Ski Jumper. Sergeant in 10th Mountain Division, 86th Regiment, Company A. He arrived in the United States in 1939, and the very next day beat the field at the Bear Mountain ski jump. Life magazine said, in February 24, 1941, "Best ski jumper in the U. S. is a 22-year-old Norwegian carpenter named Torger Tokle. In the two years he has been in this country Tokle has won 23 out of 26 meets, now holds the American record of 273 ft." His record eventually grew to winning 42 of 48 meets, and breaking his own distance record several times. In October 1942 he joined the U.S. Army and was placed in the 10th Mountain Division. After training in Camp Hale, his division was shipped to Italy, where they pushed back the Germans in the Northern Apennines. He was killed in action near Iola, Italy, during the campaign to reach Castel d'Aiano.
Source: Find a Grave
Torger Tokle was a powerful ski jumper, dominating the sport in the United States from the day he arrived as a young Norwegian immigrant at the age of 19. In a career spanning six short years, he won 42 of 48 sanctioned tournaments and set 24 hill records. He gave his life while serving his newly adopted country during World War Two.
Torger Tokle was born in Lokken Verk, Norway in 1919, one of six brothers. The Tokle family was quite poor but their father made skis from barrel staves for them and Torger was skiing at age three. At six he was competing on forty-meter hills. The young skier showed much promise from the beginning.
Torger came to the United States on January 29, 1939 – a stocky 5 foot-6 ½ inch man. Eighteen hours after stepping off the boat from Norway, Torger set a record at the Bear Mountain Park Tournament in New York, the first in a sensational series of achievements he would accomplish in his all-too-short skiing career.
It is difficult to forget Torger Tokle’s first winter in America. Although he was designated a class “B” jumper due to a quirk in the National Ski Association rules, he soundly thrashed all the class “A” riders, winning seven of eight tournaments.
Tokle settled in Brooklyn, New York. When the top jumpers in the country converged on Berlin, New Hampshire for the international tryouts amid a throng of 30,000 spectators, he asked that he be allowed to compete in class ‘A” at the Eastern Championships at Laconia, New Hampshire the following week. Here was the opportunity for him to compete against his idol, Norwegian, Reider Andersen, the most stylish jumper in the world at the time. The duel was settled in a most satisfactory fashion: a dead heat between for first between Tokle and his countryman.
The following year, 1940, he won everything but the national title where his experience caused him to bow to the perennial of the time, Alf Engen. He never lost to Engen again.
A power jumper, Tokle won the national title in 1941. He did not have the form of a Reider Andersen or Alf Engen but what Tokle lacked in grace he made up for in distance, setting hill records on nearly every hill where he competed.
A top-flight sportsman to the every end, Torger Tokle was the kind of person everyone was proud to call a friend. His career, shortened by war, robbed the world of the opportunity to determine just how great he could have been at his sport. He has been referred to as the “Babe Ruth of Ski Jumping”.
Torger Tokle was elected to the U.S. National Ski Hall of Fame in 1959.
Source: US Ski Snowboard Hall of Fame