Northwest History. Alaska. Earthquakes & Volcanoes.

Active Volcano Is Ascended: Glacier Priest And Companions Dare Dangers. ACTIVE VOLCANO IS ASCENDED Glacier Priest and Companions Dare Dangers. By Fr. Edward N. Hubbard. Santa Clara university professor, whose exploits in Alaska have won him the name, "the Glacier Priest." False Pass, Alask...

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Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1932
Subjects:
Online Access:http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/90601
id ftwashstatelib:oai:content.libraries.wsu.edu:clipping/90601
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Washington State University: WSU Libraries Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftwashstatelib
language English
topic active volcano
the Glacier Priest
Santa Clara university
False Pass
Alaska
Mount Shishaldin
vocano
Unimak island
the summit
lava
ashes
Kenneth Chisholm
George Peterson
Jack Morton
blizzard
the crater
Shishaldin cone
Father Hubbard
Mount Katmai crater
Bering sea
motion pictures
Frank Dorbandt
Aniakchak volcano
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
spellingShingle active volcano
the Glacier Priest
Santa Clara university
False Pass
Alaska
Mount Shishaldin
vocano
Unimak island
the summit
lava
ashes
Kenneth Chisholm
George Peterson
Jack Morton
blizzard
the crater
Shishaldin cone
Father Hubbard
Mount Katmai crater
Bering sea
motion pictures
Frank Dorbandt
Aniakchak volcano
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
Northwest History. Alaska. Earthquakes & Volcanoes.
topic_facet active volcano
the Glacier Priest
Santa Clara university
False Pass
Alaska
Mount Shishaldin
vocano
Unimak island
the summit
lava
ashes
Kenneth Chisholm
George Peterson
Jack Morton
blizzard
the crater
Shishaldin cone
Father Hubbard
Mount Katmai crater
Bering sea
motion pictures
Frank Dorbandt
Aniakchak volcano
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
description Active Volcano Is Ascended: Glacier Priest And Companions Dare Dangers. ACTIVE VOLCANO IS ASCENDED Glacier Priest and Companions Dare Dangers. By Fr. Edward N. Hubbard. Santa Clara university professor, whose exploits in Alaska have won him the name, "the Glacier Priest." False Pass, Alaska, May 22. (/P) -- Two students and myself made the first ascent of Mount Shishaldin, a volcano on Unimak island, which was in extremely active eruption two months ago. We reached the summit of the 9400-foot cone, which was still emitting ashes and flowing lava six days ago. The climb was made by Kenneth Chisholm, George Peterson and myself in 21 hours. Jack Morton, the other student in the expedition, turned back before the summit. On the last 3000 feet I found the hardest going I have ever tackled. Cloud of Smoke and Gases. Foot by foot and hour by hour we toiled upward. We spent an hour in the last 100 feet to the summit, from which poured billowing clouds of smoke and gases. Cinders lying at a 50 to 60 degree angle would give way, and we would slide back. Even ice picks would not take hold. Finally, crawling and scrambing, we reached the edge. After a short time at the summit, and a thorough warming on the heated cinders, we turned back and began the descent at 9 o'clock at night. On the way down we struggled through a raging blizzard that had faced us on the ascent. Not until late the following morning did we drag ourselves back to our base camp. Weather Tempestuous. During our three weeks of preparations the weather was tempestuous at the base of the peak. The crater, whose first major outburst in a number of years occurred on February 1, was still active. After studying the meteorological conditions, I judged that the almost constant storms at the base did not rage above the 6000-foot level. On our ascent, which was begun near dawn the morning of the 16th, we found that judgment correct. After climbing for several hours through a blizzard we came out through the clouds onto the glaciered slopes of the Shishaldin cone. Difficult to Conquer. The ascent of Mount Shishaldin had been judged by many Alaskans to be extremely difficult or impossible through the failures of previous climbing expeditions. Two months ago, however, Father Hubbard and his students made a sucessful climb of Mount Katmai crater on the mainland, the first winter ascent ever made, and he was given a good chance to conquer Shishaldin. After a day's rest following the successful ascent, Father Hubbard and Peterson walked over the intervening mountains here, while Chisholm and Morton drove their dog team back to the Bering sea with the motion pictures they had made and the camp equipment. Pilot Frank Dorbandt will fly the equipment here. While awaiting a June boat to take his party to the scene of the Aniakchak volcano, the professor planned to return to the east side of the Unimak island to do excavation work at the scene of buried primitive villages he has found.
format Text
title Northwest History. Alaska. Earthquakes & Volcanoes.
