Read Everest-scaling mountaineer George Mallory’s last letters, digitized for the first time | CNN (2024)

Read Everest-scaling mountaineer George Mallory’s last letters, digitized for the first time | CNN (1)

Andrew Irvine (back row, far left) and George Mallory (back row, second from left) were members of the 1924 British Mount Everest expedition. The two broke off from the team on June 8, 1924, in a push for the summit.

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George Mallory is renowned for being one of the first British mountaineers to attempt to scale the dizzying heights of Mount Everest during the 1920s — until the mountain claimed his life.

Nearly a century later, newly digitized letters shed light on Mallory’s hopes and fears about ascending Everest, leading up to the last days before he disappeared while heading for its peak.

On June 8, 1924, Mallory and fellow climber Andrew Irvine departed from their expedition team in a push for the summit; they were never seen alive again.

Mallory’s words, however, are now available to read online in their entirety for the first time. Magdalene College, Cambridge, where Mallory studied as an undergraduate from 1905 to 1908, recently digitized hundreds of pages of correspondence and other documents written and received by him.

Over the past 18 months, archivists scanned the documents in preparation for the centennial of Mallory’s disappearance. The college will display a selection of Mallory’s letters and possessions in the exhibit “George Mallory: Magdalene to the Mountain,” opening June 20.

Read Everest-scaling mountaineer George Mallory’s last letters, digitized for the first time | CNN (2)

Mallory and Irvine appear at a base camp in Tibet in the last image of the men before they disappeared a century ago.

The Everest letters outline Mallory’s meticulous preparations and equipment tests, and his optimism about their prospects. But the letters also show the darker side of mountaineering: bad weather, health issues, setbacks and doubts.

Days before his disappearance, Mallory wrote that the odds were “50 to 1 against us” in the last letter to his wife, Ruth, dated May 27, 1924.

“This has been a bad time altogether,” Mallory wrote. “I look back on tremendous efforts & exhaustion & dismal looking out of a tent door and onto a world of snow & vanishing hopes.”

He went on to describe a harrowing brush with death during a recent climb, when the ground beneath his feet collapsed, leaving him suspended “half-blind & breathless,” his weight supported only by his ice axe wedged across a crevasse as he dangled over “a very unpleasant black hole.”

Read Everest-scaling mountaineer George Mallory’s last letters, digitized for the first time | CNN (3)

A digitized letter shows part of the final correspondence that Mallory wrote to his wife, Ruth, dated May 27, 1924, as he revealed looking "onto a world of snow & vanishing hopes."

Other letters Mallory exchanged with Ruth were written at the time of their courtship, while he was serving in Britain’s artillery regiment during World War I. Throughout his travels, correspondence from Ruth provided him with much-needed stability during the most challenging times, said project lead Katy Green, a college archivist at Magdalene College.

“She was the ‘rock’ at home, he says himself in his letters,” Green said. The archivist recounted one note in which Mallory told Ruth: “I’m so glad that you never wobble, because I would wobble without you.”

Yet while Mallory was clearly devoted to his wife, he nonetheless repeatedly returned to the Himalayas despite her mounting fears for his safety.

“There’s something in him that drove him,” Green said. “It might have been his wartime experience, or it might have just been the sort of person that he was.”

‘Documents of his character’

In total, the collection includes around 840 letters spanning from 1914 to 1924; Ruth wrote about 440 of those to Mallory, offering an unprecedented and highly detailed view of daily life for women in the early 20th century, Green told CNN.

Together, the letters offer readers a rare glimpse of the man behind the legend, said Jochen Hemmleb, an author and alpinist who was part of the Everest expedition that found Mallory’s body in 1999.

“They are really personal. They are documents of his character. They provide unique insights into his life, and especially into the 1924 expedition — his state of mind, his accurate planning, his ambitions,” said Hemmleb, who was not involved in the scanning project. “It’s such a treasure that these are now digitized and available for everyone to read.”

Read Everest-scaling mountaineer George Mallory’s last letters, digitized for the first time | CNN (4)

During his travels, letters from his wife provided Mallory with much-needed stability during the most challenging times, according to a college archivist at Magdalene College, Cambridge.

Frozen in place

Three of the digitized letters — written to Mallory by his brother, his sister and a family friend — were recovered from Mallory’s body by the Mallory and Irvine Research Expedition, which ascended Everest seeking the remains of Mallory and Irvine.

On May 1, 1999, expedition member and mountaineer Conrad Anker found a frozen corpse at an altitude of around 26,700 feet (8,138 meters) and identified it as Mallory’s from a name tagthat was sewn into his clothes.

Mallory’s body was interred where it lay at the family’s request, said Anker, who was not involved in the letter digitizing project.

“Having done body recoveries in other places, it’s very laborious, and it’s very dangerous at that altitude,” he told CNN. “We collected some of his personal effects that went back to the Royal Geographical Society,” including the three letters that were later scanned at Magdalene College.

