Francis Peloubet Farquhar | |
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Born | December 31, 1887 Newton, Massachusetts |
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Died | November 21, 1974 Berkeley, California |
(aged 86)
Known for | Mountaineering, Environmentalism, California Historian |
Francis Peloubet Farquhar (December 31, 1887, Newton, Massachusetts – November 21, 1974, Berkeley, California) graduated from Harvard and came to San Francisco to set up in practice as a Certified Public Accountant. He was a mountaineer and an environmentalist.
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Farquhar was born in Newton, Massachusetts, the son of David Webber Farquhar (1844–1905) and Grace Thaxter Peloubet (1863–1943).[1] Graduating from Harvard in 1909, he came to San Francisco in 1910 and, after several business experiences, returned to New England to take up the profession of accounting, studying under Clinton Scovell, a pioneer in the field of cost accounting. In 1914 he came again to California, eventually setting up his own practice in San Francisco as a certified public accountant.[2]
Francis Farquhar was an active Sierra Club leader and served as its president 1933-1935 and 1948-1949. He served as Sierra Club Bulletin editor from 1926 to 1946, when that publication was one of the leading mountaineering journals in the world. He served in other club offices as a director from 1924 to 1951. Farquhar was a mountaineer who invited Robert L. M. Underhill to introduce proper use of modern Alpine rope techniques to Sierra Club members on an annual club High Trip in 1931. He made multiple first ascents. On August 26, 1921, he completed the first ascent of Middle Palisade by the south-west chute with Ansel Hall.[3]
Farquhar is the author of several books and wrote the foreword for other books. He is best known for his book History of the Sierra Nevada (1946), which is still in print. He had terms as president of the California Academy of Sciences, the California Society of Certified Public Accountants, and the California Historical Society.
In 1957 and 1958, Farquhar was editor of the American Alpine Journal published by the American Alpine Club.
Since 1970, the Sierra Club has given the Francis P. Farquhar Mountaineering Award in his honor.
His wife Marjory Bridge Farquhar died 1999 in San Francisco. His half brother, the Los Angeles architect Robert D. Farquhar, retired and lived with him in Berkeley.
Mount Farquhar (12,893'), located 1.6 miles (2.6 km) northwest of Mount Brewer in Kings Canyon National Park, was named in his honor.[4]