 112, 124, 140 Les Diablerets  182, 200, 221 Lettner, Rudolf  159 Leukerbad  13 Leysin  35, 40, 75, 76, 110, 111, 189, 226, 227 Ligue de Hockey sur Glace de la Suisse Romande  94 Lilienfeld  52, 122, 154 Lilienfelder Skilauf-Technik  52 Livanos family  125 Lohrer, Heini  95 London  12, 15, 18, 20, 21, 36, 70, 72, 82, 92, 94, 99, 134, 156, 206 Lord Beaverbrook  117 Lord Brabazon of Tara  29 Lötschberg  124 Lower Engadin  35, 225, 226 Lower Valais  106, 228 Lowlands  70, 95, 134, 193, 204 Lucerne  13, 186 Ludwig II., King of Bavaria  13 Lung conditions  12, 19, 40 Lunn, Arnold  50, 52, 53, 57 – 59, 61 – 63, 101, 158, 200, 216, 226 Lunn, Henry  33, 52, 53, 55, 57, 58, 74, 189 M MacMorland, Elizabeth  21, 22 Maier, Marcella  61, 80, 98, 117 Main, Elizabeth  31, 32 Maloja  38, 110, 125, 137, 160, 189 Mangold, Burkhard  134, 143 Mann, Thomas  166 Marker, Hannes  162 Marketing  133, 195, 240 Martigny  173 Martin, George  183 Martineau, Hubert  111 Mass tourism  187, 241, 243 Mathis, Christian  28, 110, 111 Mathis, Friedy  208, 209 Mathis, Hartly  203, 208, 209 Mathis, Reto  208 Mathys, Robert  155 Matter, Herbert  135, 136, 138, 149 Matterhorn  7, 12, 13, 50, 123, 174, 175

Matthias, Eugen  125, 157 Mayr, Johann Heinrich  8, 12, 15 Maze, Tina  163 Meerkämper, Emil  132 Meiringen-Hasliberg  161 Mellingen  222 Menjou, Adolphe  117 Menthon, Bernhard von  60 Mentasti, Giuseppe  102 Meyer, Antoinette  156 Meyer, Fredi  228 Middle classes  240, 242 Milan  20, 60, 132, 134, 208, 241 Military  57, 60, 93 Military patrol run  89, 93, 101, 128, 232 Minger, Rudolf  93 Minsch, Peter  25, 26 Miss Carroll  59 Mittelallalin  214 Mittelholzer, Walter  82, 117 Modernism  134, 135, 166 Mogul runs  179, 219, 226 Moholy-Nagy, Laszlo  136 Molitor, Fritz  156 Molitor, Karl  58, 59, 61, 62, 101, 103, 156, 157 Mönch  7 Mont Blanc  122, 228 Monte Rosa  228 Monte Generoso  234 Montgomery of Alamein, Bernard  170 Montreal  28, 206 Montreux  33, 72, 79, 81, 92, 110, 116 Moon boots  193, 225 Morach, Otto  166 Morgartenskilauf  186 Morges  170 Morgins  53, 228 Mountain railways  33, 69, 76, 79, 80, 106, 110, 119, 121 – 125, 134, 140, 176, 180, 191, 203, 214, 218, 237 Mountbatten, Edwina  117 Müller, Maurice E.  155 Müller, Peter  197 Munich  125, 205, 208, 241 Muothatal  46 Mürren  38, 53, 56, 58, 59, 61, 63, 66, 74, 79, 85, 110, 135, 149, 153, 156, 158, 167, 170, 183, 216 Mürzzuschlag  122 Mussolini, Benito  123 N Nadig, Marie-Theres  193, 196 Näf, Eduard  46 Nansen, Fridtjof  45, 46, 52, 222 Nater, Carl  93, 103 Nation of skiers  128, 194, 197 National Association for the Promotion of Tourism  122, 134 Nationale Aktion  194 Natural skiing  124, 134 Nendaz  209, 228 Neuburg, Hans  136 New York  99, 123, 134, 195

