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Dakota Datebook
November 26, 2003
"Norval Baptie"
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In the 1890s, World Champion speed skater, John Johnson,
raced a young teenager in Bathgate, North Dakota. Afterwards, Johnson
told a Minneapolis reporter, Hes the fastest fellow on a small
rink that Ive ever seen... hes got such marvelous control
that he could skate in a wash tub. His name is Norval Baptie. Keep the
name in mind because youll be hearing a lot about him from now on.
By the time he was 16, Norval Baptie fulfilled that prophecy by becoming
the World Champion in speed skating. And it was on this day in 1966, that
he died.
Baptie was born in Bethany, Ontario, but lived there
for only a year before his family moved to Bathgate, several miles west
of Pembina. Although North Dakota produced him, Canada claims him, and
almost nobody in our state has ever heard of him.
We know that he was born in 1879, and we know he won
his first World Outdoor Championship in 1895. We know that he spent the
next 25 years shattering every amateur and pro speed skating record there
was and that he won nearly 5000 races. We know those races ranged from
the 200 meter to the 8 kilometer, but see...? Were talking meters
and kilometers because this comes from a Canadian source, Today's Canadian
Headline... almost every mention of him on the Internet comes from a Canadian
site, and they even drafted Baptie into their Speed Skating Hall of Fame.
How could Baptie have been forgotten here in his home
state? He dominated the ice for more than 20 years in distance, speed
and then later in fancy staking (or what we now call figure
skating). He was also invented the ice show, touring with world famous
skaters like Sonja Henie. He performed all over the world. He managed
the famous rink at Madison Square Gardens.
Luckily, a Minneapolis newspaper preserved several articles
on him, so we have a few details of his life. Baptie made his skating
debut when he was 10, earning his first win and soon the State Championship.
A few years later he won the world championship and went on to break speed
records in 220 yards, half mile, one mile, two mile and five mile competitions.
He dominated the sport so long that the children of his first competitors
were now competing.
In 1913, Norval wowed fans by switching to figure skating.
He persuaded the owners of the Sherman Hotel in Chicago to create an indoor
skating rink and then produced the worlds first indoor ice-skating
show. His acts included singles, pairs and ballets.
Bapties show was so successful that a competing
hotel, the Terrace Gardens, built a colorful ice arena, surrounded by
tiers of dining tables, and lured Baptie away from the Sherman. In 1930,
reporters were still writing about Norvals show at the Terrace Gardens,
now with his elegant wife, Gladys Lamb, as his skating partner.
When he was 51, a group of New York sportsmen were willing
to put up $25,000 as a bet that Baptie could still beat any competitor,
pro or amateur, at any distance.
Unfortunately, we dont know the outcome of that
wager, but seven years later, when Baptie was 58, he told a skeptical
reporter that he could still skate as fast as he did when he won his first
championship at age 16. The next day a group of reporters gathered to
watch him prove it; he missed his own record by only 3/5ths of a second.
Maybe its time we take Norval Baptie back from
Canada. He was a North Dakota boy, after all.

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