[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 162 (2016), Part 10]
[Senate]
[Pages 13663-13664]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                     TRIBUTE TO JOHN HOMER CALDWELL

  Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I want to briefly call the Senate's 
attention to a Vermonter who, more than any other individual, has been 
responsible for the sport of cross-country skiing becoming a winter 
pastime and passion for countless Americans of all ages. I count myself 
and my wife, Marcelle, among them.
  There have been many articles written about former Olympic combined 
skier John Caldwell of Putney, VT, who in 1964 wrote the how-to guide 
to cross-country skiing, and about his sons and daughter and 
granddaughter Sophie and grandson Patrick, each of them outstanding 
cross-country skiers in their own right, two of whom, son Tim and 
Sophie, have represented the United States at the winter Olympics. 
Chances are they are not going to be the last Vermonters with the 
Caldwell name to do so.
  I will not repeat what those articles have said, but I ask unanimous 
consent that one of them, published in the Rutland Herald on February 
23, 2014, entitled ``Vt. ski pioneer sustains Olympic spirit,'' be 
printed in the Record at the end of my remarks. It gives you a pretty 
good idea of the 87-year-old Vermonter I am talking about.
  John Caldwell, known to his many friends as Johnny, is a pioneer and 
legend in every sense of the words. After the 1952 Olympics, he 
embarked on a lifelong campaign to teach and coach others to enjoy the 
sport of cross-country skiing as he did, whether as a simple way to get 
out in wintertime and experience the snow-filled woods and fields of 
Vermont or to ski competitively. I think it is fair to say that just

[[Page 13664]]

about every cross-country skier in this country, from the fastest 
racers to the recreational ski tourers like me and Marcelle, owes our 
love of the sport, directly or indirectly, to Johnny. He got us 
started. He convinced us to not be deterred by up hills or down hills 
or subfreezing temperatures and to get outside and enjoy a sport that 
requires nothing more than a pair of narrow skis and poles, a bit of 
wax, and a love of using your own power to glide silently over the 
snow.
  Johnny has a way with words, and the Rutland Herald article captures 
a bit of it. He is dry wit who doesn't suffer fools easily, a fiercely 
loyal Vermonter who I think it is fair to assume finds a lot to like in 
the words of Robert Frost, whose poem ``New Hampshire,'' a long poem 
that compares the people, geography, and traditions of various States, 
ends with these lines:

     ``Well, if I have to choose one or the other,
     I choose to be a plain New Hampshire farmer
     With an income in cash of, say, a thousand
     (From, say, a publisher in New York City).
     It's restful to arrive at a decision,
     And restful just to think about New Hampshire.
     At present I am living in Vermont.''

  There is a lot more I could say about John Caldwell, who besides 
coaching and writing about skiing, among other things taught 
mathematics for 35 year at the Putney School, has been a longtime 
gardener and wood splitter and for years was a tireless maker of maple 
syrup.
  But most important are his personal qualities: a devoted husband to 
his wife, Hester, affectionately known to everyone as ``Hep,'' who he 
first met at the Putney School 75 years ago; a role model for his 
children and grandchildren in good times and sad times; an inspiration 
to everyone who puts on boots and skis and propels themselves forward 
in all kinds of weather; and an octogenarian who will be out on skis 
for years to come, even if it is just to cheer on others a fraction his 
age, who has contributed in exceptional and lasting ways to the sport 
of skiing, to the Putney community, to Vermont, and to this country.
  There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

                [From the Rutland Herald, Feb. 23, 2014]

                Vt. Ski Pioneer Sustains Olympic Spirit

                          (By Kevin O'Connor)

