Our Maine Street's Aroostook Issue 27 : Winter 2016 | Page 13

and grade school students from surrounding towns competed in skiing, skating and snowshoeing races. They also featured international hockey games, horse racing on the frozen Aroostook River, boxing, dog racing, wood-chopping competitions and a ski marathon. The ski marathon was a three day, tri town, 35-mile event with competitors skiing between Fort Fairfield, Caribou and Presque Isle. The 1937 ski marathon winner was the only female competitor, Laverne Anderson from New Sweden. Anderson came in first each day of the race and won $50 for her efforts. And the cold weather did not stop skiers. On day one of the race the temperature hovered around 30 degrees below zero. Some of the skiers wrapped newspapers around themselves for warmth and cars followed the skiers to offer hot soup and to pick up those skiers who threw in the towel. Some of the more unusual races were simply dangerous. The tamest of these was the ski-potato race for women where competitors skied without poles for 50 yards, picked up a potato and then skied to the finish line. While not all that dangerous, it does sound tricky. The women’s three-legged race seems more daunting. \