267


New Zealand  31 “ni” storm  95 Niarchos, Stavros  125, 176, 180, 190 Nidecker  158, 163 Nidwalden  176 Niemann, Christoph  138, 239 Nora, Pierre  196 Nordic disciplines  55 Nordic Games  91 North America  28, 44, 123, 156, 231 North face of the Eiger  59, 71 Norway, the Norwegians  8, 39, 43 – 46, 50, 52, 66, 87, 89, 93, 106, 152, 154, 158, 159, 202, 226 O Oberalpstock  50 Oberdiessbach  106 Oberhof (Thuringia)  123 Obersee  40, 82, 202 Obrist, Robert  125 October Revolution  112 O≈ce National du Tourisme  122 Ogi, Adolf  7, 196 Oil crisis  194 Olten  55, 106 Olympic bob run  167, 207 Olympic ski jump  90, 93 Olympic stadium  89, 90, 96, 164, 166 Opel, Fritz von  187 Opel, Wilhelm von  184 Oslo  44, 101, 158 Osteal tuberculosis  35 Osteosynthesis  155 Outdoor Amusement Committees  22, 25 Oxford Canadians  94 P Package holidays  33, 189, 237 Package oΩers  33, 121 Pahlawi Reza, Shah of Persia  116, 152, 181, 184, 208 Paracelsus  13 Paravicini, Giovanni  44 Paris  14, 20, 45, 70, 112, 134, 206, 208 Parliamentary ski week  243 Parsenn  50, 58, 59, 67, 80, 170, 172, 173 Parsenn Derby  58, 170 Patrouille des Glaciers  128, 232, 233 Paulcke, Wilhelm  44, 50, 51, 94, 118, 174 Penicillin  76 Perren, Stephan  155 Pfä≈kon SZ  106 P�ster, Oskar  126 Pickford, Mary  117 Pieper, Michael  242 Piste de l’Ours  189, 192 Piste preparation  179, 183, 219 Piz Bernina  7, 243 Piz-Nair  137, 167, 176, 219

268 Appendix

Pizol  52, 164, 176 Plaine Morte  57, 58, 199, 200 Polo on Snow  202, 204 Poltera, Gebi  95 Poltera, Ueli  95 Pontresina  38, 51, 80, 85, 110, 123, 128, 138, 146, 152, 158 Pope Pius XI.  60 Postal snow sleds  18, 70 Postcards  131, 132 Poster art  134, 141 Posters  128, 131, 132, 134 Pragel Pass  46, 49, 57 Pragellauf  186 Prättigau  70 Preussen, Wilhelm von (Wilhelm of Prussia)  40 Price of land  14, 38, 191 Priests  14, 17, 38, 233 Prince di Sangro  117 Prince’s Club London  94 Pringle Robertson, George  25 Pröll, Annemarie  196 Public Schools Alpine Sports Club  33, 53, 189 Puidoux  163 Pulitzer Texas Long Horn  26 Pulitzer, Ralph  26

Rich, Marc  184 Richter, Hugo  17 Ridell, Jimmy  58 Riederalp  173, 195 Rigi  40, 56, 76, 77, 79, 234 Riviera  12, 36, 122 Roaring Twenties  115, 119, 134 Rodewald, Raimund  238 Rolle  163 Rollier, Auguste  35 Rolling carpets  207 Romandie  31, 94, 111, 112, 181 Romanshorn  160 Rome  20, 53, 134 Rominger, Rudolf  125 Roth, Hermann  133 Rousseau, Jean-Jacques  13 Rubi, Christian  58 Rubinstein, Helena  117 Ruchet, Henri  108 Rue, Xavier de la  229 Rümligen  160 Russi, Bernhard  193, 196, 197, 237 Russia, the Russians  20, 112, 117, 152, 208, 238, 241 Rütli Oath  133 Ruud, Sigmund  106

