Roles | Competed in Olympic Games |
---|---|
Sex | Female |
Full name | Laurence Rochon "Laurie"•Owen |
Used name | Laurie•Owen |
Born | 9 May 1944 in Berkeley, California (USA) |
Died | 15 February 1961 in Berg-Kampenhout, Vlaams Brabant (BEL) |
Affiliations | Skating Club of Boston, Boston (USA) |
NOC | United States |
She was supposed to be America’s next figure skating queen, following Carol Heiss and Tenley Albright. She was supposed to get on that plane to Prague and defeat the Netherlands’ Sjoukje Dijkstra and win the World Championship. She was supposed to win the 1964 Olympic gold medal, and then go to Radcliffe, like her mother, and become a writer.
For Laurie Owen, she would never get to see Prague, nor Radcliffe, nor the 1964 Winter Olympics, and she left us no words. After competing at the 1960 Winter Olympics when only 15-years-old, and placing sixth, trailing Heiss and Dijkstra, who won the gold and silver medal, Owen won the 1961 US National Championship and the 1961 North American Championship. The daughter of Maribel Vinson Owen, and the sister of Maribel Owen, she was from figure skating royalty, and her ascension to the top step of the figure skating podium seemed, to the United States, at least, a sure thing.
But Owen lost her life on 15 February 1961, along with her mother and sister, in the crash of Sabena 548, which fell near Brussels, while the entire US Figure Skating team was traveling to the 1961 World Championships in Prague. The World Championships were cancelled. Laurie Owen is interred in the Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts, next to her mother and sister.
Games | Discipline (Sport) / Event | NOC / Team | Pos | Medal | As | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1960 Winter Olympics | Figure Skating (Skating) | USA | Laurie Owen | |||
Singles, Women (Olympic) | 6 |