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History
The History of Curling
The oldest artifacts from the ice sport of curling are stones, today extant but
unknown, which prehistoric people slid toward a target along frozen rivers or lakes.
These people may also have used primitive brooms to clear snow from the path of
their sliding stones. In 1565, Holland's Peter Breugel painted "Hunters in the Snow"
and another work depicting scenes resembling modern curling. Breugel's paintings
support the premise held by some that curling originated in continental Europe.
The Scots, however, are the undisputed developers and formalizers of the modern game.
By 1638 curling was considered, with golf and archer (in M. H. Adamson's poem The
Muses Threnodie), to be a usual recreational pastime. After a huge growth spurt in
the 19th century, curling was played by thousands in nearly every Scottish parish.
Between the 16th and 20th centuries, Scotland's climate warmed, and today the lochs
rarely freeze. The climate change hindered curlers, who played outdoors on natural
ice until the 20th century. Nonetheless the Scots had, by the mid-1800's formalized
curling's rules of play and equipment and had established the "mother club" of
curlers worldwide, the Royal Caledonian Curling Club. The RCCC is today the national
governing body of curling in Scotland, with 20,000 active members now playing
indoors on refrigerated ice.
The game of curling spread throughout the world through the efforts of thousands of
Scottish soldiers and émigrés. In North America, curling's origins likely date to
the late 1700's. The first documented record is the founding of the Montreal Curling
Club in 1807. In 1832, the Orchard Lake Curling Club, near Detroit, became the first
curling club in the United States, organized at the home of Dr. Robert Burns. The
Orchard Lake group curled on Late St. Clair. The oldest continuously operating
curling club in the United States is the Milwaukee, Wisconsin club, found in 1845.
The Scottish founders' roster included such names as Murray, Ferguson, Dunlop,
Gunyon, Findlay, Kinney, McFarland and McFadyen.
Since the mid-1800's, curling has spread and thrived in northern states, including
Wisconsin, Minnesota, and North Dakota, and also in the Great Lakes, New England and
Mid-Atlantic states. There are dedicated pockets of curling activity in other
states, including Alaska, Washington, California, Texas, Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas,
Missouri and North Carolina. In all, there are active curling clubs in 26 states in
the nation.
In the United States today there are over 15,000 curlers in over 135 clubs, most of
which own their ice facility. While many U.S. curlers have Scottish roots, modern
curling club membership rosters tend to reflect an ethnic cross-section of their
communities which are preponderantly small-town rural. The largest curling club in
the USA is the St. Paul, Minnesota club with over 700 members.
The United States Curling Association (found 1958) governs curling in the USA. Like
that other Scottish sport, golf, curling is both a recreational and an athletic
pastime, marked by a strong code of fair play and courtesy (The Spirit of Curling).
The USCA is a member of the U.S. Olympic Committee and the World Curling Federation,
and has 131 member clubs in 111 regions. Curling debuted as a medal sport in the
1998 Winter Olympic Games in Japan. About 1.5 million people from ages eight to 80
in over 33 countries curl. The best-known American curler is Raymond "Bud"
Somerville, of Superior, Wisconsin, the first inductee into the USCA's Hall of Fame.
Somerville skipped his team to its first world championship in 1965, at age 28.
In 1992, at age 55, he skipped his team to a bronze medal at the Albertville Olympics
(curling was a demonstration sport).
The ice sport of curling, although never well known in the United States, had
developed steadily throughout American history. The sport is often passed down
through families and has provided enjoyable winter recreation to thousands of
Americans. |