John Caldwell, widely regarded as the father of American cross-country skiing, died on February 27, 2026, at the age of 97. A 1952 Olympian, five-time U.S. Olympic coach, author of the sport's foundational guidebook, and co-founder of the New England Nordic Ski Association, he transformed Nordic skiing in the U.S. through coaching, innovation, and mentoring generations of athletes.
The New England Nordic Ski Association (NENSA), which Caldwell co-founded, announced his passing on February 27 via Facebook, stating, 'It is with heavy hearts that we share the news.' A longtime Putney, Vermont, resident, he had lived in a retirement community in Hanover, New Hampshire, in recent years. He is survived by sons Tim, Sverre, and Peter, daughter Jennifer, 10 grandchildren—including Olympians Sophie and Patrick Caldwell—and seven great-grandchildren. A memorial service is scheduled for August 8, 2026, at the Putney School.
Born November 28, 1928, in Detroit, Michigan, Caldwell moved to Putney in 1941 and discovered skiing in high school, competing with his sister's alpine skis in the 1946 state championships. He skied at Dartmouth College and represented the U.S. at the 1952 Oslo Olympics in the Nordic combined event, finishing far back after poor preparation. 'We had no idea what we were doing,' he recalled, fueling his lifelong mission to build the sport.
As a math teacher and coach at the Putney School from the mid-1950s until retiring in 1989, Caldwell created a Nordic skiing hub. His 1964 book, 'The Cross-Country Ski Book,' sold over 500,000 copies across eight editions and was dubbed 'the bible of the sport' by The Boston Globe. In a 2018 interview, he said it 'promoted the sport and kept me out of the poorhouse.'
Caldwell coached U.S. Olympic cross-country teams at the 1960 Squaw Valley, 1964 Innsbruck, 1968 Grenoble, 1972 Sapporo, and 1984 Sarajevo Games. He mentored Bill Koch to the first U.S. cross-country medal (silver, 1976 Innsbruck) and his son Tim, a four-time Olympian (1972-1984). In 1971, he pioneered skate skiing techniques later used successfully by Tim and Koch at the Junior Worlds. His family's legacy endures: sons Sverre and Peter, and grandchildren Sophie (2014 Sochi sixth place, 2016 World Cup win) and Patrick, all competed at elite levels.
Inducted into the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame in 1983 and the Vermont Sports Hall of Fame in 2017, Caldwell was praised by FasterSkier for fostering growth without control. Three-time Olympian Jim Galanes called him 'one of a kind' in a tribute, while NENSA deemed him 'indisputably the founding father.'