Thomas hornbein biography

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“This is going to take some time.”

I asked if this happened often when they were out on the trail.

“Oh yes.”

We were able to see but not hear the conversation from our perch– and what struck me is that it wasn't Tom doing all the talking. He had clearly been asking them questions. He was listening, attentive, and genuinely interested. I felt certain that in meeting one of their heroes, they left feeling not only inspired by his accomplishments– but with their own sense of purpose notched up a rung.

In May 2016, Tom and Kathy boarded the M/V Discovery vessel with eight fellow travelers along with Captain Dean Rand. They experienced a multi-day expedition in Prince William Sound exploring the glaciers, fjords, mountains, forests, and wildlife of this vast, wild coastal landscape. All of the funds from the trip participants were donated by Discovery Voyages for the production of a Braided River book A Wild Promise: Prince William Sound to help protect a rare coastal wilderness in Chugach National Forest at the heart of Alaska’s Prince William Sound that has been in l

Tom Hornbein

American mountaineer (1930–2023)

Thomas Frederic Hornbein (November 6, 1930 – May 6, 2023) was an American mountaineer and anesthesiologist who made the first ascent of Mount Everest via the west ridge; the Hornbein Couloir on Everest was named in his honor.[1] On top of his mountaineering achievements, Hornbein was a professor of anesthesiology and physiology at the University of Washington.[2]

Early life and education

Thomas Frederic Hornbein was born in St. Louis, Missouri, on November 6, 1930. His mother, Rosalie (Bernstein) Hornbein, was a housewife, and his father, Leonard Hornbein, was a department store advertiser. Hornbein states that he had a desire to be outside since his childhood, and that he would climb trees and houses in St. Louis. When he was 13, his parents sent him to a camp in Colorado, and he considers that a pivotal moment in his life.[3][4]

At age 13, Hornbein attended the Cheley Colorado Camps. He credits his experiences as a camper and a counselor there with discovering his love of mount

Tom Hornbein is known for one of mountaineering's epic achievements: the 1963 climb of Mount Everest's West Ridge with Willi Unsoeld (1926-1979), in which the two men traversed the 29,028-foot summit of the earth and spent a night exposed at 27,900 feet. He wrote a celebrated book, Everest: The West Ridge, reissued in 2013 to mark the 50th anniversary of the climb. But Hornbein never returned to the Khumbu region of Nepal, explaining simply, "It was a once in a lifetime event. Life goes forward" (Interview, April 24, 2013). Mountains shaped Hornbein's life but, in the words of climber friend Bill Sumner, "He is far from a one-dimensional famous climber" (Interview, January 7, 2014). Hornbein spent his career as a physician and medical researcher, much of it in Seattle, where he joined the faculty of the University of Washington Medical School shortly after his historic climb and later served for 16 years as chairman of the Department of Anesthesiology. After retiring he moved with his wife Kathy to Estes Park, Colorado, within sight of Long's Peak where his climbing began nearl

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