Peggy Casselman
Margaret Rose Casselman was a Canadian curler. During her career, she won the Canadian women's and mixed championships.
Casselman was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, the daughter of Charles and Constance Douglas.
Career
Women's
In 1963, Casselman took a look around Winnipeg's brand new Wildewood Curling Club, and assembled a team of three skips, Val Taylor, Pat McDonald and Pat Scott, with the mantra that "f you're serious about competitive curling, you have to pack a rink." Two years later, with Casselman at skip, the team won the Manitoba women's championship, defeating Bertha Thompson of Minnedosa in the final. This win qualified the rink to represent Manitoba at the 1965 Diamond D Championship, Canada's national women's curling championship. At the event, both Manitoba and Alberta headed into the final round with identical 7–1 records, tied for first place. The teams just so happened to be facing off against each other in the last draw, with the winner clinching the championship. In the game, Manitoba took an early 6–0 lead after four ends, and while Alberta battled back to trail 6–4 after six, the teams traded points in the eighth and ninth before Manitoba ran Alberta out of rocks in the tenth, winning the game 7–5. It was the first national women's curling championship for Manitoba.In 1966, Casselman and her rink were eliminated in zone playdowns to Min McDonald of Pine Falls. A month later, her team won the Grand Aggregate and the Lady Eaton events at the Manitoba Ladies Curling Association bonspiel.
In 1967, the team made it to the final of Manitoba championship, but lost to Betty Duguid in an extra end.
In 1969, Casselman joined the 1968 Manitoba champion Pat Brunsdon rink as her third.