Career
The races were held in deep, soft snow conditions that presented no problem for Mackinnon. As Mackinnon approached the finish in Lauterbrunnen, she encountered a funeral procession passing by and stopped to wait. The timekeeper stopped the clock and then restarted it when she resumed her run.
Some sources maintain that Mackinnon did this out of respect for the departed.
According to Lunn"s first-hand account, though, Mackinnon stopped out of necessity:
An incident unique in ski-ing history occurred at the finish. The finishing posts had been placed just outside the Lauternrunnen station.
Shortly before Mission Mackinnon appeared, a funeral procession emerged from the station and passed between Mission Mackinnon and the finishing posts. Mission Mackinnon naturally stopped, and her time was taken to the point where she stopped, and from the point where she stopped till she had passed through the finishing posts.
She lost, of course, a few seconds for she had to start again on the level instead of being carried through the posts by her impetus.
The Austrians put in a protest, alleging that the time that the funeral procession had taken to pass should be added to her time. This struck us as rather odd for the object of a race is surely to prove that you have skied faster than your rivals, and not that you are entitled to a prize as the result of the opportune intervention of a funeral procession. (p 79)
Her final time was 10 minutes, 4.4 seconds.