The news splashed
over the newspapers was that the body of British mountaineer, George Mallory,
was found by the British Climbing Expedition that had been set up to find the
remains of George Mallory and his climbing partner, Sandy Irvine. George
Mallory and Sandy Irvine were members of the expedition to conquer Mount
Everest and had perished on 8/9 June 1924. The body was found at the height of
8157 m (26760 ft) on 1st of May, 1999 and was remarkably well
preserved even after 75 years due to extremely low temperatures. The
expedition conducted service for Mallory and covered his remains with a cairn on the
mountain. The body of Sandy Irvine has not yet been found. The camera has also
not been found so far, which could have conclusively proved that the duo did or
did not reach the top of Everest on 8 June 1924.
Since then it has been a subject of intense debate and resarch whether
George Mallory was indeed a first ever man to have reached the top of the Earth
at Mount Everest. The controversy has still not been settled and there are
claims and counter-claims on either side. One circumstantial evidence that the
believers now cite is that Mallory was carrying a photograph of his wife, Ruth,
in his wallet to be left on the top of the mountain. When his body was found,
the wallet was very much there but with no photograph of Ruth in it. Whatever
may be the truth, one thing which most of the experts agree on is that George
Mallory was certainly capable of summiting the Mount Everest. He was an
extraordinary climber with exceptional talent. He was driven to achieve the
feat. On being asked once why did he wish to scale the Mt Everest, he famously
replied, “Because it is there”.
The master story teller, Jeffery Archer, wrote a biographical novel on
George Mallory, ‘Paths of Glory’ in 2009, which I recently chanced to read.
Though all the characters of the novel are real, I can not say same for all the
incidents. But all the major events are real as they have been described in a
number of reports, biographies, and documentaries on Mallory.
In 1924, when George Mallory started for his third visit to the Himalayas,
he was already past 37 years of age. His first visit to the mighty Himalayas
was in 1921, which was an exploratory visit to find the possible route/routes
to the summit. Very little was known at that time how human body would react to
the high altitude above 15000 ft. It has to be borned in mind that the highest
peak in Britain is Ben Navis at 4470 ft, and in Europe it is Mont Blanc at
15782 ft. These pale in comparison with Mt Everest that stands tall at 8848 m
(29029 ft). That was the time when bottled oxygen was only in the experimental
stage, the clothing was ordinary, and logistics difficult to organize, since
one did not know what to expect high up in the mountains. During the 1922
expedition, Mallory was totally against using bottled oxygen saying any
climbing was successful if it was accomplished unaided. During that attempt,
Edward Norton and Howard Somerwell managed to reach a height of 8225 m (26980
ft), while another fellow expeditioner, George Finch, an Australian, managed an
altitude of 8321 m (27300 ft). Mallory was surprised with the astonishing speed
with which Finch had climbed up using bottled oxygen. After two failed attempts
by his fellow expeditioners, Mallory made third attempt, which also remained
unsuccessful owing to extremely hostile weather. While climbing down, seven
Sherpas of Mallory were caught in the avalanche and perished beneath the snow.
Mallory himself was heart broken with this tragedy, and was accused of poor
judgement.
During 1924 expedition, Mallory knew that that was his last chance to
summit the Mt Everest. He was willing now to use bottled oxygen for a
successful climb. George Finch, who was an advocate and expert in using such
oxygen was dropped from the expedition, and Sandy Irvine, 22 year old boy, who
had no experience of mountain climbing, other than scaling 5000 ft high peaks,
was chosen as an replacement. However, he was an enthusiastic athletic young
man, with expertise in using and repairing oxygen bottles.
What happened on the fateful night of 8 and 9 June, 1924 has remained a
matter of intense speculation and research. After many unsuccessful search
attempts to locate the bodies of Mallory and Irvince, it was 75 years later on
1 May, 1999 that Conrad Anker, member of the search party led by Eric Simonson,
discovered well preserved body of George Mallory at the height of 8157 m (26760
ft). Camera has still remained untraceable.
Number of mountaineering experts and climbers have reacted differently to
the speculation that Mallory did reach the summit in 1924, becoming the first
ever man to reach the highest point on the surface of Earth, pushing down
Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay’s record to second place. Some have
said that to speculate in absence of any photographic evidence, it is even
wrong to make such assumptions. Others have said a successful complete climb is
not only to ascend, but also to successfully descend down.
Two British Heroes, Robert Scott and George Mallory, could not accomplish
their mission: Scott to become the first ever man to reach the bottom of Earth,
the South Pole, and Mallory to become the first man to step on the highest
point on the surface of Earth, the Mount Everest, in 1924. Both perished to
realize their dreams. Scott did reach the South Pole on 17 January 1912, only
to realize that the Norwegian, Roald Amundsen had already hoisted Norwegian
flag on the South Pole 33 days earlier on 14 December 1911. Dejected and
heart-broken, Scott perished on his way back alongwith his other four
colleagues. Scott's entry
in the diary reveals his great disappointment. “The worst has happened… All the
daydreams must go…Great God! This is an awful place and terrible enough for us
to have laboured to it without the reward of priority,” the diary entry reads.
George Mallory left a great mystery behind him, whether he did or did not reach
the highest point on the Earth. Inspite of all the risks, dangers, and
uncertainties, he wanted to do it ‘since it is there’.
George Mallory II, grandson of George Mallory, summitted the Mt Everest on
1995 as a member of the American Everest Expedition. He left a laminated
photograph of George and Ruth Mallory saying it was to complete an ‘unfinished
family business’.