In 1953, Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay reached the summit of
Mount Everest. They climbed from the south, from Nepal, via the
Khumbu Glacier - a route first pioneered in 1951 by a reconnaissance
expedition led by Eric Shipton. Everest 1951 is the account of
this expedition.
It was the first to approach the mountain from the south side, it
pioneered a route through the Khumbu icefall and it was the expedition
on which Hillary set foot on Everest for the first time. Everest 1951
is a short but vitally important read for anybody with any interest in
mountaineering or in Everest. The 1951 Everest Expedition marked the
public highpoint of Shipton's mountaineering fame. Key information was
discovered and the foundations laid for future success. Despite this,
Shipton's critics felt he had a 'lack of trust' and thus failed to match
the urgent mood of the period.
Despite having been on more Everest expeditions than any man alive, he
was 'eased' out of the crucial leadership role in 1953 and so missed the
huge public acclaim given to Hillary, Tenzing Norgay and John Hunt
after their historic success.