ISHOF Inductees - 1990
Edgar Hetteen | C.J. Ramstad | Ralph Plaisted
Edgar Hetteen - Inventor and Manufacturer
Grand Rapids, Minnesota
Edgar Hetteen
Edgar was born in 1920 in Roseau County, Minnesota and served in the military in World War II. Upon returning in 1945, he founded Hetteen Hoist and Derrick, which was later renamed Polaris Industries. Edgar Hetteen, David Johnson and Allan Hetteen, his brother, built their first snowmobile in 1954. It was called the Polaris Sno Traveler. Edgar is often referred to as the "Grandfather of snowmobiling." A true visionary, he recognized early on the impact snowmobiling could have through new manufacturing jobs and winter tourism. To promote the sport, he traveled 1200 miles down the frozen Yukon River in 1960 to prove the durability of the Sno Traveler. Edgar left Polaris later that year but wasn't out of the snowmobile business for very long. Arctic Cat, a second venture, was founded a year later. Today's modern snowmobile owes many technical refinements to innovations by Edgar Hetteen including slide rails and forward mounted engine. In 1983, he co-founded ASV, a manufacturing company in Marcell, Minnesota, to build a new trail grooming machine called Track Truck. Edgar Hetteen was an industry founder, innovator and tireless spokesperson for the sport of snowmobiling.
C.J. Ramstad - Journalist and Historian
Minnetonka, Minnesota
C.J. first encountered snowmobiling in the 1960s as a copywriter for a Minneapolis, Minnesota advertising agency with a new account, Arctic Cat. His mission was to visit the Arctic Cat factory located at Thief River Falls, Minnesota to learn about the machines and the people who built them. There he met Edgar Hetteen, founder of Arctic Cat. Subsequently, C.J. Ramstad wrote several award winning ad campaigns for Arctic Cat. In 1973, he founded "Snowmobile Week," the first publication of its kind, and it grew rapidly in popularity. In 1976, "Snowmobile Week" was purchased by "Snow Goer." C.J. Ramstad worked as editor of both "Snow Goer" and the renamed "Snow Week." Named editor of "Snowmobile" magazine in 1981, C.J. Ramstad introduced factual journalism, accurate technical detail and quality photography. "Snowmobile" became the number one publication in the industry. In 1986, C.J. Ramstad left "Snowmobile" to author two important histories: "The Legend," a comprehensive illustrated history of Arctic Cat's first quarter century, and "Of Ice and Engines," a twenty-five (25) year illustrated history of the Eagle River World Championship. In 1988, he was named publisher of Minnesota Snowmobiling, official publication of the Minnesota United Snowmobiler's Association (MnUSA).
C.J. Ramstad
Ralph Plaisted - Explorer and Adventurer
Wyoming, Minnesota