R Rack railways  84 Raclette  206 Radical Snowboarding Club  224 Radio  99, 194, 196 Ragaz, Georg  215 Ragetli, Melchior  36 Ragettli, Andri  229 Railways and funiculars: ¬¬Allmendhubel  56, 79 ¬¬Arth-Rigi  77 ¬¬Berner Oberland  72, 79 ¬¬Chantarella  56 ¬¬Corvatsch  200 ¬¬Corviglia  69, 79 ¬¬Diavolezza  183 ¬¬Gerschnialp  79 ¬¬Gerschnialp-Trübsee  84 ¬¬Gotschna  173 ¬¬Jungfrau  56, 64, 76, 134, 214 ¬¬Matterhorn Gotthard  174 ¬¬Montreux-Oberland-­ Bernois  72 ¬¬Muottas Muragl  56, 76, 79 ¬¬Parsenn  67, 80, 165, 166 ¬¬Visp-Zermatt  74, 174 ¬¬Vitznau-Rigi  77, 79 ¬¬Wengernalp  59, 71, 74, 85 ¬¬Wispile Funi  81 Rainier III., Prince of Monaco  116, 184, 190 Raphael  14 Ratrac  179, 183 Ray Ban  136, 177 Recession  194 Reinalter, Edy  101 Rennverein St. Moritz  202 Reuge, Guido  159 Revolving turns  66, 226 Rhaetian Railway  38, 70 – 72, 90, 110, 202

S Saanenland  72, 80, 84, 106, 118 Saanenmöser  81 Saas Valley  44 Saas-Fee  175, 200, 209, 214, 243 Saas-Grund  197 Sachs, Ernst  187 Sachs, Gunter  29, 111, 158, 184, 187 Sachs, Mirja  184 Sachs, Rolf  111 Safety binding  162, 163, 178 Sa�en valley  219 Sailer, Toni  178 Salastrains  125 Samedan  14, 15, 38, 82, 99, 128, 132 Samnaun/Ischgl  197, 219 San Bernardino  36 Sanatoriums  18, 34, 35, 37, 40, 76, 166, 189 Santos, Alberto  50 Sapporo  96, 193, 196, 197 Sarajevo  41 Saratz, Claudio  51 Sattel-Hochstuckli  207 Saudan, Sylvain  228 Savognin  214 – 216 Sawiris, Samih  242 Scaletta Pass  72 Scandinavia  8, 44, 123, 186, 215 SchaΩhausen  193, 197 Schatzalp  40, 56, 76, 192 Schaufelberger, Edi  219 Scherz, Ernst  210, 211 Scheuing, Albert  186 Schierke (Harz)  123 Schiller, Friedrich  13, 133 Schilthorn  58, 167, 183, 184 Schindellegi  106 Schlitteda  22, 110

Schlunegger, Hedi  99 Schmid, Jürg  239 Schmid, Leza  214 Schmid, Peter  218 Schmidt, Gian-Paul  226 Schneereifen  44 Schneider, Hannes  58, 60, 65, 122, 123, 134 Schneider, Robert  155 Schneider, Romy  183 Schneider, Vreni  197 Schönenwerd  157 School holidays  172 Schulthess, Edmund von  88 Schulthess, Emil  136 Schumacher, Beatrice  128 Schwarzenbach, Urs E.  205 Schweizerische HotelTreuhand-Gesellschaft  112 Schwyz  106, 173, 192, 229 Scotland  23 Scuol  34, 38, 225, 226 Second homes  9, 194, 238 Seiler, Alexander  122 Seiler, Hermann  50, 174 Semmering  29, 40, 122 Sestriere  58, 123 Siberia  44 Siebenthal, Oswald von  80, 81 Siegrist, Dominik  232, 235 Sillig, Max  94 Sils (Engadin)  38, 152, 222 Silvaplana  181, 208 Sion  192 SKA hat  183 Skateboards  224, 229 Skating Union  91 Skeleton  7, 8, 26, 28, 29, 37, 40, 88, 90, 101, 102, 110, 117, 134, 187, 192, 225 Ski acrobatics  125, 195, 209, 226 Ski areas  9, 181, 183, 190 – 192, 195, 197, 212, 215 Ski association of the Workers’ Gymnastics and Sports ­Federation (Satus)  106 Ski bindings: 44, 49, 52, 152 – 154, 222, 225 ¬¬Alpina  159 ¬¬Balata  154 ¬¬Fritschi  162 ¬¬Gertsch  163 ¬¬Giant reed  154 ¬¬Kandahar  67, 153, 158, 159, 162, 163 ¬¬Nefracta  162 Ski boots: ¬¬Bally  157, 158, 161 ¬¬Heierling  157, 161 ¬¬Henke  156, 161, 193, 195 ¬¬Molitor  156, 157, 161 ¬¬plastic  156 ¬¬Raichle  157, 158, 161, 225 ¬¬Te-Ma  125, 157 Ski camps  106, 128, 173, 183, 238, 240 Ski clothing  47, 49 Ski clubs: ¬¬Alpina St. Moritz  44, 65, 164, 202


