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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Barbara Washburn, McKinley’s first lady, dies at age 99

Barbara Washburn, right, poses with her husband, Bradford Washburn, during the 1947 McKinley expedition in Alaska.

OUTDONE Barbara Polk Washburn, first woman to climb the highest peak in the United States, died in Massachusetts on Sept. 25 at the age of 99.

The climb of Mount McKinley was less about breaking barriers than about building a relationship with her husband, the Boston Globe reported.  “I had no real feeling about being a pioneering woman on a serious Alaskan expedition,” she said in a story about the climb. “I only knew that as the only woman, I had to measure up.”

Her husband, Henry Bradford Washburn Jr., was an American explorer, mountaineer, cartographer and photographer. He led several first ascents in Alaska, including a 1951 ascent of McKinley’s West Buttress, which proved to be the safest route to the 20,320-foot summit. In the 1970s, Washburn led the first extensive mapping of the Grand Canyon. 

The 1947 McKinley expedition took 70 days and gained 14,600 feet of elevation to the mountain’s summit and highest point in North America.

Barbara told the Boston Globe that she had trained for the climb by pushing a baby carriage.

She was involved in many organizations and was honorary director of the Grand Circle Foundation.

Her 100th birthday would have been in November.

Steelhead fly fishing highlighted

OUTCAST – Fly tyer Leroy Hyatt of Lewiston will present a free program on steelhead fly fishing on the Clearwater, Grande Ronde and Snake rivers during the Spokane Fly Fishers meeting, 7 p.m., Wednesday at St. Francis School, 1104 W. Heroy.

Ski movies hit The Bing

OUTHUCK – Ski season hasn’t quite arrived, but ski movie season has.

Scheduled at Spokane’s Bing Crosby Theater in the next month are:

• Oct. 14, 7 p.m. – Sports Creek Ski Movie Party, featuring “Less,” “ Oil and Water,” “Burn” and “Ten and Two.”  Professional skiers L.J. Strenio and Mike Hornbeck, who appear in some of the movies, will attend the show. College ski passes to Lookout Pass will be sold for $99.  Tickets $5.

• Nov. 1, 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. – Warren Miller’s “No Turning Back,” the 65th ski film from the father of the genre, pays homage to 65 years of mountain culture and winter adventure filmmaking. Advance tickets $20 through TicketsWest.