Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Suicide Six

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Nearest city
  
Pomfret, Vermont

Skiable area
  
100 acres (40 ha)

Longest run
  
5,280 feet (1,600 m)

Top elevation
  
366 m

Number of trails
  
23

Base elevation
  
550 feet (170 m)

Runs
  
23

Vertical
  
198 m

Phone
  
+1 802-457-6666

Lift system
  
2 double chairs, 1 J-bar

Address
  
247 Stage Rd, South Pomfret, VT 05067, USA

Similar
  
Woodstock Inn & Resort, Pico Mountain Ski Area, Mad River Glen, Bolton Valley Ski Area, Okemo Mountain Resort

The one and only suicide six ski area


Suicide Six is the name of a ski resort in South Pomfret, Vermont. It has some claim to historical fame as a very early ski resort. In January 1934, an improvised rope tow, said to be the first ski lift in the Eastern United States, was installed on a hill located on Clinton Gilbert's farm. The rope tow was originally powered with a Ford Model T engine. By the following month, Wallace "Bunny" Bertram (a former ski coach at Dartmouth College who had helped build the original rope lift) took over the operation, and installed a more reliable electric motor. A few years later he moved his operation to a steeper hill nearby, shown on the map as "Hill 6". Bertram once joked that to ski down the nearby Hill No. 6 would be suicide. Two years later the resort was opened using this name and photos of Bertram can be seen in the resort museum in the base lodge. Devotees of ski mountaineering and backcountry skiing mark this as the beginning of the divergence of resort skiing and traditional backcountry skiing.

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Suicide Six was the location of the first National Snow Surfing Championships in 1982, considered an important event in the development of snowboarding as a sport.

Bunny Bertram sold Suicide Six to Laurance Rockefeller in 1961, and it became the ski resort for Rockefeller's nearby Woodstock Inn. In a 2004 article, the Boston Globe described Suicide Six as "steeped in history", and now a "low key" location for "a taste of rural skiing". As of late 2011, when Suicide Six marked its 75th anniversary, the facility included 23 runs and continued to operate as the ski area of the Woodstock Inn.

Suicide Six is host to the longest running ski race in North America, The Fisk Trophy Race. It was first held in 1937 and is a rite of passage for serious eastern ski racers. Notable past winners include Bode Miller, Chip Knight, Jimmy Cochran, and many other Olympians, US Ski Team members, and NCAA Champions.

Face at suicide six 12 31 2014


References

Suicide Six Wikipedia