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Paperback Mount McKinley: The Pioneer Climbs Book

ISBN: 0898860210

ISBN13: 9780898860214

Mt. McKinley: The Pioneer Climbs

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

* Author participated in McKinley's third ascent. * Contains maps and historic photos * Includes vast literature references and a glossary of mountaineering terms The natives called it Denali, the great one, and accorded the magnificent mountain their respect. Sourdoughs, adventurers and mountaineers knew it as Alaska's Mt. McKinley, highest point on the North American continent and a supreme challenge. Measured from base to summit, McKinley involves more climbing than Mt. Everest. In this book, Terris Moore presents a dramatic account of man's contest with McKinley, from initial explorations on into the 1940s. With documented facts and a novelist's skills, he tackles the mysteries and controversies surrounding many of the early expeditions. There was the daring 1910 ascent of the North Peak by a group of Alaska sourdoughs, who carried up a large pole to plant on the top only to discover later that there was another, higher summit. There was the heartbreaking effort in 1912, by Belmore Browne, who was forced to turn around less than 150 vertical feet from the summit, leaving the top for Archdeacon Hudson Stuck to achieve in 1913. Perhaps the most widely discussed attempt was that of Arctic Explorer Dr. Frederick Cook, who tried to support his claim of victory in 1906 with faked photos. With fascinating historic photos and maps, Mount McKinley: The Pioneer Climbs has become a virtually indispensable reference for the ever-increasing numbers of those who climb on or near the mountain.

Customer Reviews

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best denali book ever written

From the first sightings by Russian and British explorers from Cook Inlet, through the first attempts, and finally, success, Dr. Moore, past president of the University of Alaska detailed the history of discovering and climbing America's highest mountain. I simply couldn't put it down. You won't believe the interview with Billy Taylor, one of the sourdoughs who mushed from Fairbanks in 1910 and climbed to the top with a thermos of coffee and a sack of donuts, and erected a 14' spruce pole on the north peak. Then they simply hung out for the summer and mined for gold near the base. True or false? You'll have to find out for yourself.
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