title_short Northwest History. Alaska. Earthquakes & Volcanoes.
title_full Northwest History. Alaska. Earthquakes & Volcanoes.
title_fullStr Northwest History. Alaska. Earthquakes & Volcanoes.
title_full_unstemmed Northwest History. Alaska. Earthquakes & Volcanoes.
title_sort northwest history. alaska. earthquakes & volcanoes.
publishDate 1932
url http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/90601
long_lat ENVELOPE(-61.220,-61.220,-62.697,-62.697)
geographic Bering Sea
Morton
Pacific
geographic_facet Bering Sea
Morton
Pacific
genre Bering Sea
glacier
Alaska
genre_facet Bering Sea
glacier
Alaska
op_source Northwest History. Alaska. Box 8
op_relation nwh-sh-8-3-31
http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/90601
op_rights http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0
Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information.
_version_ 1766378097467195392
spelling ftwashstatelib:oai:content.libraries.wsu.edu:clipping/90601 2023-05-15T15:43:53+02:00 Northwest History. Alaska. Earthquakes & Volcanoes. Spokesman Review 1932-05-22 Active Volcano Is Ascended: Glacier Priest And Companions Dare Dangers. 1932-05-22 http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/90601 English eng nwh-sh-8-3-31 http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/90601 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0 Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information. Northwest History. Alaska. Box 8 active volcano the Glacier Priest Santa Clara university False Pass Alaska Mount Shishaldin vocano Unimak island the summit lava ashes Kenneth Chisholm George Peterson Jack Morton blizzard the crater Shishaldin cone Father Hubbard Mount Katmai crater Bering sea motion pictures Frank Dorbandt Aniakchak volcano Northwest Pacific -- History -- 20th century Text Clippings 1932 ftwashstatelib 2021-07-26T19:18:18Z Active Volcano Is Ascended: Glacier Priest And Companions Dare Dangers. ACTIVE VOLCANO IS ASCENDED Glacier Priest and Companions Dare Dangers. By Fr. Edward N. Hubbard. Santa Clara university professor, whose exploits in Alaska have won him the name, "the Glacier Priest." False Pass, Alaska, May 22. (/P) -- Two students and myself made the first ascent of Mount Shishaldin, a volcano on Unimak island, which was in extremely active eruption two months ago. We reached the summit of the 9400-foot cone, which was still emitting ashes and flowing lava six days ago. The climb was made by Kenneth Chisholm, George Peterson and myself in 21 hours. Jack Morton, the other student in the expedition, turned back before the summit. On the last 3000 feet I found the hardest going I have ever tackled. Cloud of Smoke and Gases. Foot by foot and hour by hour we toiled upward. We spent an hour in the last 100 feet to the summit, from which poured billowing clouds of smoke and gases. Cinders lying at a 50 to 60 degree angle would give way, and we would slide back. Even ice picks would not take hold. Finally, crawling and scrambing, we reached the edge. After a short time at the summit, and a thorough warming on the heated cinders, we turned back and began the descent at 9 o'clock at night. On the way down we struggled through a raging blizzard that had faced us on the ascent. Not until late the following morning did we drag ourselves back to our base camp. Weather Tempestuous. During our three weeks of preparations the weather was tempestuous at the base of the peak. The crater, whose first major outburst in a number of years occurred on February 1, was still active. After studying the meteorological conditions, I judged that the almost constant storms at the base did not rage above the 6000-foot level. On our ascent, which was begun near dawn the morning of the 16th, we found that judgment correct. After climbing for several hours through a blizzard we came out through the clouds onto the glaciered slopes of the Shishaldin cone. Difficult to Conquer. The ascent of Mount Shishaldin had been judged by many Alaskans to be extremely difficult or impossible through the failures of previous climbing expeditions. Two months ago, however, Father Hubbard and his students made a sucessful climb of Mount Katmai crater on the mainland, the first winter ascent ever made, and he was given a good chance to conquer Shishaldin. After a day's rest following the successful ascent, Father Hubbard and Peterson walked over the intervening mountains here, while Chisholm and Morton drove their dog team back to the Bering sea with the motion pictures they had made and the camp equipment. Pilot Frank Dorbandt will fly the equipment here. While awaiting a June boat to take his party to the scene of the Aniakchak volcano, the professor planned to return to the east side of the Unimak island to do excavation work at the scene of buried primitive villages he has found. Text Bering Sea glacier Alaska Washington State University: WSU Libraries Digital Collections Bering Sea Morton ENVELOPE(-61.220,-61.220,-62.697,-62.697) Pacific