......Ski-Mor
is a chapter of Spokane Valley history almost forgotten.
......One
of the areas first ski resorts, it operated for nine seasons
where 44th Avenue meets the east slope of Browne Mountain in the Ponderosa
neighborhood.
......
Entrepreneurs
William Schafer and his son-in-law, Orrin Torrey, developed Ski-Mor
as a winter playground in 1933. The 110-acre property had been in
the Schafer family since 1850.
......
It
was something special, said Marilyn Rider, Torreys 74-year-old
daughter. There was nothing else like it here.
......The
resort, open on weekends and holidays, featured an Olympic-sized ski
jump, a smaller ski jump, an outdoor ice skating rink, toboggan run
and indoor ski lodge.
......
The toboggan
run was a long chute, using planks of wood as the sides to stabilize
the snow.
......
We
would get five or six kids on and go down that thing, said longtime
Valley resident Lloyd Phillips, 84. I dont know how fast
we were going but we would go a-flying.
......
Phillips,
along with his friend Martha Eachon, were two neighborhood kids who
worked and played at the resort.
......
Phillips
was 8 and Eachon, 9, when it opened during the Great Depression. The
kids did not have any money to use the facility.
......
We
were so poor we didnt have skis, skates or anything, Phillips
explained.
......
The Schafers
compensated the kids with food and use of the resort in exchange for
working small jobs.
......
We
would get a hamburger and a Coke, said Eachon, 85. That
was our pay. We thought that was great.
......
(The
Schafers) were so good to us, Phillips said. Mrs. Schafer
created jobs for us. My job was sweeping the ice every hour to two.
I would come in and (Mrs. Schafer) would make me a hamburger and
cocoa. |
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......
Eachon
helped cook hamburgers for the hungry skiers. She would start up
the gas grill, make small balls of hamburger using a ladle, and
then pound the balls into the right size patties.
......
Some
(hamburger patties) were larger than others, Eachon laughs.
It was work, but fun work.
......
When they
finished working, the kids enjoyed the resort free of charge. Phillips
remembers riding a modified bicycle down the bunny hill. The bike
had runners instead of tires.
......
Riding
those bikes was unreal, Phillips said. They had no brakes.
You just went down the hill a-flying and either fell off, hit something
or made it clean down into the field.
......
Phillips
spent most of his time skating. He taught himself to skate using metal
blades tied to his boots. To this day, the ice skating pond is one
of his favorite Ski-Mor memories.
......
I
loved to skate, Phillips remembers. I would skate for
hours.
......
Rider and
her twin sister, Carolyn, were very young when their parents operated
the resort but would get to come occasionally to ice skate.
......
It
was real magical, said Rider, who still lives in the Valley.
We would skate at night and the lights from the lodge lit up
the ice.
......
Building
the resort took years of hard work. Schafer and Torrey cleared the
wooded hillside, built the ski lodge that housed a large rock fireplace
and kitchen, and dug the hole for the ice skating pond, which was
fed with spring water year round.
......
Eachon
remembers her father, Charlie Gorremans, helping clear the trees
with a hand ax, and then hauling the logs down the mountain side
with his horses.
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......
Rider believes the idea for the resort came after her father visited
his sister in Leavenworth, Wash.
......
My father was an innovator, Rider said. He was always
inventing something. I believe he saw someone skiing on the West Coast
and thought they could do something similar.
......
She also remembers her father creating a special way to haul toboggan
riders up the hill. She thinks he based the designed on an escalator
that her mother, Stella, saw in Denver.
......
My mom described to him what she saw, Rider recalls. He
could create anything.
......
According to Florence Boutwells book, The Spokane Valley,
Volume 2, A History of the Growing Years, Torrey, who was also
a blacksmith, developed the areas first rope tow. He powered
it with a Chevrolet engine.
......
Phillips
and Eachon both recall the resort attracting large crowds. There was
a parking lot on the west side of the resort that Phillips estimates
accommodated 50 to 100 cars. He remembers cars lining up along both
sides of 44th Avenue, especially when the resort hosted the Northwest
Ski Championships.
......
It
was standing room only, Phillips said of watching the event.
I wouldnt miss them. I remember I couldnt believe
how these guys could come down the hill so fast, fly out over an excess
of 350 feet, land and not fall down.
......
In 1942,
the resort closed. Boutwells book cites one reason as the snow
always coming at the wrong time. Rider also believes a
lawsuit over a toboggan accident is another factor. The owners eventually
sold the property. |