Frederick Fortune
| Medal record | ||
|---|---|---|
| Men's Bobsleigh | ||
| Olympic Games | ||
| Bronze medal – third place | 1948 St. Moritz | Two-man |
| World Championships | ||
| Bronze medal – third place | 1949 Lake Placid | Two-man |
| Bronze medal – third place | 1950 Cortina d'Ampezzo | Two-man |
| Bronze medal – third place | 1965 St. Moritz | Four-man |
Frederick Joseph Fortune, Jr. (April 1, 1921 – April 20, 1994) was an American bobsledder who competed from the late 1940s to the mid-1960s. Competing in two Winter Olympics, he won the bronze medal in the two-man event at St. Moritz in 1948. Four years later he finished seventh in the two-man event at the 1952 Winter Olympics.
Fortune also won three bronze medals at the FIBT World Championships with two medals in two-man (1949, 1950) and one medal in four-man (1965).
In addition to bobsledding, Fred Fortune was a fine skier and he served during World War II in the 10th Mountain Division Ski Troops, during which time he earned a Bronze Star After the war, he returned to Lake Placid where he won the 1947 North American 2-man title with his Olympic partner, Sky Carron. Fortune’s occupation was as a contractor. He founded and built two towns – North Pole, New York and North Pole, Colorado (on Pikes Peak) – both Santa Claus Children's Villages.
References
[edit | edit source]- Bobsleigh two-man Olympic medalists 1932-56 and since 1964 Archived 2011-08-10 at the Wayback Machine
- Bobsleigh two-man world championship medalists since 1931
- Bobsleigh four-man world championship medalists since 1930
- DatabaseOlympics.com profile
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- 1921 births
- 1994 deaths
- American male bobsledders
- Bobsledders at the 1948 Winter Olympics
- Bobsledders at the 1952 Winter Olympics
- Olympic bronze medalists for the United States in bobsleigh
- Medalists at the 1948 Winter Olympics
- 20th-century American sportsmen
- American bobsleigh biography stubs
- American Winter Olympic medalist stubs