Sir Edmund Hillary, in full Edmund Percival Hillary
(born July 20, 1919, Auckland, New Zealand—died January 11, 2008, Auckland) New
Zealand mountain climber and Antarctic explorer who, with the Tibetan
mountaineer Tenzing Norgay, was the first to reach the summit of Mount Everest
(29,035 feet [8,850 metres]; see Researcher’s Note: Height of Mount Everest),
the highest mountain in the world.
Hillary’s father was a beekeeper, an occupation he also
pursued. He began climbing in New Zealand’s Southern Alps while in high school.
After military service in World War II, he resumed climbing and became
determined to scale Everest. In 1951 he joined a New Zealand party to the
central Himalayas and later that year participated in a British reconnaissance
expedition of the southern flank of Everest. He was subsequently invited to
join the team of mountaineers planning to climb the peak.
The well-organized expedition was launched in the spring
of 1953, and a high camp from which to mount attempts at the summit was
established by mid-May. After a pair of climbers failed to reach the top on May
27, Hillary and Tenzing set out for it early on May 29; by late morning they
were standing on the summit. The two shook hands, then Tenzing embraced his
partner. Hillary took photographs, and both searched for signs that George
Mallory, a British climber lost on Everest in 1924, had been on the summit.
Hillary left behind a crucifix, and Tenzing, a Buddhist, made a food offering.
After spending about 15 minutes on the peak, they began their descent. They
were met back at camp by their colleague W.G. Lowe, to whom Hillary reputedly
said, “Well, George, we knocked the bastard off.” Hillary described his
exploits in High Adventure (1955). He made other expeditions to the Everest
region during the early 1960s but never again tried to climb to the top.
Between 1955 and 1958 Hillary commanded the New Zealand
group participating in the British Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition led
by Vivian (later Sir Vivian) Fuchs. He reached the South Pole by tractor on January
4, 1958, and recorded this feat in The Crossing of Antarctica (1958; with
Fuchs) and No Latitude for Error (1961). On his expedition of Antarctica in
1967, he was among those who scaled Mount Herschel (10,941 feet [3,335 metres])
for the first time. In 1977 he led the first jet boat expedition up the Ganges
River and continued by climbing to its source in the Himalayas. His
autobiography, Nothing Venture, Nothing Win, was published in 1975.
Hillary never anticipated the acclaim that would follow
the historic ascent. He was knighted in 1953, shortly after the expedition
returned to London. From 1985 to 1988 he served as New Zealand’s high
commissioner to India, Nepal, and Bangladesh. Over the years numerous other
honours were bestowed on him, including the Order of the Garter in 1995.
Throughout it, however, he maintained a high level of humility, and his main
interest came to be the welfare of the Himalayan peoples of Nepal, especially
the Sherpas. Through the Himalayan Trust, which he founded in 1960, he built
schools, hospitals, and airfields for them. This dedication to the Sherpas
lasted into his later years and was recognized in 2003, when, as part of the
observance of the 50th anniversary of his and Tenzing’s climb, he was made an
honorary citizen of Nepal.
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