Little Giant (April 1968 | Volume: 19, Issue: 3)

Little Giant

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April 1968 | Volume 19, Issue 3


Mount Washington ranks high among America’s most popular peaks, even though there are scores of others (nearly all of them in the West) that are far higher in altitude. Its New England location, its ease of ascent, and the stunning view from its top have given it a longer and fuller history than perhaps any other lofty American mountain. Today its most learned chronicler is Frank Alien Burt, of Brookline, Massachusetts. Grandson of the man who in 1877 started Among the Clouds , the daily summer newspaper published at the summit for thirty-one years, Mr. Burt has gathered all of his Mount Washington lore into an absorbing book, The Story of Mount Washington , published by Dartmouth Publications in 1960. AMERICAN HERITAGE is grateful to him for the use of his book as a basic source for the accompanying article on the cog railway, and for the compilation of the following sampler of Mount Washington history.

Long a playground for tourists, hikers, and skiers, Mount Washington in the last century has also been an important natural laboratory for the study of cold-weather phenomena. Despite its generally delightful weather in other seasons—though there are sometimes sudden snow squalls even in summer—winter brings the mountain summit a climate more closely approximating polar conditions than any other equally accessible spot in the world. Winds blowing above 150 miles per hour are no surprise, while the thermometer quite casually drops to forty degrees below zero. This makes it something of a paradox that the mountain has, besides the cog railway, a good auto road to the top, and for many years boasted a large, comfortable hotel, the Summit House, that entertained thousands of happy summer visitors who were scarcely mountaineers. More distinguished Americans have probably ascended Mount Washington than any other mountain anywhere, not excluding Pikes Peak.

Here is a somewhat capricious selection of Mount Washington’s notable events across three and a quarter centuries: 1642 : Darby Field, of Massachusetts Bay Colony, made the first ascent by a white man. 1784 : The Reverend Jeremy Belknap, D.D., climbed the mountain, named it Mount Washington, and estimated its height as above ten thousand feet (it actually measures 6,288). 1821 : Three young ladies from Jefferson, New Hampshire, were the first females to climb the mountain. 1849 : An English hiker named Frederick Strickland became the first of some thirty-five persons to die from exposure or climbing accidents on the slopes of Mount Washington during the last 119 years. 1855 : A. S. Walker of Boston walked to the summit barefoot. 1861: The eight-mile carriage road (later called the auto road) was completed to the summit. 1869 : The cog railway was finished and began regular service. 1874 : The U.S. Army set up a weather station for winter observations at the summit which was operated