Rainier’s First Celebrated Ascent: 1870

Figure 1 Hazard Stevens

They must be spirits, he thought. They had gone up the south face of Mount Rainier and they should not have come back. He had warned them. He had heard there was a horrible pool of fire at the top. But after a little more observation from afar, Sluiskin, the Yakima Warrior from the Battle of Grande Ronde and now their guide, was relieved and thrilled they were truly alive.

Sluiskin learned they had been to the top and he was overjoyed. Hazard Stephens and Philemon Beecher Van Trump, had summited Mount Rainier on August 18th, 1870. It was the first documented ascent of Mount Rainier.

Hazard Stevens was already a force to be reckoned with. He had some advantages as he was the son of the first governor of the Washington Territory. However, he had already proven himself with valor: Stevens had earned the Congressional Medal of Honor for his courage in battle during the American Civil War. After the war he returned and became – as you and I would – captivated by Mount Rainier. But admiring it from Puget Sound was not satisfying.

Stevens had met Van Trump and they became friends because they shared a common passion for approaching and attempting Mount Rainier. But it was their meeting of Thomas Edward Coleman, a British Subject and one of the original climbers among the Alps. He gave them the final nudge to commit themselves to the task and together they headed into the backcountry of Washington without roads.

Sluiskin was hired as their guide to get them through the forest and down the Nisqually River to Mount Rainier; he took his time in order to work and be paid for more days.

Coleman was more of an irritant or comic relief on the journey. Each day he insisted on bathing or at least making a sponge bath, no matter what the inconvenience required. He also sipped tea as his colleagues made camp. Most amusing of all, he filled his own canteen with whiskey instead of water, which he emptied part way to the mountain; he was mildly stunned at the pace Stevens and Van Trump intended to proceed.

Coleman could not make the final attempt as he lost his pack (it fell when he set it down) climbing a nearby slope. Though they lost the bacon for protein, Stevens and Van Trump were determined to press on. I will use contemporary names for these landmarks: They ascended from the Paradise River, walked up the Muir Snowfield, climbed up Cowlitz Cleaver (with a good view of Gibraltar Rock), trudged over Camp Misery and onto the summit proper. They only carried an alpenstock, creepers (similar to crampons), rope, ice axe (like a navy axe of the day), a canteen, lunch, gloves, goggles, a plate, flags, and ascended without coats or blankets.

They believed they could make the ascent in a day, but were forced to spend the night near the top in an ice cave. Van Trump injured his leg on the decent, but that did little to dampen their victory. They were not ghosts, they were Puget Sound’s latest heroes!

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Sources: 1) Haines, Aubrey L., Mountain Fever: Historic Conquests of Rainier, Oregon Historical Society, 1962; 2) National Parks Service website.

Mount Rainier’s Foggy First Ascent

Unlike the conquests of the Alps or the Himalayas, the events of the first ascent of Mount Rainier (14,410 ft./4,392 m.) were virtually lost in history. The details that we do know are thanks to a Native American that lead the unnamed — and therefore unheralded — duo to the mountain.

Saluskin of the Yakima Tribe was born around 1823 and passed away in 1917. He never learned to speak English so his story of guiding the mystery men to the mountain had to be interpreted. In the latter years of his life he gave two translators on separate occasions his story of the first ascent. This, as well as some other factors described by Aubrey L. Haines, author of Mountain Fever (1962), gave Saluskin his credibility.

Saluskin told his second interpretor, Lucullus McWhorter, the account Haines includes in his book. Haines explains that both McWhorter’s version and the one by A.J. Splawn corroborate on the key details.

In the day when skins trading was huge in what was then known as the Washington Territory, the settlements along Puget Sound were pushing their government to establish a road through the Cascade Range; no reliable route could be found. It’s likely that the two men that came to the Yakima Chief, Owhi, to ask for help in getting to the mountain were surveyors. Saluskin describes two white men, one tall and one short. The short man was clean faced while and carried a pistol; the taller one had a mustache and carried a long musket.

The Yakima Tribe were suspicious of the men’s intentions — most likely looking for gold or some other mineral. The white men explained that they represented Governor Stevens (the first governor of the Washington Territory) and that they were looking to identify the lines drawn in a treaty. The white men then shared their telescope to demonstrate their exploratory intent. This comforted the tribesmen and they assigned Saluskin to take them to the mountain.

Over several days, he lead them to Mystic Lake near the end of the Carbon Glacier. Saluskin was surprised when early one morning, the men put plenty of food in their pockets, put on hobnail boots and left not indicating where they were going.

They returned at dark the same day and described the summit crater adequately, including the rim, ice and pool at the center. The men also reported that they found the lines that they sought through their looking glass. And that was the first ascent to the top of Mount Rainier.

Both translated accounts gave the approximate timing, which places the first ascent in 1855 or so — some historians still disagree on the precise year.

It is interesting that the climb’s details have been lost in history to the degree it has. It is likely because the summit team did not think it more important than other events of their journey and that the visit to the top was more curiosity than athletic or sporting accomplishment.

The story of these two unlikely mountaineers should also not give the impression that Mount Rainier is an easy climb. Naivety would say that it is a walk to the top. However, the conditions of the surveyors’ climb and that they skirted danger, such as crevasses, may have been more due to luck than ease of the challenge.

Well, thanks again for visiting. If you enjoyed this post, please consider following the Suburban Mountaineer on Facebook or Twitter.

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