¬¬Berne  152 ¬¬Glarus  48 ¬¬of Great Britain  61 ¬¬Kandahar  58, 62, 63, 158 ¬¬Zurich  52 Ski �lms  134, 228, 231 Ski instructors  7, 52, 55, 60, 61, 65, 84, 93, 96, 101, 122, 124, 125, 170, 174, 175, 180, 181, 193, 195, 200, 219 Ski jumping  55, 57, 61, 91, 102, 108, 115, 125, 134, 154, 201 Ski jumps  38, 106, 122, 166 Ski lifts  69, 81, 83 – 85, 100, 106, 123, 173, 176, 190, 191, 197, 200, 216, 222, 238 Ski races  39, 41, 43 – 67, 89, 101, 122, 132, 149, 156, 169, 193, 195, 196, 200, 202, 225 Ski school prices  170 Ski schools  7, 64, 65, 77, 123 – 125, 178 – 182, 186, 195 Ski tour racing  232, 233 Ski touring  44, 51, 52, 221, 230, 232, 240 Ski World Cup  163 Skiing  8, 32, 39, 43 – 67, 69, 77, 79, 89, 96, 105 – 129, 134, 145, 157, 169 – 197, 199, 200, 204, 207, 212, 216, 222, 230, 232, 235, 237, 240 Skiing holidays  53, 56, 121, 238 Skiing lesson/ski course  51, 60, 65, 77, 121, 122 Skikjöring  38, 39, 106, 125, 144, 202, 203 Ski-Mambo  65, 134, 178 Skis: ¬¬ash timber  152, 158 ¬¬Attenhofer  154, 158, 159, 162, 180 ¬¬Authier  158, 162 ¬¬Belmag  158 ¬¬Carving  152, 230 ¬¬Gotthardsoldat  60 ¬¬Head  161 ¬¬hickory  158, 178 ¬¬metal  154, 158, 162, 180 ¬¬Molitor  156 ¬¬Movement  163, 230 ¬¬norwegian  44, 46 ¬¬plastic  162 ¬¬Rebell  158 ¬¬Schwendener  158, 162 ¬¬Splitkein  67, 158, 161 ¬¬Staub  158 ¬¬Stöckli  158, 161 – 163 ¬¬Streuli Frères  158 ¬¬wooden  158, 159 ¬¬Zai for Bentley  163 Slalom  58, 59, 63, 64, 99, 101, 156, 157, 170, 224 Sledges: ¬¬Burri  160 ¬¬Caprez  160 ¬¬Davos  25, 28, 45, 160, 161, 192 ¬¬Engelberg  160 ¬¬Graf  160 ¬¬Grindelwald  160

