Willi Unsoeld
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Willi Unsoeld (October 25, 1926 - March 4, 1979) was an American climber who, along with Tom Hornbein, were members of the first American expedition to summit Mount Everest on May 22, 1963. Unsoeld and Hornbein's legendary climb was the first ascent from the peak's west ridge. His subsequent activities include Peace Corps director in Nepal, speaker for Outward Bound, faculty member at The Evergreen State College and a mountaineering legend. An avalanche during a winter climb of Mount Rainier took his life.
Unsoeld and Tom Hornbein ascended Everest’s difficult West Ridge route in May 1963 on a National Geographic Society sponsored expedition while Barry Bishop and Lute Jerstad followed Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay’s South Col route established during their 1953 climb. It was the first simultaneous attempt from two directions.
The grueling expedition would cost Unsoeld nine of his toes and require several months of recovery in the hospital. Unsoeld and the team reunited in July 1963 when they were presented with the National Geographic Society’s highest honor, the Hubbard Medal, by John F. Kennedy.
After his stint in the Peace Corps Unsoeld joined Outward Bound and traveled about the country giving speeches and promoting the organization. Unsoeld lived and died by his philosophy that spirituality and a real grasp of the soul could be gained by risk and pushing past your personal comfort zone.
After leaving Outward Bound he became one of the founding faculty at Washington State’s Evergreen State College. He was highlighted prominently in the first recruiting video in 1971 advising that "not every student should come to Evergreen."
He married Jolene Unsoeld in the 1950s. In the late 1950s he was a leading climbing guide in the Grand Teton Mountains. He climbed Mt. Rainier over 200 times. Evergreen’s annual Willi Unsoeld Seminar is held as a living memorial to Unsoeld as a mountaineer, a philosopher and a theologian.
In 1976 Unseold and his daughter Nanda Devi were on an expedition to climb her namesake mountain Nanda Devi, the second highest peak in India. His daughter died during the climb, which was plagued by accidents and eventual tragedy. Unsoeld died in an avalanche during a winter climb of Mt. Rainier in March of 1979 at the age of 52. He was leading an Evergreen student climb at the time and died descending from their high camp in Cadaver Gap along with one student, Janie Diepenbrock.
[edit] External sources
- Willi Unsoeld: Brief Biography & Quotes - Known as “The father of Experiential Education” Willi Unsoeld influenced the growth of Outdoor Education inspiring educational leaders like Simon Priest and Mike Gass, his philosophical approach to living and global perspective mentored environmental visionaries like Caril Ridley and his intense approach to living was immortalized by author Mike Roper who highlighted Willi's un dieing spirit living on and on through generations. -