The legendary founder of Arctic Cat Inc. (NASDAQ: ACAT), co-founder of
Polaris and "grandfather” of snowmobiling died on Saturday, February 12,
in Grand Rapids, Minn. He was 90 years old.
An innovative visionary who turned the concept of an over-the-snow
machine into a playful winter pastime, Edgar made deep, lasting tracks
that led to a new means of experiencing winter.
"Edgar did more than just make tracks,” said Roger Skime, vice president
of engineering at Arctic Cat. "He broke a trail. From the frozen
farmlands of Northwest Minnesota to every state, province and country
that has snow. Along the way he built a company, nurtured an industry
and shaped the culture of winter recreation with an unbridled optimism
that made the sport what it is today, and will be tomorrow.”
In 1954, Edgar, along with his younger brother Allan and brother-in-law
David Johnson, formed a manufacturing company in Roseau, Minn. The
company produced its first snowmobile in 1956, a concept at which Edgar
initially scoffed. But he quickly and wholeheartedly embraced the
snowmobile, and soon became its greatest promoter. His flair for
adventure and promotion led him on an unprecedented 1,200-mile
snowmobile trip across Alaska in 1960, which brought national exposure
to a fledgling sport despite unanticipated derision "back home.”
Undeterred, Edgar founded Polar Manufacturing in Thief River Falls in
1961, where he began producing snowmobiles that reflected his dreams.
One year later, he changed the company name to Arctic Cat, and began a
series of innovations that transformed hulking snow "machines” into
small, playful snowmobiles.
Edgar didn’t invent the snowmobile, but he envisioned its near-limitless
opportunities with a clarity and passion that made him the greatest
pioneer the sport has ever known.
"Edgar focused on the ‘mobile’ aspect of snowmobiles,” said Skime. "At
the time, few had any idea where the sport would go, but Edgar had a
unique vision. He could imagine the possibilities, especially the social
relationships. Perhaps his greatest insight was that snowmobiles were a
means for people to recreate together.”
Five decades later, Edgar’s vision continues to propel a sport and an
industry.
"Today, snowmobiling continues to capture our imagination,” said Claude
Jordan, Arctic Cat president and CEO. "It fuels our spirit of adventure
and, as an experiential, social winter recreation, it builds and
strengthens our relationships with friends and family.”
Although the family of employees, dealers and snowmobilers sheds a
collective tear, we raise our hands to cheer the sport, industry and
culture that Edgar so profoundly shaped. While the long, lifetime-track
Edgar made has ended, the trail he blazed continues onward.
About Arctic Cat
Arctic Cat Inc., based in Thief River Falls, Minn., designs, engineers,
manufactures and markets all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) and snowmobiles
under the Arctic Cat® brand name, as well as related parts, garments and
accessories. Its common stock is traded on the NASDAQ Global Select
Market under the ticker symbol "ACAT.” More information about Arctic Cat
and its products is available on the Internet at www.arcticcat.com.