¬¬Hartkopf  160 ¬¬Heinz-Friberg  160 ¬¬Marquart  160 Sledging  28, 192 Sleigh lifts  81, 84 Sloterdijk, Peter  196 Slovenia  44 Smith, Trygve  44, 50 Snocial season  211 Snociety  210, 211 Snörekjöring  38, 39, 202 Snow cannons  215, 218, 219 Snow football world cup  209 Snow’n’Rail  83 Snowboard world championships  227 Snowboarding  206, 207, 214, 219 – 231, 240 Snowboards: ¬¬Hooger Booger  223, 224 ¬¬Radical  163, 224, 230 ¬¬Sims  225 ¬¬Wild Duck  230 Snowcats  182, 183, 216 Snowkite  234, 235 Snow-making systems  215, 216, 218, 237, 238 SnowpenAir  218, 219 Snowplough turn  52, 122 Snowshoeing  235, 240 Snowshoes  18, 44 – 46, 77, 231, 234 Social Darwinism  8 Solar energy  126 Solarskilift  218, 219 Solothurn  106 Sonloup  34, 79, 140 South Tyrol  193, 224 Soviet Union  98 Speed skating  17, 89, 91, 92, 106, 166, 206 Speicher  106 Spengler, Alexander  8, 12, 15, 16, 19, 34, 44 Spiez  112 Spini, Georg  157 Spiritual Defence  126 Spitzmeilenhütte  164 Squaw Valley  196 St. Anton am Arlberg  58, 60, 65, 122, 134 St. Gallen  36 St. Galler Oberland  216 St. Gotthard  124, 174, 194 St. Imier  53, 106 St. Moritz Tourist Board  65, 82, 98, 132, 133 St. Moritz: 7, 8, 11 – 41, 44, 45, 47, 48, 50, 52, 56, 57, 63 – 66, 69 – 72, 77, 79 – 83, 85, 87 – 103, 106, 108, 110 – 112, 115 – 118, 123, 125 – 129, 131 – 138, 151, 155 – 157, 160, 164 – 166, 170, 174, 175, 181 – 184, 186 – 189, 192, 193, 200, 202 – 205, 207, 208, 210 – 212, 219, 224, 226, 227, 229, 237 – 241, 243 ¬¬Bad  13, 16, 37, 61, 89, 186, 189 ¬¬Bobsleigh Club (SMBC)  110, 111

¬¬Font  134– 138 ¬¬Grand Prix of  202 ¬¬Skating Club  18, 70, 132 ¬¬Tobogganing Club (SMTC)  28, 29, 102 ¬¬Top of the World  137, 138 ¬¬Village  13, 14, 37, 136 St. Niklaus  174 Stankowsky, Anton  136 StauΩer, Teddy  117 Ste-Croix  40, 106, 153, 159 Steel edges  59, 159 SteΩen, Rudolf  210 Stein am Rhein  161 Steiner, Albert  132 Steiner, Karl  190 Stephen, Leslie  9, 31, 40 Sterchi, Thomas  219 Stevenson, Robert Louis  23 Stifter, Herbert  122 Stirrup pants  47, 67, 177 Stockholm  134 Stoos  176 Strasser, Gottfried  70 Straumann, Fritz  155 Strauss, Franz-Josef  191 Strettell, Alfred Baker  14, 19 Strettell, Arthur V.  12, 14, 15 Subsidies  72, 172, 242 Sulgen  160 Summer ski areas  200 Summer skiing  200 Summer toboggan runs  207 Sun Valley  123 Sunglasses  136, 177 Sur�ng  22, 224 Surselva district  191 Susten Pass  200 Suvretta  125, 190 Suvretta lift  83, 84 Swanson, Gloria  117 Sweden  44, 99, 186 Swinging Sixties  212 Swiss Confederation  88, 90 Swiss federal government  72, 103, 174 Swiss Federal Institute of ­Technology (ETH) 50, 118 Swiss Federal O≈ce of Sport  232 Swiss Federation for Nature Conservation  180, 192 Swiss Foundation for Landscape Conservation  238 Swiss Heritage Society  192 Swiss National Tourism O≈ce see Switzerland Tourism Swiss ¬¬Academic Ski Club (SAS) 50, 59, 62, 63 ¬¬Alpine Club (SAC) 52, 60, 164, 180, 243 ¬¬Army  57, 101, 124, 128 ¬¬Berghilfe (an organisation for the bene�t of the population in the mountains)  219 ¬¬Cableways register  175 ¬¬Credit Institution  190, 193 ¬¬Curling Association  23