       John Caldwell, the Vermonter who literally wrote the book 
     on cross-country skiing 50 years ago--his trailblazing 1964 
     how-to guide reaped the Boston Globe rave ``the bible of the 
     sport''--stopped writing updated editions after the eighth a 
     quarter-century ago. Now 85, he's entitled to sleep in.
       But the man considered the father of U.S. Nordic is also 
     the grandfather of 2014 Olympian Sophie Caldwell, 23, of the 
     Green Mountain town of Peru. That's why he has risen the past 
     two weeks before dawn to watch the third generation of his 
     family compete in the Winter Games.
       ``Despite what the governor says, and he's a Putney boy, we 
     don't have high-speed Internet here,'' says Caldwell, who has 
     been waking in the town he shares with Peter Shumlin as early 
     as 4 a.m., then driving to his nephew's ski shop down the 
     road to watch live online races from Sochi.
       So much has changed since Caldwell himself competed in the 
     1952 Olympics, where a lack of television coverage required 
     family and friends seeking results to await the newspaper the 
     next day.
       ``That was back in the dark ages,'' he says only half-
     jokingly. ``When I was racing, nobody knew much about cross-
     country, and people hardly knew we were there. Everything is 
     much, much better than it used to be. All this ease of 
     communication has helped.''
       Caldwell has helped, too--by turning his lowest point of 
     adversity into a lifetime of achievement.
       Some Vermonters may remember his Oslo Winter Games as the 
     ones where Rutlander Andrea Mead Lawrence became the only 
     U.S. woman to win two skiing gold medals. But while the late 
     female legend experienced the thrill of victory, Caldwell 
     felt the agony of defeat.
       ``I was on the combined team--cross-country and ski 
     jumping--but I was poorly prepared.''
       Born in Detroit in 1928, Caldwell had moved to Putney with 
     his family in 1941. When his high school needed a cross-
     country racer for the 1946 state championships, he strapped 
     on his sister's wooden alpine skis. Continuing on to 
     Dartmouth College, he borrowed his coach's slats before the 
     school bought him a pair.
       Caldwell tried out and made the 1952 Olympic team. But 
     knowing little about proper training, he toured too many 
     Norwegian bakeries beforehand. The onetime 145-pound athlete 
     weighed 170 by the time he dressed for his event. But that 
     wasn't why he needed help buttoning his shirt--his shoulders 
     ached from falling so often in practice.
       The rest is history--just not Olympic history.
       ``That really inspired me to help better prepare athletes 
     so they wouldn't be so flummoxed, overwhelmed and thoroughly 
     thrashed.''
       Caldwell started by coaching at his alma mater, the Putney 
     School, where he worked with such up-and-coming skiers as 
     Bill Koch, the first U.S. Nordic athlete to win an Olympic 
     medal (silver in 1976). That, in turn, led him to help the 
     American team in a succession of Winter Games.
       Off the job, Caldwell befriended Brattleboro publishers 
     Stephen and Janet Greene.
       ``They said, `Are there any books on cross-country?' I said 
     no.''
       Soon there was one--his simply titled ``The Cross-Country 
     Ski Book''--which he updated until its eighth and final 
     edition in 1987.
       Caldwell also nurtured the sport by helping found the New 
     England Nordic Ski Association and by forging a family with 
     his wife, Hep, and their four children: Tim competed in the 
     Olympics in 1972, 1976, 1980 and 1984. Peter raced undefeated 
     in college. Jennifer made the U.S. ski team. And Sverre 
     coached the Americans in 1988 and fathered the latest 
     generation of family champions, Sophie.
       John Caldwell has been waking in the dark the past two 
     weeks to drive to Putney's Caldwell Sport--owned by his 
     nephew Zach, who's assisting U.S. skiers in Russia, and wife, 
     Amy--to watch live Sochi races that, because of the time 
     difference, have started as early as 4:15 a.m.
       ``I'm a Luddite,'' he says, ``but I emailed Sophie before 
     the sprint and said, `Go fast.'''
       Caldwell then cheered her sixth-place finish (the best U.S. 
     women's Olympic cross-country result ever) before, a week 
     later, she ended up eighth in the team sprint.
       Seen the way skiers collapse after a race?
       ``I joke with them, `Are you suffering?' I spell and say it 
     `s-u-f-f-a-h.' It sounds masochistic, but that's the way it 
     is. When you do it you hurt, but you feel great afterward--
     like when you stop hitting your head against the wall. All of 
     us must be nuts, but it's a lifestyle, a culture.''
       It's the same for the spectator back home.
       ``It takes me a long time to recover from these early 
     mornings,'' the grandfather says.
       Even so, after rising this past Wednesday before dawn, 
     Caldwell still stayed up for his weekly 7 to 10 p.m. bridge 
     game. Then on Saturday, he was set to watch grandson Patrick, 
     a freshman at Dartmouth College, compete in the Eastern 
     Intercollegiate Ski Association championships in Middlebury.
       The grandfather of 10 still takes a turn himself. But the 
     cross-country pioneer says he's going downhill fast--as an 
     alpine season pass holder at Stratton.
       ``A guy who's 88 and I go over together. It's slow getting 
     the strength back. I got a new hip in May and two new knees 
     in October. I have a plastic heart valve and fake shoulder, 
     too.''
       So goes life. So much ``s-u-f-f-a-h-ing.'' So much 
     satisfaction.
       ``I'm bionic--and still plugging along.''

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