Dave Rearick
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Dave Rearick (born ca 1934) is an American rock climber and mathematician. A pioneer of Yosemite's golden age of climbing, Rearick - frequently climbing with Bob Kamps – was instrumental in shifting the focus from aid climbing to free climbing in the 1950s.
Rearick and Royal Robbins climbed the Vampire at Tahquitz Rock in California in 1959; though some aid was used (not eliminated until 1973), the route required 5.10 climbing, exceptionally difficult for the times. A year later the team of Robbins and Rearick established Yosemite's first 5.10 climb: the East Chimney of Rixon's Pinnacle.
In August of 1960, Kamps and Rearick made the first ascent of the Diamond, the massive headwall on the east face of 14,255 foot Longs Peak, in Colorado. Their ascent was reported in newspapers across America.
Rearick received a PhD in mathematics from Cal Tech about 1959. He became a mathematics professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder, retiring in the 1990s.
[edit] References
- Ament, Pat (2002). "Wizards of Rock: A History of Free Climbing in America", Wilderness Press