Melville Rogers

Melville Rogers
Personal information
Full name Melville F. Rogers
Born (1899-01-05)January 5, 1899
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Died September 26, 1973(1973-09-26) (aged 74)
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Partner Gladys Rogers
Isobel (Blyth) Rogers
Cecil Smith
Jeanette Rathbun
Skating club

Melville F. Rogers (January 5, 1899 – September 26, 1973) was a Canadian figure skater and figure skating judge. He competed in the disciplines of single skating, pair skating, ice dancing, and fours.

Personal life

Melville Falkner Rogers, son of Amos Frankford Rogers and Margaret Rebecca Falkner, was born in Ottawa, January 5, 1899 (Ontario birth registrations). Melville's siblings included Frankford Ernest Rogers (born April 20, 1897) and Gladys Margaret Rogers (born June 1, 1903). In Ottawa on March 5, 1927, Melville married Isobel Hossack Blyth, daughter of James Thorp Blyth and Isabella Evans Thomson (Ontario marriage registration). According to that marriage registration, Melville was a lawyer. Melville and Isobel (1904-1968) are buried in the Beechwood Cemetery, section 49, lot 44 (Beechwood Cemetery burial registers).

Skating career

National level

As a single skater, he won the Canadian Figure Skating Championships in 1923 and from 1925 to 1928.

As a pair skater, he won the silver medal at the 1922 Canadian Championships and the bronze medal at the 1923 Canadian Championships with partner Cecil Smith. During those years, he represented the Toronto Skate Club in competition. He won the 1925 Canadian Championships, the silver medal at the 1928 Championships, and the bronze medal at the 1929 Championships with Gladys Rogers, representing the Minto Skating Club. He won the bronze medal at the 1926 Canadian Championships with partner Isobel Blyth, whom he married in 1927 (Ontario marriage registration 1927 009200).

As an ice dancer, he won the silver medal at the 1940 Canadian Championships with Elmore Davis. They also won the Junior national title that same year.

In the fours discipline, he won the 1922 Canadian fours silver medal with partners Sidney Pepler, Frankford Rogers, and Katherine Capreol. He won the 1929 Canadian fours silver medal with partners Frances Claudet, Katherine Lopdell, and Guy Owen. He won the 1931 Canadian fours bronze medal with the same team as in 1929. He won the 1932 Canadian fours silver medal with partners Elmore Davis, Prudence Holbrook and Guy Owen. He won the 1933, 1934, 1935, 1936, and 1937 Canadian fours title with the same team as in 1932.

Internationally

He competed at the 1924 Winter Olympics as both a single skater and pair skater. He placed 7th in singles, and 7th in pairs with partner Cecil Smith. At those Olympics, Rogers became the first Canadian men's singles skater to compete at the Olympics and was also a member of the first Canadian pairs team to compete at the Olympics.

He won the North American singles title in 1925 and 1927. He won the 1925 silver medal in pairs with Gladys Rogers. He won the fours title in 1933, 1935, and 1937 with Margaret Davis, Prudence Holbrook, and Guy Owen.

He also competed in pairs with Isobel Rogers, formerly Isobel Blyth. They placed 5th at the 1930 World Figure Skating Championships

Results

Men's singles

Event 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928
Winter Olympics 7th
North American Championships 2nd 1st 1st
Canadian Championships 3rd 3rd 2nd 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st

Pairs

(with Rathbun)

Event 1922
Canadian Championships 2nd

(with Smith)

Event 1923 1924
Winter Olympics 7th
Canadian Championships 3rd

(with Rogers)

Event 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929
North American Championships 2nd
Canadian Championships 1st 2nd 3rd

(with Blyth)

Event 1926
Canadian Championships 3rd

Fours

(with Margaret Davis, Prudence Holbrook, and Guy Owen)

Event 1933 1935 1937
North American Championships 1st 1st 1st

(with Frances Claudet, Kathleen Lopdell, and Guy Owen)

Event 1931
North American Championships 1st

Professional career

Following his retirement from comeptitive skater, he worked as a judge. He served as the president of the Canadian Figure Skating Association for two terms.

He was posthumously inducted into the Canadian Figure Skating Hall of Fame in 1991.

References

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