Snowshoe Thompson Explained

John Albert Thompson
Birth Name:Jon Torsteinsson Rue
Birth Date:30 April 1827
Birth Place:Austbygde, Telemark, Norway
Nationality:Norwegian, American
Other Names:Snowshoe Thompson

John Albert Thompson (born Jon Torsteinsson Rue; April 30, 1827 – May 15, 1876), nicknamed Snowshoe Thompson, an early resident of the Sierra Nevada of Nevada and California, was a Norwegian-American considered to be the father of California skiing.[1] [2]

Background

Jon Torsteinsson Rue was born on the Rue farm in Austbygdi, Tinn in Telemark, Norway. He was the son of Torsten Olsen Rue (ca. 1760–1829) and Gro Jonsdatter Håkaland (1781-ca. 1846). His father died when Thompson was 2 years old.[3] [4] [5]

In 1837, at the age of 10, Thompson came to America with his mother, settling first on a farm in Norway, LaSalle County, Illinois at the Fox River Settlement. The family subsequently moved on the Norwegian immigrant settlement in Shelby County, Missouri which was under the leadership of Cleng Peerson.[6] In 1839, they were joined by Thompson's brother Tostein (1819-1880) and sister Kari (born 1822). In 1840, they followed Hans Barlien and moved to the Sugar Creek Settlement in Lee County, Iowa.[7] [8]

In 1846, Thompson and his brother Tostein came to Dane County, Wisconsin. In 1851, Thompson drove a herd of milk cows to California and settled in Placerville. For a short while he mined in Kelsey Diggins, Coon Hollow and Georgetown. With the small amount he saved, he bought a small ranch at Putah Creek, in the Sacramento Valley. In 1860, Thompson homesteaded a 160-acre ranch in Diamond Valley, south of Genoa in California's Alpine County.[9] [10]

Mail delivery

Between 1856 and 1876, he delivered mail between Placerville, California and Genoa, Nevada and later Virginia City, Nevada. Despite his nickname, he did not make use of the snowshoes that are native to North America, but rather would travel with what the local people applied that term to: ten-foot (over 3-meter) skis, and a single sturdy pole generally held in both hands at once. He knew this version of cross-country skiing from his native Norway, and employed it during the winter as one of the earlier pioneers of backcountry skiing in the United States. Thompson delivered the first silver ore to be mined from the Comstock Lode. Later he taught others how to make skis, as well as the basics of their use. Despite his twenty years of service as a subcontractor, he was never paid for delivering the mail.[11]

Thompson typically made the eastward trip in three days, and the return trip in two days. Thompson carried no blanket and no gun; he claimed he was never lost even in blizzards. A rescue attributed to him was that of a man trapped in his cabin by unusually deep snow. Thompson reached him, realized the damage to the man's legs from frostbite was sufficient to kill him, skied out to get chloroform, skied back in with it, and delivered the chloroform in time to save him.[9]

Thompson traveled the Star routes along Old Emigrant Road and later Big Tree Route.[12] [13] The route known as "Johnson's Cutoff" was a pathway first marked by John Calhoun Johnson, an early explorer and first man to deliver mail over the Sierra Nevada mountain range. Today this approximates the route of U.S. Route 50 as it winds its way from Placerville, California to South Lake Tahoe.

Personal life

In 1866, Thompson married Agnes Singleton (1831-1915) who had come to America from England. The Thompsons' only child, Arthur Thomas, was born on February 11, 1867. From 1868 to 1872 Thompson served on the Board of Supervisors of Alpine County, and was a delegate to the Republican State Convention in Sacramento in 1871. In spite of a resolution sent to Washington, D.C. by the Nevada Legislature, the many political contacts he had gathered, and a trip to Washington, D.C. in 1872, Snowshoe Thompson was never paid for his services delivering the United States Mail.

Snowshoe Thompson died of appendicitis which developed into pneumonia on May 15, 1876. His grave can be seen in Genoa, Nevada, in Carson Valley, east of Lake Tahoe. His son, Arthur, died two years later of diphtheria, and was buried next to his father at the cemetery in Genoa.[14]

Legacy

Thompson in popular culture

See also

Other sources

Related reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.nevadamagazine.com/index.php/issues/read/snowshoe_thompson/ Famous mail carrier has left an indelible legacy from Genoa to Placerville
  2. Web site: Snowshoe Thompson. Lokalhistoriewiki. March 20, 2016.
  3. Web site: Telemark. Tinn herad. Rui. Matrikkelutkastet av 1950 . March 20, 2016.
  4. Web site: Jon Torsteinson Rue -Postarbeider, Eventyrer, Skipioner . Norsk biografisk leksikon. Kjetil Steinsholt . March 20, 2016.
  5. Web site: From Cotter's Son In Tinn To American Ski Hero. https://web.archive.org/web/20110101025315/http://www.nasjonalparkrute.no/eng/images/Lure%20ENGELSK.pdf. dead. January 1, 2011. nasjonalparkrute.no. March 20, 2016.
  6. Web site: Emigration from the Community of Tinn, 1837-1907: Demographic, Economic, and Social Background. The Norwegian-American Historical Association (Volume 29: Page 43). Andres A. Svalestuen translated by C. A. Clausen. March 20, 2016.
  7. Web site: The Sugar Creek Settlement in Iowa. The Norwegian-American Historical Association (Volume IX: Page 38). H. F. Swansen. March 20, 2016. May 15, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110515094449/http://www.naha.stolaf.edu/pubs/nas/volume09/vol09_3.htm. dead.
  8. Web site: Sugar Creek at Lee County, Iowa. Donnellson Public Library . March 20, 2016.
  9. http://www.thestormking.com/Sierra_Stories/Snowshoe_Thompson/snowshoe_thompson.html Snowshoe Thompson, Legendary Skiing Mailman
  10. http://www.genoanevada.org/snowshoethompson.htm Snowshoe Thompson, mailman and hero Snowshoe Thompson, Legendary Skiing Mailman
  11. http://www.co.el-dorado.ca.us/stories/snowshoe.html Pioneer Skier & Mail Carrier
  12. https://postalmuseum.si.edu/exhibition/networking-a-nation/john-snowshoe-thompson John "Snowshoe" Thompson
  13. https://www.calaverashistory.org/emigrant-road-big-tree-and-carson-valley-turnpike Emigrant Road, Big Tree and Carson Valley Turnpike
  14. http://www.ronwatters.com/SnowShoe.htm The Soaring Eagle of the Sierras
  15. Web site: Snowshoe Thompson. telelaget.com . March 20, 2016.
  16. Web site: Friends of Snowshoe Thompson. Snowshoe Thompson website. March 20, 2016.
  17. Web site: Snowshoe Thompson: Legendary Skiing Mailman. MicMacMedia.com . March 20, 2016.
  18. https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=101465 "Snowshoe" Thompson
  19. http://www.visitrjukan.com/hva-skjer/snowshoe-thompson-minnerenn Snowshoe Thompson minnerenn
  20. Peter Browning, Place Names of the Sierra Nevada From Abbot to Zumwalt, 1986, Wilderness Press,, page 215.
  21. Web site: Snowshoe Thompson. IMDb. August 11, 2018.
  22. http://www.klikk.no/donald/ Slik gjør du skiskyting enda morsommere
  23. Web site: Stampout Songstravaganza, by Wildfire Stampout. 2020-11-10. Wildfire Stampout.