Norfolk Then . . .
With the Norfolk Curling Club back in full swing, or sweep, have a look at the earliest days of curling in Norfolk. The sport was introduced here 60 years ago by Elisabeth Childs, whose father John Walcott Calder had been an avid curler in Utica, New York. The first games were held on Tamarack Pond and Tobey Pond in the winter of 1954-55. Preparation required arduous work with a section of ice 150 feet by 15 feet shoveled and scraped free of snow, and 12-foot circles scratched 114 feet apart. A hole was chopped and water sprinkled on the sheet to pebble the ice. The club was officially organized in 1956 and the original curling shed built that fall. To raise money for equipment, club members known as “The Broom Stackers” performed annual plays. Pictured in this photograph taken by Darrell Russ in 1954 are some of the charter members of the Norfolk Curling Club: (from left) Herb Robertson, Elaine Russ, Howard Malcolm, Ed Quinlan, Elisabeth Childs and Ted Childs.
—Ann Havemeyer
Photo Courtesy of Russell Russ