1956 Cortina d'Ampezzo Winter Games
819 Athletes, 32 Countries, 24 Events
The USSR made its Olympic debut at the 1956 Winter Games, but it
showed no first-year jitters. It had a dominant showing of 16
medals in only 24 events. The United States only managed to win
seven, two bronze medals, three silver medals, and two golds.
American Ivy League competitors had a hand in four out of those
seven medals. Japan, which won one medal in 1956, could attribute
its success to an Ivy Leaguer as well.
The Dartmouth Outing Club was, once again, well represented at
the Winter Olympics. Chiharu 'Chick' Igaya
(Dartmouth, 1957), with several NCAA skiing championships to his
name, placed second in only the third running of the slalom alpine
skiing event, requiring skiers to weave through a series of blue
and red 'gates.' This silver medal was the first Winter Olympic
medal in Japan's history. Igaya would return to the 1960 games, and
eventually become a member of the IOC, which he still is today.
Five others from Hanover joined Igaya: William L.
Beck (1953), Thomas A. Corcoran (1954),
J. Brooks Dodge (1951), Ralph E.
Miller (1955), and Charles N. Tremblay
(1952).
Beck, in his last Olympics, was unable to match his fifth-place
finish in the downhill skiing event four years earlier at St.
Moritz as he did not place. Corocoran was a slalom skier, he placed
14th and 19th in the giant slalom and slalom, respectively. But
Corcoran would do much better in 1960. Dodge, on the other hand,
was on the heels of Igaya in the 1956 slalom race, he finished 1.6
seconds away from the thirdplace finisher. He would later be known
as one of the 50 Greatest New Hampshire Sports Figures according to
Sports Illustrated. Miller took part in three events, Tremblay, a
crosscountry skier, in one.
In other events, Charles Thomas Butler (Brown,
1955) was part of the U.S. fourman bobsled team that won the bronze
medal at Cortina. The U.S. would win their next fourman bobsled
medal 46 years later, at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games, where they
won both silver and bronze.
On the ice, the U.S. men's ice hockey team compiled a 52 record
en route to the silver medal. With the arrival of the USSR, 1956
was the first year in Olympic ice hockey history that Canada did
not win the gold or silver medals. Bill Cleary
(Harvard, 1956) was on the team, and would return for the United
States' first gold medalwinning team four years later at the Squaw
Valley games. Cleary is also known for coaching the Crimson for
many years, as well as serving as Athletic Director for
Harvard.
Harvard also swept the figure skating gold medals, and earned
both US gold medals from 1956 in the process. Hayes A.
Jenkins (Harvard, 1959) won the men's figure skating gold,
his younger brother won the bronze. Tenley
Albright (Harvard, 1953) followed up her 1952 second-place
performance with a gold in the women's competition, despite
suffering a serious ankle injury only two weeks before. Her father,
a surgeon, fixed her ankle. Albright eventually earned first-place
votes from all but one of the judges.
| Name |
School |
Sport |
| Charles Thomas Butler |
Brown University |
Men's Bobsled |
| William L. Beck |
Dartmouth College |
Men's Alpine Skiing |
| Thomas A. Corcoran |
Dartmouth College |
Men's Alpine Skiing |
| J. Brooks Dodge |
Dartmouth College |
Men's Alpine Skiing |
| Chiharu 'Chick' Igaya |
Dartmouth College |
Men's Alpine Skiing |
| Ralph E. Miller |
Dartmouth College |
Men's Alpine Skiing |
| Charles N. Tremblay |
Dartmouth College |
Men's Nordic Skiing |
| Tenley Albright |
Harvard University |
Women's Figure Skating |
| William J. Cleary, Jr. |
Harvard University |
Men's Ice Hockey |
| Hayes A. Jenkins |
Harvard University |
Men's Figure Skating |