Advertisement

Dick “Mad Dog” Buek

Advertisement

Dick “Mad Dog” Buek Famous memorial

Original Name
Richard Carl Buek
Birth
Oakland, Alameda County, California, USA
Death
3 Nov 1957 (aged 27)
Donner Lake Village, Nevada County, California, USA
Burial
Oakland, Alameda County, California, USA Add to Map
Plot
Plot 50, Lot 389
Memorial ID
View Source
Professional Competition Skier. Born in Oakland, California, he was a serious downhill skiing racer by the age of 18. He was the National Downhill Champion in 1952 and a member of the United States Olympic Ski Team that competed in the 1952 Olympic Winter Games in Olso, Norway. He won a second national downhill title in 1954. His record included two runner-up efforts, a third and a fourth at the national championships. In 1948, he did a straight schuss at the Inferno Race on Mount Lassen. In 1949, he won the Silver Dollar Derby and the Far West Ski Association's downhill title. In 1952, Dick won the United States National Downhill. Dick seemed to be fearless and paid a heavy price for it. He suffered two broken backs, one from a motorcycle accident. He competed in the 1952 Winter Olympics Downhill in Helsinki, Finland. Despite falling twice on the course and careening off course (into the trees and back out), he managed a 12th place finish. The motorcycles and the two airplanes did more damage to Dick then the skiing did. When he wrecked his motorcycle he had virtually every bone on the right side of his body broken, including his arm, pelvis, leg, and ankle. His knee was completely shattered and his spleen ruptured. The doctor later told Dick that he would be lucky to walk again, let alone ski, but he told him that he was already late for getting into shape for next ski season. The following winter he began his rehabilitation by skiing on one leg with half his body in a plaster cast. Despite painful therapy, his right knee was so damaged that Dick regained only 60 percent mobility with it. Metal pins held him together, but in 1954 he entered the U.S. Nationals at Aspen, Colorado, where he took first place in the Men's Downhill. Dick also loved to perform aerial stunts like the time he flew his plane down a lift line at Squaw Valley, beneath the cables, banking around the lift towers like he was slalom skiing. In 1955, Dick fell in love with paralyzed ski racer Jill Kinmon who had crashed at Alta, Utah. They spent a lot of time together while she rehabilitated, but Jill regained only limited movement and mobility. Dick proposed marriage, but Jill was unwilling to burden the energetic young man with her physical disabilities. This heartbreaking love story was portrayed in the movie "The Other Side of the Mountain." Despite her injuries Kinmont became a teacher and painter. Dick was inducted into the National Ski Hall of Fame in 1974. Dick died at the age of 27 while flying over Donner Lake. Ironically, Dick wasn't at the stick of the airplane in which he was killed. It was a friend's plane and Dick was giving the friend a piloting lesson. The wings iced up and the plane dived straight into the icy waters.
Professional Competition Skier. Born in Oakland, California, he was a serious downhill skiing racer by the age of 18. He was the National Downhill Champion in 1952 and a member of the United States Olympic Ski Team that competed in the 1952 Olympic Winter Games in Olso, Norway. He won a second national downhill title in 1954. His record included two runner-up efforts, a third and a fourth at the national championships. In 1948, he did a straight schuss at the Inferno Race on Mount Lassen. In 1949, he won the Silver Dollar Derby and the Far West Ski Association's downhill title. In 1952, Dick won the United States National Downhill. Dick seemed to be fearless and paid a heavy price for it. He suffered two broken backs, one from a motorcycle accident. He competed in the 1952 Winter Olympics Downhill in Helsinki, Finland. Despite falling twice on the course and careening off course (into the trees and back out), he managed a 12th place finish. The motorcycles and the two airplanes did more damage to Dick then the skiing did. When he wrecked his motorcycle he had virtually every bone on the right side of his body broken, including his arm, pelvis, leg, and ankle. His knee was completely shattered and his spleen ruptured. The doctor later told Dick that he would be lucky to walk again, let alone ski, but he told him that he was already late for getting into shape for next ski season. The following winter he began his rehabilitation by skiing on one leg with half his body in a plaster cast. Despite painful therapy, his right knee was so damaged that Dick regained only 60 percent mobility with it. Metal pins held him together, but in 1954 he entered the U.S. Nationals at Aspen, Colorado, where he took first place in the Men's Downhill. Dick also loved to perform aerial stunts like the time he flew his plane down a lift line at Squaw Valley, beneath the cables, banking around the lift towers like he was slalom skiing. In 1955, Dick fell in love with paralyzed ski racer Jill Kinmon who had crashed at Alta, Utah. They spent a lot of time together while she rehabilitated, but Jill regained only limited movement and mobility. Dick proposed marriage, but Jill was unwilling to burden the energetic young man with her physical disabilities. This heartbreaking love story was portrayed in the movie "The Other Side of the Mountain." Despite her injuries Kinmont became a teacher and painter. Dick was inducted into the National Ski Hall of Fame in 1974. Dick died at the age of 27 while flying over Donner Lake. Ironically, Dick wasn't at the stick of the airplane in which he was killed. It was a friend's plane and Dick was giving the friend a piloting lesson. The wings iced up and the plane dived straight into the icy waters.

Bio by: Shock


Family Members


Advertisement

Advertisement

How famous was Dick “Mad Dog” Buek ?

Current rating: 4.16667 out of 5 stars

78 votes

Sign-in to cast your vote.

  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: AJ
  • Added: Aug 15, 2002
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6688034/dick-buek: accessed ), memorial page for Dick “Mad Dog” Buek (4 Nov 1929–3 Nov 1957), Find a Grave Memorial ID 6688034, citing Mountain View Cemetery, Oakland, Alameda County, California, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.