Read Everest-scaling mountaineer George Mallory’s last letters, digitized for the first time | CNN (5)

The collection at Magdalene College includes around 840 letters spanning from 1914 to 1924.

Mount Everest, the highest peak in the Himalayan mountain range, is also the tallest mountain on Earth, rising 29,035 feet (8,850 meters) above sea level on the border between Nepal and Tibet — an autonomous region in China. Its Tibetan name is Chom*olungma, meaning “Goddess Mother of the World,” and its Nepali name is Sagarmatha, meaning “Goddess of the Sky.”

However, these names were unknown to 19th century British surveyors who mapped the region, and in 1865the Royal Geographical Society named the peak Mount Everest after British surveyor Sir George Everest, a former surveyor general of India.

Mallory participated in all three of Britain’s first forays onto Everest’s slopes: in 1921, 1922 and 1924. When he vanished in 1924, he was less than two weeks shy of his 38th birthday.

Many have speculated about whether Mallory and Irvine managed to reach Everest’s summit. The climbers were last seen in the early afternoon of June 8 by expedition member and geologist Noel Odell, who was following behind and glimpsed them from a distance. Odell later found some of their equipment at a campsite, but there was no trace of Mallory and Irvine.

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“(Mallory) risked a lot despite the fact that he had a family back home and three small children,” Hemmleb said. “We don’t know whether it was really irresponsible to make that final attempt, because we don’t really know what happened. It could be that in the end, he simply had bad luck.”

So close, yet so far

Decades after Mallory’s death, Sherpa Tenzing Norgay and New Zealand mountaineer Sir Edmund Hillary became the first to reach Everest’s peak, summiting on May 29, 1953. In the years that followed, thousands attempted to climb Everest, with nearly 4,000 people reaching its summit.More than 330 climbers have died trying since modern records were kept, according to the Himalayan Database, which compiles records of all expeditions in the Himalayas; some of those bodies remain on the mountain, frozen where they fell and visible to climbers who pass them by.

“If you’re out in this environment, you make peace with your own mortality and the deaths of others,” Anker said. “You’re above 8,000 meters, and when there are weather changes or your own systems cease to function due to the lack of oxygen, it gets serious really quickly.”

Staff and Workers from the recycle company Blue Waste 2 Value showing the waste garbage's towards media collected from Mount Everest and Base Camp in Kathmandu, Nepal on Wednesday, June 05, 2019. Clean-up Campaign 2019 on Mount Everest removes 24,000lbs of rubbish and four dead bodies. Narayan Maharjan/NurPhoto/Getty Images Related article Mount Everest: Nepal to remove trash and dead bodies from world’s tallest mountain

When mountaineers are close to a mountain’s summit, they sometimes proceed even under dangerous conditions due to so-called summit fever, a compulsion to reach the peak even at the cost of their own safety. It’s unknown whether Mallory was in the grip of summit fever when he died, but he might have thought that his reputation depended on summiting.

“That was going to be the defining moment in his life,” Anker said.

By comparison, Mallory’s team member Edward Norton had attempted to summit four days earlier but turned back at roughly the same altitude where Mallory and Irvine were seen for the last time.

“I had a conversation with one of Edward Norton’s sons a couple of years ago,” Hemmleb said. “When I asked him, do you think it was mere luck that your father survived and Mallory died? He said, ‘No, I think there was one difference: My father, Edward Norton, didn’t need the mountain.’”

As a climber himself, Hemmleb took that message to heart.

“That is something I personally learned from Mallory,” he said. “You need to be very careful not to make yourself dependent on that summit success.”

This photograph taken on May 31, 2021 shows mountaineers lined up as they climb a slope during their ascend to summit Mount Everest. Lakpa Sherpa/AFP/Getty Images/File Related article Nepal to require all Mount Everest climbers to use a tracking chip

A century has elapsed since Mallory’s death, but the digitizing of these letters assures that his story will keep being told, Hemmleb said.

“This will continue beyond my own lifetime, I’m certain of that,” he added. “In a sense, it’s the expedition that never ends.”

Mindy Weisberger is a science writer and media producer whose work has appeared in Live Science, Scientific American and How It Works magazine.

Correction: A previous version of this story misstated the nationality of Sir Edmund Hillary and, in a caption, the location of the base camp where Mallory and Irvine were last photographed.

Read Everest-scaling mountaineer George Mallory’s last letters, digitized for the first time | CNN (2024)

FAQs

Did they ever find Mallory on Everest? ›

And then, shortly before noon, Anker discovered the body of George Mallory. When the news got out, it electrified the mountaineering world (see “Out of Thin Air,” Adventure, Fall 1999). The BBC and NOVA worked together on an acclaimed documentary film about the expedition and the monumental discovery.