¬¬Federal Railways (SBB) 80, 106, 108, 132, 134, 176 ¬¬Hoteliers Association  65, 83, 112 ¬¬Hotel-Revue  65 ¬¬Ice Hockey Federation  94 ¬¬Locomotive and Machine Factory (SLM) 46 ¬¬National Accident Insurance Fund (Suva)  155 ¬¬National Exhibition  1939 134 ¬¬Olympic Committee  90 ¬¬Public accident insurer (Suva)  155 ¬¬Railway Workers Association  121 ¬¬Reisekasse (holiday fund)  121 ¬¬Sample Fair  156 ¬¬Ski Association  7, 50, 55, 64, 65, 77, 96, 106, 189, 196 ¬¬Ski Championships  55, 174 ¬¬Ski School Association  65 ¬¬Television  193 ¬¬Tourism Federation  194 ¬¬Youth ski camp  126, 128 Swissair  82, 83 Switzerland Tourism  7, 119, 122, 134, 238, 239 Syers, Madge  17 T Tailing party  18, 23 Tannenbodenalp  176 Tanner, Simon  132 Täsch  175 Taylor, Liz  190 Team games  37, 106 Telemark  44, 49, 152, 235 Television  99, 131, 133, 193, 194, 196, 222, 224 Tell, Wilhelm  13, 133 Tenna  218, 219 Tennis  22, 106, 132, 200, 209 Testa, Adriano  47, 152 Testa, Giovanni  65, 124, 125, 134, 157, 178, 195 Testa, Plinio  125 Testa, Renato  125 Tête Blanche  233 The AO Foundation (Association for Osteosynthesis)  155 The First Crossing of Greenland  45, 222 Theler, Hans “Cha-Cha”  187 Thermal springs  13 Theus, Tilla  167 Thoma-Badrutt, Emil  80, 202 Thöni, Hans  121 Thurgau  12, 156 Thusis  70, 72 Thyon  189, 192, 193 Tianjin  205 Ticino  208, 234 Tissières, Rodolphe  128, 190 Toboggan  23, 25, 26, 28, 76 Toboggan runs  18, 25, 37, 38, 77 Tobogganing  18, 23, 26, 28, 29, 192

269


Toggenburg  176, 193, 226 Töndury, Janet  16 Topham, Harold  45 Torelli, Ines  181 Torriani, Bibi  95, 96, 99, 100 Torriani, Vico  183 Tourism  8, 33, 57, 77, 83, 122 Trenker, Luis  117 Trepp, Hans-Martin  95 Triet, Max  111 Trio Eugster  194 Tropeano, Joe  215 Tschappina  181 Tuberculosis  8, 12, 16, 23, 34, 35, 44, 51, 76 Tunisia  163 Turner, Tina  219 Typhoid epidemic  175 Tyrol  65 U Udet, Ernst  82 Unger, Friedrich  12, 17 Uniform method  65, 125, 178, 195 United States Olympic ­Committee  99 Unterterzen  176 Unterwasser  81 Upper Engadin  33, 40, 51, 56, 70, 76, 89, 101, 134, 137, 176, 180, 181, 186, 200, 205, 219 Uri  200 Urnäsch  215, 216 USA  26, 31, 82, 84, 98, 99, 123, 125, 136, 174, 195, 215, 222, 225 V Vaduz  157 Val d’Hérens  192, 233 Val de Travers  111 Val Gardena  193 Val Thorens  192 Valais  40, 44, 50, 53, 56 – 58, 74, 81, 84, 102, 115, 173, 174, 186, 189, 192, 194, 209, 228

270 Appendix

Valbella  81 Valentin, Paul  176 Vasaloppet  186 Vaucher-Testa, Irene  125 Vaud  35, 79, 158, 226 Velogemel  158, 159 Veraguth, Hilda  204 Verbier  128, 149, 173, 175, 190, 228, 233, 238 Vergé, Roger  208 Vevey  13, 94 Vex  192 Veysonnaz  189 Victoria, Queen of England  13 Vienna  40, 52, 122, 123, 134, 156, 207, 241 Viennese school  17 Village Run  37 Villars  40, 66, 94, 106 Visp  74, 174 Von Roll  173 Vue-des-Alpes  207 Vuilleumier, Evelyne  222, 224 – 226 Vulpera  209 W Waldenburg  155 Wangs  216 Wasescha, Teias  214 Wasserngrat  202, 210 Weber, Emil  164 Weber, Hermann  12, 15 Wedeln (fast parallel turning)  125, 178 Weisse Arena  191 Weiss�uh summit  50, 176 Weiss�uhjoch  66, 80, 176, 203 Wengen  38, 53, 56, 58, 61, 64, 65, 71, 74, 149, 156, 157 White Turf  184, 202, 203 Whitney, Stephen  110 Whymper, Edward  13, 174 Widmer, Sigmund  192 Wiesen  21 Wildhaus  81, 226

