New EnglandSkiMuseum Accepting Applications for
Cal Conniff Grants
Program In Its Tenth Year
Franconia Notch, NH, December
8, 2009–New England Ski
Museum, announced today that the organization’s Cal Conniff Grant program will
award $2,500 to support individuals and organizations that align with the
Museum’s mission to preserve the history of skiing and winter sports.
The Grant Program is named in honor of Ski Museum Board
member Cal Conniff. He is a former Executive Director of the National Ski Areas
Association, and while President of the SkiMuseum
founded the Hannes Schneider Meister Cup as a benefit event for the non-profit
group. Conniff’s life in skiing reaches back to his youth, when at age 14 he
operated the town rope tow in Springfield, Vermont, hiking up the slope each
night to fire up the engine located at the top of the tow. In the late 1940s,
Conniff worked as an assistant cook at Pinkham Notch Camp, located at the
trailhead for Tuckerman Ravine, so that he could ski in the ravine, one of the
most remarkable ski sites in the east.
2010 will mark the 10th year the Museum has
awarded grants, funded with proceeds of the Hannes Schneider Meister Cup Race,
held each March at Cranmore Mountain Resort in North
Conway. The Cal Conniff awards will be announced on Friday, March
5, 2010 at the opening reception of the Schneider Race at Cranmore.
The Cal Conniff Grant Program is open to individuals,
organizations and educational institutions with an interest in winter sports,
such as Alpine and Nordic skiing, snowboarding and snowshoeing. Anyone who can
demonstrate the need for funding for the purposes of education, preservation of
skiing history, encouraging winter sports participation, or other involvement
in snow sports is eligible.
The selection process is conducted by the Museum’s Grant
Committee on an objective and nondiscriminatory basis. The committee judges
applications based on the following:
·How important is this grant to the success of
the program?
·Will this applicant contribute to the
preservation of ski or snowboard history?
·Does the success of this applicant have an
educational value?
·Does this application encourage participation in
skiing or snowboarding?
·Does the applicant seem organized in the pursuit
of the project?
The application process is kept purposefully informal.
Applicants should send a letter that outlines a description of the project, its
goals, the audience that it will impact, and the dollar amount requested. Supporting
information for the application should include:
·Resume (individuals) or organizational
description (groups);
·Two letters supporting the merits of the
individual or program;
·Representative photograph of person or program
that may be published by the Museum if the applicant is successful.