Don Whillans
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Don Whillans (18 May 1933 - 4 August 1985) was an English rock-climber and mountaineer. Born and raised in a two-up two-down house in Salford, Lancashire, he climbed with both Joe Brown and Chris Bonington on many new routes, and was considered the technical equal of both. He was an apprentice plumber when he first starting his climbing career with Joe Brown in 1951. Don met Joe Brown while climbing one day. When Joe's climbing partner failed to follow Joe up a new route, Don shouted up to ask if he could try - and subsequently led the second pitch of Joe's new route. Don had from an early age walked all around the local Pennine moors, climbing therefore was the next step for an adventurous young boy. From rock climbing he expanded into mountaineering with trips to the Alps. Ascents in the alps included the "Bonatti Pillar" of the Dru and the first ascent along with Chris Bonnington, Jan Dlugosz and Ian Clough of the Central Pillar of Freney. With Dougal Haston, he made the first ascent of the south face of Annapurna in Bonington's 1970 expedition.
Whillans was attributed great safety and mountain awareness, which is evidenced by the fact that he retreated from the Eiger North Face on several separate occasions owing to bad weather or rockfall. He also had very few climbing accidents although there were several near misses, such as when a fixed rope on the Central Tower of Paine snapped. In this case he managed to put his weight on the holds with split second timing before calmly retying the rope.
Whillans was well-regarded for his capacity to deliver a cracking one-liner off the cuff. One example which perhaps best encapsulates his wry humour concerns him encountering a team of -- to his mind -- poorly equipped Japanese mountaineers attempting the north face of the Eiger. "You going up?" Whillans asked them. "Yes! Yes!" came the reply. Pause, then Whillans: "You may be going a lot higher than you think."
Whillans was well-known for his heavy drinking, which harmed his career after the expedition to Annapurna and may have contributed to his early death from a heart attack. He also designed mountaineering equipment, including the "Whillans Harness", once described as designed to safely transport beer-guts to great height, and the "Whillans-box" expedition tent. He died at the age of fifty-two and was the subject of a biography called The Villain by the author-climber Jim Perrin in 2005.
The British Mountaineering Council maintain a climbing hut near the Roaches in his memory.
[edit] References
- Jim Perrin (2005), The Villain : the life of Don Whillans, Hutchinson, ISBN 0-09-179438-2.
- Whillans, Don & Ormerod, Alick (1971), "Don Whillans. Portrait of a mountaineer.", Heinemann, London (ISBN 0-434-86251-7) (Harmondsworth, Penguin Books, 1973).
- Don Whillans - Myth and Legend (2006) - Film by Leo Dickinson
[edit] External links
- List of Joe Brown's first ascents, including many with Don Whillans
- "The vertical beatnik", Observer Sport Monthly, 6 March 2005
- Peter Donnelly, ‘Whillans, Donald Desbrow (1933–1985)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, May 2006
- The Don Whillans Memorial Hut Information page at the BMC website
- A Whillan's tale Leo Dickinson introduces his new film, exploring the myths and legends of rock climber Don Whillans