How many times did George Mallory climb Mount Everest? ›

NOVA Online | Lost on Everest | Mallory. George Leigh Mallory was the only climber to take part in all three of the British pioneering expeditions to Mount Everest in the 1920s. Born in 1886, he died a few days short of his 38th birthday, while making a summit attempt with his young companion, Andrew Irvine.

How many corpses are on Mount Everest? ›

How Many Dead Bodies Are on Mount Everest? According to the climbing community, to date, an estimated 300 people have died climbing Mount Everest, with approximately 200 bodies still on the mountain. Some of the dearly departed are visible on the mountain, while others are forever lost.

Who was the first person to climb Mount Everest and survive? ›

Edmund Hillary did not drop dead at the top of Everest. On May 29, 1953, he and the Nepalese Sherpa, Tenzing Norgay, set foot on the summit of Mount Everest, the highest point on Earth. They had succeeded where others had failed, and had survived a journey that had taken the lives of great explorers before them.

What famous body was found on Everest? ›

Green Boots, arguably the most famous body on Everest, has been identified as Tsewang Paljor, Head Constable of the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP), though some think it might be his colleague, Lance Naik (i.e. Lance Corporal) Dorje Morup.

What is the oldest body on Everest? ›

George Mallory
BornGeorge Herbert Leigh Mallory18 June 1886 Mobberley, Cheshire, England
Died8 or 9 June 1924 (aged 37) North Face (Everest), Tibet
Cause of deathMountaineering accident
Body discovered1 May 1999
13 more rows

What famous climber died on Everest? ›

Scott Fischer. Scott Fischer was an experienced American mountaineer and mountain guide who lost his life during the infamous 1996 Everest disaster. His death is one of the most notable in the history of Everest expeditions.

Who was the famous person lost on Everest? ›

George Mallory was a famed mountaineer. Long before Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay became the first people confirmed to summit Mount Everest, Mallory joined an expedition to try to reach the top. But while he was attempting to reach the summit in June 1924, Mallory vanished.

Did Edmund Hillary use oxygen? ›

After all, Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay's first ascent of Mt. Everest in 1952 was largely made possible by their use of bottled oxygen.

Who is Sleeping Beauty on Everest? ›

The terrible tale of Francys Arsentiev stands out among other tragic tales. Francys Arsentiev, an American mountain climber who passed away on Mount Everest in 1998, was also known as the mountain's Sleeping Beauty.

Why don t they remove the dead bodies from Mt Everest? ›

When people die on Everest, it can be difficult to remove their bodies. Final repatriation costs tens of thousands of dollars (in some cases, around $70,000) and can also come at a fatal price itself: Two Nepalese climbers died trying to recover a body from Everest in 1984.

What is the deadliest mountain in the world? ›

The deadliest mountain in the world is a specific ascent of Annapurna, another peak in the Himalayas. The route is so deadly because of an extremely steep face. Astonishingly, 58 people have died from just 158 attempts.

Who climbed Mount Everest without legs? ›

Arunima Sinha is an Indian mountaineer and sportswoman. She is the world's first female amputee to scale Mount Everest (Asia), Mount Kilimanjaro (Africa), Mount Elbrus (Europe), Mount Kosciuszko (Australia), Aconcagua (South America), Denali (North America) and Vinson Massif (Antarctica).

Who is the youngest girl to climb Mt. Everest? ›

Malavath Poorna (born 10 June 2000) is an Indian mountaineer. On 25 May 2014, Poorna climbed Mount Everest, aged 13 years and 11 months, the youngest female to have reached the summit. Purna climbed Mount Elbrus, the highest peak in Europe on 27 July 2017.

Who was the man found alive on Everest? ›

Rescue on Everest. Lincoln Hall narrowly survived after his ascent of Mount Everest in 2006. He was left for dead at an altitude of 8700m while descending from the summit on 25 May 2006. He had fallen ill from a form of altitude sickness, probably cerebral edema, that caused him to hallucinate and become confused.

Did they find Mallory's body murdaugh? ›

Authorities spent eight days searching for Mallory, and her body was eventually recovered on March 3, over five miles down river from the site of the crash. Paul Murdaugh was charged with causing her death through his actions while under the influence, along with causing harm to the boat's other passengers.

Where is Mallory's body on Everest? ›

Mallory had disappeared some 75 years earlier, while trying to become the first person to scale Mount Everest, and now, an expedition searching for his remains had found them, at the foot of the Northeast Ridge, mummified and frozen solid.

Did they find Mallory Beach body? ›

On March 3, 2019, two volunteers found her body about five miles down the river from the scene of the crash. According to the coroner's office, Beach died from drowning and blunt force trauma. Several of the teens were injured and required surgery. Paul Murdaugh was uncooperative with the medical staff.

How long after the crash did they find Mallory? ›

Around 2 a.m., on Feb. 24, 2019, the boat crashed into the pilings of the Archer's Creek Bridge in Beaufort County, S.C. Mallory was thrown from the boat. Her body was found about a week later, aproximately five miles from the crash site.

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