Wilhelm II., Kaiser of Germany  41, 53, 181 Willenegger, Hans  155 Williams, Robbie  219 Wills, Alfred  243 Winter campgrounds  189 Winter hiking  235 Winter hiking trails  77, 235 Winter holidays  128, 189, 208, 238 Winter Olympics: 7, 29 ¬¬1924  47, 91 ¬¬1928  7, 47, 82, 87, 88, 90, 91, 111, 125, 134, 151 ¬¬1932  123 ¬¬1936  93, 123 ¬¬1940  96 ¬¬1948  7, 87, 98, 99, 101 – 103, 156, 170, 210 ¬¬1952  101 ¬¬1956  178 ¬¬1968  186 ¬¬ 1972  196 ¬¬1976  192 ¬¬2014  163 Winter paradise  108 Winter sports advertising  119 Wintersportmuseum Davos  44 Winter Sports Week  91 Winterhalder, Robert  84 Winterthur  46 Witte, Harry  117 Wolf, Konrad  167 Wolhusen  161, 162 World fairs  14 World Luge Championships  192 World Ski Championship  7, 66, 93, 157, 197 World War ¬¬First  8, 11, 17, 29, 60, 72, 77, 79, 82, 111, 112, 117, 118, 122, 167, 200 ¬¬Second  9, 20, 43, 53, 63, 85, 95, 105, 111, 126, 161, 169, 173, 232 Wranding, Gita  184

Wright brothers  82 Writers  23, 32, 35 – 37, 51, 65, 133, 158 Wyss, Fridli  101, 180 – 182, 200, 219 X Xtreme  228, 229 Y Youth culture  222 Z Zaeslin, Carl  164 ZaharoΩ, Basil  117 Zaki Jamani, Ahmed  184 Zarn, Adolf  61, 65 Zdarsky, Mathias  47, 52, 63, 64, 122, 152, 154, 157, 159 Zellweger, Ulrich  16 Zemp, Josef  72 Zermatt  50, 52, 72, 74, 106, 122, 128, 173 – 175, 181, 182, 195, 200, 203, 204, 214, 216, 219, 233, 238, 241 Zernez  137 Zryd, Annerösli  193 Zucchero  218 Zumikon  158 Zuoz  40, 189 Zurbriggen, Pirmin  197 Zürcher Oberland  46, 192 Zurich  12, 14, 15, 36, 50, 52, 72, 81, 82, 90, 95, 102, 106, 134, 156, 163, 170, 172, 176, 206, 207, 224, 225, 229, 237, 240, 241 Zurich Academic Ice Hockey Club  95 Zürcher SC  95


Authors and Co-Authors

Michael Lütscher, *1962, lives in Zurich. He has worked as a journalist since 1982, including editorial work on background issues, portraits and reports for the �nancial paper Cash and the SonntagsZeitung newspaper. He has been working on a freelance basis for a few years. He has many published works, including Eine Stadt, ein Verein, eine Geschichte (Buchverlag Neue Zürcher Zeitung), about the history of FC Zürich.

de Lausanne. He has worked in various ­European luxury hotels, including the Gstaad Palace. He was general manager of The Peninsula in Hong Kong and Badrutt’s Palace in St. Moritz from 1980 to 1990. His book Via St. Moritz nach Hongkong und zurück (Buchverlag Neue Zürcher Zeitung), a collection of stories from his time in the hotel industry, was published in 2006. He has been living in Denmark with his wife since the end of his career as a hotelier.

