2003. 258 pp, photos, maps. This excellently researched and written history of women in climbing concentrates on the 19th and early 20th century greats such as Fanny Workman and Miriam Underhill, and is a delightful addition to the chronicles of women in the high peaks of the world. Hardcover with dust jacket.
Traces the evolution of female mountaineering from the Victorian Age to the early 1900's. More than a history of ascents, it delves into the reasons that compelled these women to break with tradition and seek adventure of such a treacherous kind.
Nineteenth-century women took to the mountains for recreation, adventure, challenge, escape, or spiritual peace. The wealthy climbed with large entourages of porters; the less-well-off struggled with mutinous guides and men who chafed at female leadership. We can barely imagine the hardships mountaineers endured then with their heavy, low-tech equipment and clothing, but women also had to contend with corsets and voluminous skirts, not to mention societal restrictions.
The author, a New Hampshire outdoorswoman and journalist, makes vivid use of these women's own words to tell their fascinating stories. Mostly American and British, these women climbed in the Alps, Alaska, South America, and the Himalayas. Sidebars discuss such topics as dress reform and Tschingel, a dog who accompanied Meta Brevoort on many climbs, including the Alps' highest peak, Mont Blanc.