Daily Times (Primos, PA)

TODAY’S OBITS

- By Phuong Le

• Elwood E. Starr • Margaret A. Starr • Dr. Edward John Beadle • Michael J. Rosci • Constance Lamond • Carmella Turner • Maryanne Mercanti • James J. Del Sordo Sr. • Betty C. Lewis • Janice M. Samsel • David W. Thomas

SEATTLE » Legendary mountain climber Fred Beckey, who wrote dozens of books and is credited with notching more first ascents than any other American mountainee­r, has died. He was 94.

Megan Bond, a close friend who managed his affairs, told The Associated Press that Beckey died of natural causes in her Seattle home Monday.

“He was an extraordin­ary mountainee­r. He also had a personalit­y and humor that almost dwarfed the mountains around him,” Bond said. “He was a brilliant writer. He was a scholar. He lived based on what was important to him, and he was not going to sell out.”

Beckey was known as much for his eccentric personalit­y as for his singular obsession with climbing.

He was born in Germany and immigrated to the United States as a child. His family settled in Seattle, where he got his first taste of hiking and scrambling with the Boy Scouts and later The Mountainee­rs club.

In 1942, he and his younger brother Helmut wowed the climbing community with an impressive second ascent of Mount Waddington in British Columbia.

He went on to accomplish hundreds of first ascents on peaks throughout the Pacific Northwest, Alaska, Canada and Wyoming. In 1954, he establishe­d new routes on three of Alaska’s mountains: McKinley, Deborah and Hunter. He also climbed in the Himalayas and China.

“Fred got the golden age of climbing first ascents,” Alex Bertulis, a former climbing partner told the AP last year. “That will be his legacy.”

He authored more than a dozen books, including the three-volume “Cascade Alpine Guide” that details hundreds of peaks in the North Cascades in Washington state.

Beckey once wrote that climbing gave him a unique sense of control over his destiny. “The exaltation one can get in the presence of mountains can be a memorable lesson in humility and an aid to self-realizatio­n,” he wrote.

“Fred was a true American icon. His legacy is profound, and he has inspired countless people to explore this amazing planet,” Dave O’Leske said in a statement. He directed the documentar­y feature film, “Dirtbag: The Legend of Fred Beckey” and spent the past decade filming Beckey.

Even in his 90s, Beckey was still plotting routes and climbing — though more slowly and with the help of a cadre of fiercely protective partners.

Bond said they were planning a trip to the Himalayas next spring and she was working on arranging porters to carry him. In recent weeks, she and others took him climbing to Squamish, British Columbia.

 ?? DAVE O’LESKE — FRED BECKEY ARCHIVES VIA AP ?? This circa 1940 photo provided by Fred Beckey Archives shows Fred Beckey, right, on the summit of Mount Baker, Wash. Legendary mountain climber Beckey, who wrote dozens of books and is credited with notching more first ascents than any other American...
DAVE O’LESKE — FRED BECKEY ARCHIVES VIA AP This circa 1940 photo provided by Fred Beckey Archives shows Fred Beckey, right, on the summit of Mount Baker, Wash. Legendary mountain climber Beckey, who wrote dozens of books and is credited with notching more first ascents than any other American...

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