PHOTO: NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CLINE LIBRARY
Aspen groves provide natural obstacles for Snowbowl skiers. This photo was made by Robert Fronske, a Flagstaff native who extensively documented the area from the late 1930s to the early 1980s.

 

PHOTO: NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CLINE LIBRARY
Skiers check their equipment outside Snowbowl Lodge in the early 1940s. The lodge was a hub of activity until February 1952, when it was destroyed in a fire; arson was suspected at the time, but historians now believe a burning log rolling out of a fireplace was more likely.

 

PHOTO: NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CLINE LIBRARY
An Arizona State College student skis with a Saint Bernard named Mike in 1947. These days, pets other than service animals are not allowed on Snowbowl’s ski terrain.

 

PHOTO: NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CLINE LIBRARY
In an undated Fronske photo, skiers congregate along one of Snowbowl’s slopes. Since opening in 1938, Snowbowl has closed for only one season: 1944, because of gasoline rationing during World War II.

 

PHOTO: NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CLINE LIBRARY
It wasn’t just local college students hitting Snowbowl’s slopes in the mid-1940s. Here, members of the University of New Mexico’s ski team pay the San Francisco Peaks a visit.

 

PHOTO: NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CLINE LIBRARY
Arizona State College skiers pose outside the team bus with coaches Aaron McCreary and John Pederson in 1952. The school’s ski class started with six students in 1950 but grew to more than 50 students by 1955.

 

PHOTO: NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CLINE LIBRARY
Skiers examine what appears to be a map of ski runs inside Snowbowl Lodge in 1947. That year, the Arizona Daily Sun described Snowbowl as having “changed thousands of people’s minds about Arizona being only a desert state.”

 

PHOTO: NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CLINE LIBRARY
Two visitors ride Snowbowl’s chairlift up the mountain in an undated image. This apparatus was leaps and bounds ahead of what the ski area featured when it opened: a two-person rope tow powered by a car engine.

 

PHOTO: NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CLINE LIBRARY
In this Fronske photo from around 1960, a view down a Snowbowl slope shows some of the facilities available at that time. These days, the ski area offers 55 runs and 777 acres of ski terrain.

 

PHOTO: NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CLINE LIBRARY
Legendary photographer Josef Muench’s work at Snowbowl included this shot of ski instructor Kit Wing making a turn. Wing spent parts of the 1940s and ’50s at Snowbowl.

 

PHOTO: NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CLINE LIBRARY
Muench photographed three skiers above Snowbowl Lodge sometime before the lodge burned in 1952. The peak in the distance is Sitgreaves Mountain, to the west.