Owen figure-skating family
The
Owen figure-skating family consisted of Guy Owen, a
Canadian, his
American wife Maribel Vinson, and their two American-born daughters, all of whom were
figure skating champions.
Guy Owen, (
August 22,
1913 -
April 21,
1952), was a
Canadian figure skating champion.
Guy Rochon Owen initially competed in the men's individual figure skating event, winning the1929 Canadian junior men's singles championship. He went on to specialize in the "Fours Event" with great success. For five straight years between 1933 and 1937, Owen and his skating partners
Margaret Davis,
Prudence Holbrook, and
Melville Rogers won the Fours Event at the Canadian National Figure Skating Championships plus they also captured the bi-annual North American Figure Skating Championship three successive times in 1933, 1935, and 1937.
In 1938 Guy Owen married Maribel Vinson, the nine-time United States ladies figure skating champion and settled in
Berkeley, California. They had two daughters, Maribel Yerxa Owen (born 1940) and Laurence Rochon Owen (born 1944).
Guy and Maribel Owens turned professional, earning a living as performers with ice skating shows such as the International Ice Skate Revue before setting up their own show.
Guy Owen was only 38 years old when he died unexpectedly in 1952.
Maribel Yerxa Vinson-Owen, born
October 12,
1911 - died
February 15,
1961, was an American figure skating champion and one of her country's top figure skating instructors.
Maribel Vinson was the daughter of Thomas and Gertrude Vinson of
Winchester, Massachusetts. A good student, she studied at
Radcliffe College while pursuing an interest in ice skating. In the ten years between 1928 and 1937, Maribel Vinson won the Women's Singles title at the ladies U. S. Figure Skating Championship every year except for 1934. During this stretch, she also teamed up with
Thornton L. Coolidge to win the United States Pairs championship in 1928 and 1929 then in 1933 she partnered with
George E.B. Hill to win the U.S. Championship again followed by three more Pairs' titles in 1935, 1936, and 1937.
At the 1932
Winter Olympic Games in
Lake Placid, New York, Maribel Vinson earned the bronze medal behind the
Norwegian champion
Sonja Henie and the
Austrian runner up,
Fritzi Burger. While still competing, in the 1930s, Maribel Vinson became the first woman sportswriter at the
New York Times newspaper. Following her retirement from amateur ice skating she married
Canadian skater Guy Owen with whom she toured as professionals in an ice skating review. Initially based in Berkeley, California, following the birth of their two daughters: Maribel Yerxa Owen (born 1940) and Laurence Richon Owen (born 1944), she returned to the rink as an ice-skating coach.
In 1952 Maribel Vinson-Owen's husband died unexpectedly and the 41-year-old widow was left to raise their young daughters alone. Living in her native Winchester, Massachusetts, she earned a living as a figure skating instructor at rinks in the
Boston area. Her daughters developed a love for ice skating and she trained them in the sport. A master instructor, Maribel Vinson-Owen coached
Tenley Albright to five U.S. titles and then to the first
Olympic Games gold medal for an American in Ladies figure skating. She also taught
Frank Carroll who himself went on to be one of America's top skating instructors.
During her lifetime, Vinson-Owen authored several books on her sport:
Primer of Figure Skating - McGraw-Hill/Whittlesey House (1938)
Advanced Figure Skating - McGraw-Hill/Whittlesey House (1940)
The Fun of Figure Skating - Harper & Brothers (1960)
In 1961, her daughter and namesake, Maribel, won the United States figure skating Pairs title with partner
Dudley S. Richards. These national championships were broadcast on
television for the first time. In that same competition, her younger daughter, 16-year-old Laurence, won the ladies Singles championship and because of the television exposure the Owen family became instant celebrities.
As a coach, Maribel Vinson-Owen was part of the United States team scheduled to compete in the 1961
World Ice Skating Championships in
Prague, Czechoslovakia. With her daughters' winning championships, they too were part of the American team that boarded
Sabena Flight 548 at
New York City's
Idlewild International Airport bound for the World Championships in Prague.
