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Sir
Edmund Hillary
First To Conquer Mt. Everest

Photo By
Bettman
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Sir Edmund
Hillary was born in 1919 and grew up in Auckland, New
Zealand. It was in New Zealand that he became interested in
mountain climbing. Although he made his living as a beekeeper,
he climbed mountains in New Zealand, then in the Alps, and
finally in the Himalayas, where he climbed 11 different peaks of
over 20,000 feet. By this time, Hillary was ready to confront
the world's highest mountain .Mt. Everest lies between Tibet and
Nepal. Between 1920 and 1952, Seven major expeditions had failed
to reach the summit.
In 1924, the famous
mountaineer George Leigh-Mallory had perished in the attempt In
1952, a team of Swiss climbers had been forced to turn
back after reaching the South peak, only 1000 feet from the
summit. Edmund Hillary joined in Everest reconnaissance
expeditions in 1951 and again in 1952. These exploits brought
Hillary to the attention of Sir John Hunt, leader of an
expedition sponsored by the Joint Himalayan Committee of the
Alpine Club of Great Britain and the Royal Geographic Society to
make the assault on Everest in 1953.
The expedition reached the
South Peak on May, but all but two of the climbers who had come
this far were forced to turn back by exhaustion at the high
altitude. At last, Hillary and Tenzing Norgay, a native Nepalese
climber who had participated in five previous Everest
trips, were the only members of the party able to make the final
assault on the summit. At 11:30 on the morning of May 29, 1953,
Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay reached the summit, 29,028
feet above sea level, the highest spot remarkable as the feat on
earth.
As of reaching the summit,
was the treacherous climb back down the peak. By coincidence,
the conquest of Everest was announced to the British public on
the eve of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. The triumph of
a British-led expedition combined with the inauguration of the
young Queen did much to restore the confidence of a nation weary
from long years of wartime hardship and postwar shortages.
Edmund Hillary returned to Britain with the other climbers and
was knighted by the Queen.
Now
world famous, Sir Edmund Hillary turned to Antarctic exploration
and led the New Zealand section of the Trans-Antarctic
expedition from 1955 to 1958. In 1958 he participated in the
first mechanized expedition to the South Pole. Hillary went on
to organize further mountain-climbing expeditions but, as the
years passed, he became more and more concerned with the welfare
of the Nepalese people. In the 1960s, he returned to Nepal,
to aid in the development of the society, building clinics,
hospitals and 17 schools.
To
facilitate these projects, two airstrips were built. These
airstrips had the unforeseen consequence of bringing more
tourists and would-be mountain climbers to the remote region.
The Nepalese cut down ever more of their forests to provide fuel
for the mountaineers. Edmund Hillary became concerned about the
degradation of the environment of the Himalayas and persuaded
the Nepalese government to pass law protecting the forest and to
declare the area around Everest a National Park. The Nepalese
could not afford to fund this project themselves and had no
experience in park management. Hillary used his great prestige
to persuade the government of New Zealand to provide the
necessary aid.
Immediately
after the successful Everest expedition, Hillary and Sir John
Hunt published their account of the expedition, The Ascent of
Everest. The book was published in the U.S as The Conquest of
Everest. Sir Edmund Hillary's autobiography Nothing Venture,
Nothing Win was published in 1975. In 1979, he published From
The Ocean To The Sky, an account of his 1977 expedition on the
Ganges River from its mouth to its source in the Himalayas.
Hillary's life was darkened by the loss of his wife and daughter
in a plane crash in 1975.
He
later remarried and continues to occupy himself with
environmental causes. I thank the fine people from the American
Academy Of Achievement for the reference source
information.

Source: Time Life's 100 greatest
events of exploration
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