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Hillary and Tenzing aftter the successful ascent May 29th 1953 |
Today is sixty six years since the first ascent of Everest.
On 29th May 1953 at 11.30 am, a Sherpa and a New Zealander became the first men to stand on top of the highest peak on this planet. However the intervening years has seen a sea change as far as Everest is concerned. The mountain has now become a playground for guided expeditions, with clients paying between thirty thousand to eighty thousand dollars or more to stand on the highest point on earth. The South Col route climbed in 1953 is now disdainfully referred to as the “yak trail”. The dangerous icefall below the Western Cwm is maintained by a team of sherpas right through the season led by a senior “Icefall Doctor.”
In order to make it possible for the clients to summit Everest, the entire mountain has fixed rope from bottom to top and the first to summit each year is a Sherpa team.
Kami Rita Sherpa created a new record this year by summiting Everest 24 times - in the last week he has summitted Everest twice in the 2019 season - the most by any climber breaking his own record of 22 summits. I wonder if anyone will break Kami's record - maybe Kami himself next year!
This year 2019 has not been a very good one on 8000 metre peaks. At the time of writing, there have been 20 deaths on 8000 metre peaks this season - Everest, Makalu Kangchenjunga and Cho Oyu. There were also reports in social media and newspapers that more than 200 climbers were in human traffic jam on the south east ridge of Everest near the balcony area and as a result of this some climbers lost their lives due to exhausion and many others had injuries due to frostbite from waiting in the "deathzone" for so many hours. There have been ten deaths on Everest so far.
However, this post recounts through photographs, the 1953 climb, the historic ascent of the first two men to summit Everest and the team of climbers and sherpas who supported them through this endeavour.
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Bourdillon and Evans on their return from the South Summit on May 26th 1953 - Bourdillon had wanted to make a push for the summit |
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Nawang Gombu crossing the icefall ladders - Gombu later became the first man to climb Everest twice in 1963 and 1965 |
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The five men who helped Hillary and Tenzing to carry to Camp 9 27,800 feet - John Hunt, Da Namgyal, Alf Gregory, Any Nyima and George Lowe - Photo George Lowe Collection |
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The map of the Khumbu icefall and the route followed by the 1953 expedition
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From left: John Hunt, Ed Hillary, Tenzing, Ang Nyima, Alfred Gregory and George Lowe after the ascent |
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The code which was later used in the telegram to send the news before the Queen's coronation |
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The telegram sent by John Hunt after the ascent |
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Hunt, Hillary and Tenzing in London |
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The full expedition team with the sherpas |
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Tenzing and his mother at Tengboche monastery after the climb |
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Tenzing and Hillary at Tengboche monastery after the successful climb |
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Sketch map drawn by Tenzing for his biographer James Ramsay Ullman |
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The signed colour supplement of The Times
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All photographs in this post are copyright the ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY and the respective owners. This post is non-commercial.
Nice article as well as whole site.Thanks.
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