Chicago Sun-Times

Climber helped start retailer REI

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SEATTLE — Mary Anderson, a climbing enthusiast who helped start the outdoor retailer REI that has become the nation’s largest consumer- owned retail cooperativ­e, has died at 107.

REI said she died March 27, the Seattle Times reported.

Mrs. Anderson and her husband, Lloyd, along with 21 other mountainee­ring friends, started the consumer cooperativ­e in 1938 out of a desire to find high- quality, affordable climbing gear in the United States. By forming a co- op, they were able to buy outdoor gear in bulk from Europe and other places.

REI, headquarte­red south of Seattle, has grown to about 6.3 million active members, more than 140 retail stores and about 12,000 employees.

Mrs. Anderson’s “legacy is deeply engrained in REI and her contributi­ons to the outdoor community extend far beyond the co- op,” the company said in a statement. “REI and our employees are grateful to the Andersons for their dedication to REI and the incredible foundation they establishe­d.”

In search of high- quality outdoor gear and relying on Mrs. Anderson’s German skills to translate gear catalogs, the couple discovered they could order ice axes from Austria and have them delivered to Seattle at bet- ter prices, according to an REI blog post. Friends heard what they were up to and wanted to get involved.

The couple and 21 other outdoor enthusiast­s officially formed Recreation­al Equipment in 1938. Each paid for a $ 1 lifetime membership fee. Mary Anderson held membership card No. 2, according to the Mountainee­rs, the Seattle- based nonprofit outdoor organizati­on in which the Andersons were heavily involved.

For years, the Andersons operated the co- op out of their Seattle home. She stitched tents and packed food in boxes while he sprayed them with waterproof­ing — a room off their kitchen served as their office, the newspaper reported.

“They never started this buying cooperativ­e to create a store,” said Thomas Vogl, CEO of the Mountainee­rs and a former senior vice president of marketing at REI. “All they really wanted to do was make it easier and more accessible for people to get into the outdoors.”

Mrs. Anderson was born in central Washington’s Yakima Valley. She was a longtime teacher in Seattle public schools and was among a handful of people who helped set up the Mountainee­rs climbing course in 1936.

She retired from REI in 1968.

 ?? | REI. ?? REI has grown to about 6.3 million active members, more than 140 retail stores and about 12,000 employees. COM
| REI. REI has grown to about 6.3 million active members, more than 140 retail stores and about 12,000 employees. COM

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