Ursula Bauer, *1947, lives in Zurich. She is an author and works in media documentation. She wrote various book chapters on early mountain hikers and Alpine tourists, including Elizabeth Main (in Elizabeth Main. Alpinist, Photographer, Writer: Diopter Verlag). She also co-wrote many works with Jürg Frischknecht, including Time Travel: En route to historic hotels in Switzerland (Mattenbach), Ein Russ im Bergell. Anton von Rydzewsky 1836 – 1913 (Desertina) and eight literary travel guides.

Christof Kübler, *1956 in Thusis, studied history of art, history and sociology at the University of Zurich. He worked at the Institute of Historic Building Research and Conservation at ETH Zurich, and then became an assistant to the chair of modern and contemporary art at the University of Zurich. He has been involved in journalistic projects in the �elds of history of art, architecture and culture. He has been curator at the Swiss National Museum since 1996, and chief curator and member of the management from 2005 to 2008. He has been working on a freelance basis since 2009 and manages the company querverweise gmbh.

Samuel Burgener, *1987, grew up in SaasFee. He started out working as sports editor for the Walliser Bote, and has been sports editor for the Neue Zürcher Zeitung and NZZ am Sonntag since 2013. He primarily writes about ice hockey and football. Beatrice Geistlich, *1966, lives in Zurich. She has been working as a photo editor since 1996, including for Keystone, TagesAnzeiger, and various book projects. Peter Jegen, *1962, is deputy head of the sports department at the Neue Zürcher ­Zeitung. He has been writing about inter­ national and national equestrian sports for over 30 years. He edited The Moyglare Story (Buchverlag Neue Zürcher Zeitung), a book about horse racing and the people involved. He also co-wrote White Turf: 100 Jahre ­Internationale Pferderennen St. Moritz (Gammeter). Adi Kälin, *1959 in Küssnacht, obtained a Master’s degree in history, has been a journalist for about 30 years and is currently editor of the Zurich section of the Neue Zürcher Zeitung. His book Rigi – mehr als ein Berg (Hier + Jetzt) was published in 2012. Max Keller, *1943 near Lake Constance, ­attended business school in St. Gallen, and later trained as a chef at the Ecole hôtelière

272 Appendix

Roland Küng, *1953 in Chur, is a former pilot who now works in radar systems management for the air force. For roughly 30 years, he has been running the Flug­ archiv Graubünden, a private collection of documents on aviation in the Canton of Graubünden, in other areas of Switzerland, and abroad. He has written several publications on the topic of aviation in Graubünden. Silvio Margadant, *1947, born and raised in St. Moritz, obtained a doctorate in history and was the state archivist for the Canton of Graubünden from 1980 to 2012. He is member of the executive committee of many historical and cultural institutions. He wrote numerous pieces on the history of Graubünden, including St. Moritz: Strei�ichter auf eine aussergewöhnliche Entwicklung (Gammeter), which he cowrote with Marcella Maier. Sepp Renggli, *1924, was head of sports at Radio DRS, manager of the Radio DRS studios in Zurich and, from 1987 to 1995, columnist for the Weltwoche. He has covered over 18 Winter and Summer Olympic Games and countless major sporting events on every continent. He is married and has two sons who are also sports journalists.

Imprint

This publication is issued on behalf of the municipality of St. Moritz and the Bürgergemeinde (citizens’ commune) of St. Moritz. © 2014 Neue Zürcher Zeitung Publishing, Zurich Concept and editorial work: Michael Lütscher, Zurich Archive research assistance: Silvio Margadant, Haldenstein English translation: ENGLISH EXPRESS, Berlin, www.englishexpress.de Picture editing: Beatrice Geistlich, Zurich Layout and typesetting: Bernet & Schönenberger, Zurich Printing: Somedia, Chur Bookbinding: Buchbinderei Burkhardt, Mönchaltorf

This work is protected by copyright. All rights are reserved, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, speci�cally the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations and tables, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on micro�lm or in any other way and storage in data processing systems. Reproduction of the work in whole or in part is permitted only within the limits imposed by the provisions of the relevant amendment of copyright law and is subject to a charge. Infringements are subject to the provisions of copyright law on penalties. ISBN 978-3-03823-921-5 www.nzz-libro.ch NZZ Libro is an imprint of Neue Zürcher Zeitung


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