Lionel Terray

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Lionel Terray (25 July 192123 September 1965) was a French climber who made many first ascents, including Makalu in the Himalaya (with Jean Couzy on 15 May 1955) and Cerro Fitzroy in the Patagonian Andes (with Guido Magnone in 1952).

A climbing guide and ski instructor, Terray was active in mountain combat against Germany during World War II. After the war, he became well known as one of the best Chamonix climbers and guides, noted for his speedy ascents of some of the most notorious climbs in the French, Italian, and Swiss Alps: the Walker Spur of the Grandes Jorasses, the south face of the Aiguille Noire de Peuterey, the north-east face of Piz Badile, and the north face of the Eiger. Terray, frequently with climbing partner Louis Lachenal, broke previous climbing speed records.

Terray was a member of Maurice Herzog's 1950 expedition to the Nepalese Himalayan peak, Annapurna, the highest peak climbed at the time, and the first 8000-meter peak climbed (although British climbers George Mallory, George Finch, Geoffrey Bruce, Henry Morshead, Edward Norton and Howard Somervell had reached higher altitudes on Mount Everest during the 1920s). Terray did not reach the summit of Annapurna, but he aided summitteers Maurice Herzog and Louis Lachenal down from the mountain. Both Herzog and Lachenal experienced extreme frostbite and subsequently underwent amputations. [1] Despite these events, the French team returned to Paris to huge public acclaim, and Herzog's expedition book Annapurna became an international bestseller.

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Terray made a number of first ascents in Peru, including the highest unclimbed peak in the central Andes at the time, 20,981-foot Huantsan. He also made first ascents of lower but more difficult peaks, including Veronica, Soray, Taulliraju, and Chacraraju, possibly the hardest peak in the Peruvian Andes and considered unclimbable at the time. One of Terray's finest achievements was the first ascent of 25,295-foot Jannu in Nepal in 1962. He also climbed the Nilgiris near Annapurna, and led the successful 1964 first ascent of 12,240 foot Mount Huntington, in the Alaska Range, by the northwest ridge. [2]


Terray died on a rock climb in the Vercors, south of Grenoble, on 23 September 1965, several years after the publication of his climbing memoirs, Conquistadors of the Useless.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Terray, Lionel (1963). Les Conquérants de l'inutile. France: Victor Gollancz. ASIN B000HJRAVQ. 
  • Terray, Lionel; Geoffrey Sutton (trans.) (2000). Conquistadors of the Useless. Baton Wicks Publications; New Ed. ISBN 1898573387. 
  • Terray, Lionel; Jean Franco (1965). Bataille pour Le Jannu. France: Gallimard. ISBN 2070102033. 

[edit] References

  1. ^ Herzog, Maurice (1997). Annapurna. New York, NY, USA: The Lyons Press. ISBN 1558215492. 
  2. ^ Jones, Chris (1976). Climbing in North America. Berkeley, California, USA: American Alpine Club/University of California Press, 330, 331. ISBN 0520029763.