Sabena's overnight Flight 548 had a stopover scheduled for
Brussels, Belgium and on its arrival in the morning of
February 15,
1961 the captain had to abort the approach and circle around for a second attempt to land on a different runway. The
Boeing 707 never made it back to the airport, instead, it plunged into the wooded farmland of the village of
Berg, Belgium taking the lives of all 72 passengers and crew plus a farmer at work in his fields. All 18 members of the American figure skating team plus 16 of their relatives, friends, and coaches, were among the dead.
The 1961 World Championships at Prague were cancelled. The remains of Maribel Vinson-Owen and her daughters were brought home for interment in the Story Chapel Columbarium at
Mount Auburn Cemetery in
Cambridge, Massachusetts.
In 1976, Maribel Vinson Owen was posthumously named to the
U. S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame and was inducted a second time in 1994 with George E.B. Hill in the Pairs category.
In Winchester, Massachusetts, the Vinson-Owen school was named in her honor.
Maribel Yerxa Owen, born
April 25,
1940 - died
February 15,
1961, was a United States figure skating champion in the Pairs competition.
The first child of Guy Owen and Maribel Vinson, she was named for her mother. From a young age she began skating in the Pairs competition. Under her mother's tutelage, in 1956 at age 15, she and her partner won the National Junior Pairs title following which she appeared as a featured performer in the highly successful Boston Skating Club's "Ice Chips" show.
A student at
Boston University, Maribel Owen majored in
sociology and
anthropology while continuing to participate in competitive ice skating. With partner
Dudley S. Richards, she was a member of the 1960 United States
Olympic team at
Squaw Valley, California. The following year she and Richards won the U.S. Pairs figure skating national championship at
Colorado Springs, Colorado and as a result they were part of the American team that was scheduled to compete in the World Championships in Prague, Czechoslovakia.
Maribel Y. Owen was 20 years old when, along with the rest of the U.S. skating team, she died with her sister and mother in the aircraft crash near Brussels, Belgium while on their way to Prague.
She is interred next to her mother and sister in
Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Laurence Rochon Owen, born
May 9,
1944 â€" died
February 15,
1961, was a North American ladies figure skating champion.
The second child of Guy Owen and Maribel Vinson was an all-around athlete who participated in several sports but at an early age showed all the signs of becoming a wonderful skating champion. Coached by her mother, she was 15 years old when she earned a berth on the U.S. Olympic team, finishing in 6th place at the
1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley, California. In January of the following year, Laurence Owen won the U.S. figure skating championship and then captured the
North American title a few weeks later. That week, she appeared on the cover of
Sports Illustrated magazine with a feature story that called her "America's most exciting girl skater."
As a result of her championships, Laurence Owen was a member of the American team that was scheduled to compete in the World Championships in Prague, Czechoslovakia. She was 16 years old when, along with the rest of the U.S. skating team, she died with her sister and mother in the aircraft crash near Brussels, Belgium while on their way to Prague. It was the first commercial crash of a Boeing 707, and 18 members of the team were killed, along with 16 officials. The World Championships that year were cancelled.
Laurence Owen is interred next to her mother and sister in
Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
In her book on figure skating,
Debbi Wilkes, a Canadian Hall of Fame skater and coach who watched Laurence Owen win her title, wrote:
*"Laurence was wonderful. She had a fresh, wholesome look, but didn't fit into any mold. She was carefree and joyous on the ice. She had wonderful rosy cheeks, beautiful big eyes and a short shag haircut that feathered over her face and fluttered when she skated. I was totally enchanted by her."
Laurence Owen planned to attend her mother's alma mater, Radcliffe College, with a view to eventually becoming a writer. Following her death, at her High School in Winchester, Massachusetts, Laurie Owen's English teacher read a poem to her classmates that Laurie had recently written. The poem ended with these words:
Gloom is but a shadow of the night, long past;Hope is the light, The radiance.* "Shattered Dreams,"
Boston Globe, December 29, 2000, p. E16.
* Nichols, Nikki.
Frozen in Time: The Enduring Legacy of the 1961 U.S. Figure Skating Team. Emmis Books, 2006. ISBN 1578602602.