Mount Witherspoon

Mount Witherspoon
Mt. Witherspoon right of center, from NW
(Mount Edison slightly left of center)
Highest point
Elevation12,012 ft (3,661 m)[1]
Prominence2,162 ft (659 m)[1]
Parent peakMount Gilbert Lewis (12,250+ ft)[2]
Isolation4.13 mi (6.65 km)[3]
ListingHighest major summits of the US
3000-meter summits of the US
Coordinates61°23′44″N 147°12′03″W / 61.39556°N 147.20083°W / 61.39556; -147.20083[1]
Geography
Mount Witherspoon is located in Alaska
Mount Witherspoon
Mount Witherspoon
Location of Mount Witherspoon in Alaska
LocationChugach National Forest
Valdez-Cordova Borough
Alaska, United States
Parent rangeChugach Mountains
Topo mapUSGS Anchorage B-1
Climbing
First ascentJune 25, 1957[4]

Mount Witherspoon is a 12,012-foot-elevation (3,661 meter) glaciated summit located 36 mi (58 km) northwest of Valdez in the Chugach Mountains of the U.S. state of Alaska. It's set on land managed by Chugach National Forest. This remote mountain, fifth-highest in the Chugach range, is situated 4.33 mi (7 km) northwest of Mount Einstein, with the heads of Yale Glacier and Columbia Glacier between the summits.[5] It is the second-highest peak in the Dora Keen Range, which is the 25-miles-long divide separating Harvard Glacier from Yale Glacier.[6] The mountain's name was officially adopted in 1928 by the U.S. Board on Geographic Names to honor David C. Witherspoon, a U.S. Geological Survey topographer for 30 years, "who at the time of his retirement in 1921 had mapped a greater area of Alaska than any other man."[6] The first ascent of Mount Witherspoon was made June 25, 1957, by David Bohn, Arthur Maki, Jr., Martin Mushkin, and Lawrence E. Nielsen.[2]

  1. ^ a b c "Mount Witherspoon, Alaska". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 2020-03-17.
  2. ^ a b "Mount Witherspoon". Bivouac.com. Retrieved 2020-03-17.
  3. ^ Witherspoon, Mount AK, listsofjohn.com
  4. ^ The American Alpine Journal, Volume 11, 1958, page 92
  5. ^ Chugach Mountains, Peakbagger.com
  6. ^ a b "Mount Witherspoon". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved 2020-03-17.

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