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Edmund Hillary: The First Westerner on Everest

Playing with risks has always been one of the most adventurous pastimes of human beings. Be it the loftiest mountains on earth or the coldest poles, man has baited himself and ultimately conquered. The conquest of Mount Everest – the highest mountain peak in the world – will always go down into history as one of man’s most admirable achievements. With it will be remembered the two pioneers – Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary. 

Edmund Hillary, one of the two first conquers of the world, is counted among one of the greatest explorers and mountaineers of the twentieth century. He not only conquered the Everest, but also set his foot on the South Pole, one of the coldest places on earth that remains frozen round the year. 

Edmund Hillary was born in Auckland, New Zealand on July 20, 1919. He spent his childhood in Tuakau, a rural area just south of Auckland where he went to the local primary school. Hillary was brilliant as a child and had a passion for reading adventure stories. Later he travelled daily to the city for secondary schooling, where he was a shy and awkward boy. As a child he helped in his father’s beekeeping business and eventually quit school to work with his father, full-time. 

In 1935, during a ski weekend on a school trip to Mount Ruapehu, Hillary discovered his joy in the mountains and it never left him. He would often escape to the mountains to enjoy skiing and hiking, and he developed a love of climbing. A few years later he climbed his first mountain, the 7,500-foot Mount Oliver in New Zealand. 

Hillary was a member of the Royal New Zealand Air Force in World War II between 1939 and 1945, where New Zealand was a part of the Allied powers of America, England, and Russia in their war against the Axis powers of Germany, Italy, and Japan. While serving as a navigator in the South Pacific, he was wounded in battle. Despite the physical setback, Hillary was determined to make a full recovery and resume mountain climbing. 

Other risky and adventurous pursuits soon followed. During the 1940s, he made many climbs in New Zealand. The indomitable mountains in the Southern Alps drew his attention more than any other peak and a determined soul as he was; he took these challenges as his privilege. He quickly became recognized for his daring, strength, and reliability. 

After many landmark and breathtaking climbs in the Caribbean, he turned to Europe. His association with Sir John Hunt’s expedition team during these climbs gave him a way to come to the Mount Everest, in the Himalaya Mountains in Nepal. For two years, Hillary joined Hunt in the Scottish Highlands to prepare himself for the Everest. The highest point on Earth, Mount Everest measures 29,028 feet high, roughly six miles.

Those days, the Everest was considered an impossible feat, for many attempts to conquer it had been made, and many lives lost.  Memories were not far remote; famous climbers George Malloy and Andrew Irvine had come close to success before they disappeared somewhere near the mountain’s peak. 

In March 1953, Hillary and Hunt, along with twenty other of the best climbers in the world, gathered at Everest. Their company also included 350 Nepalese workers carrying 10,000 pounds of food and equipment, as well as thirty-six Sherpas, people who are familiar with the rugged terrain and are invaluable guides for climbers. 

With the party’s base camp just 1,100 feet from the summit, Hunt sent a two-man team the rest of the way. They failed but returned to camp with valuable information about how to attack the summit. Next, Hunt chose Hillary and Sherpa guide Tenzing Norgay to make an attempt. After a heroic and death-defying climb, the two reached the summit on May 29, 1953, becoming the first two people to reach the top of the world. 

After the Everest expedition, Hillary gained worldwide fame and a reputation as an adventurer. The fame quickly rose and spread across lands and oceans, and Hilary became an icon of courage. More expeditions followed in sequence. Vivian Fuchs invited Hillary to become part of the Trans-Antarctic expedition in 1957 and 1958 that would cross the southern Atlantic Ocean to the South Pole. Hillary’s job was to set up supply dumps from base camp towards the South Pole so that Fuchs’s party could complete the crossing of Antarctica. 

Hillary wanted to use the sophisticated Snow-Cats available to Fuchs, but he had to settle for Ferguson farm tractors for transport and hauling. When the last dump was established, Hillary made his own decision to head for the Pole, which he reached with his three tractors on January 4, 1958. He was the first person to travel there by land in forty-six years. Another historic achievement was registered in his name. 

The attraction the Himalayas had would not allow him to bind his mind to anything else. He returned to the Himalayas. Through the 1960s and 1970s, Hillary continued to explore the Himalayas. He also led a renowned expedition by jet boat and on foot from the mouth of the Ganges River to its source. 

Although Hillary had achieved worldwide fame for his adventures, he never lost touch with the Nepalese people and devoted much of his time to their environmental and social causes. Hillary built hospitals and schools in the mountains of Nepal by raising money, buying materials, and working on many of the buildings. 

Hillary also expressed social concerns in New Zealand by commenting on public issues. His observations were noted for their simplicity and good sense. He was president of Volunteer Service Abroad and patron of an Outdoor Pursuit Centre and of the Race Relations Council. He was also active in the Family Planning Association and in conservation campaigns. He was strongly opposed to nuclear tests and to ocean dumping in the South Pacific or elsewhere. 

Hillary’s achievements were recognized internationally with the award of numerous decorations and honorary degrees, beginning with his knighthood in 1953. They reflect the rare warmth and respect in which he was held. In 1985 he was appointed New Zealand high commissioner to India. He was also honorary president for New York’s Explorers Club. 

In 1975 Hillary’s wife and teenage daughter were killed in an airplane crash. He later remarried, and after leading one last expedition in 1977, he retired to his bee farm outside of Auckland. 

Hillary remains an important voice in the sport of mountain climbing, even in retirement. He wrote the forward for a book by Helen Thayer titled Polar Dream published in 1993. 

Hillary has also remained active in the region where he made his famous climb. The Sir Edmund Hillary Himalayan Trust provides funds and expertise to support reforestation, build schools and hospitals, and use technology such as solar power. He personally raised funds for the Nepalese people throughout the 1990s through public speaking engagements and lectures in the United States. 

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