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Nick Clinch Showed the World Americans Could Make First Ascents Too
Nicholas Clinch standing, middle of back row. American Antarctic Mountaineering Expedition. Photo: via AAC.
Despite a nickname that makes it seem diminutive, Hidden Peak soars to over 26,500 feet the Karakoram range in northeast Pakistan. It is the worldโs 11th tallest mountain. You may know it as Gasherbrum I. It was first climbed in 1958; at the time, it was the second-highest unclimbed mountain on earth after just slightly taller Dhaulagiri, in Nepal, at 26,800 feet. Itโs also the only 8,000-meter peak with a first ascent nabbed by an American climbing team.
Like many other grand, supremely uncomfortable adventures, that first ascent of Hidden Peak started with a casual challenge thrown down among mountaineers in a warm room, bellies full, bottles of wine opened, when all things seem possible, and very, very far from the frozen roof of the world
โWho wants to climb Hidden Peak?โ asked a gangly, bespectacled 20-something year old climber named Nicholas Clinch, after a dinner of pasta among climbing buddies in a California home in 1955. There was some laughter. Two of the men at the dinner agreed. They, along with Clinch, went on to make history.
Clinch was born in the flatlands of Evanston, Illinois, in 1930. His father was a colonel in the U.S Army Air Force, and the family moved around a little. He lived in Dallas for a time, then the family moved to Roswell, New Mexico, where Clinch attended a military academy. Far more important for our story was that Clinch spent his teenaged summers in Colorado at a kind of outdoors camp, where he met and befriended Tom Hornbein, who would eventually become a decorated alpinist.
The long-limbed Clinch was hooked on the mountains from his Colorado days and later, as a student at Stanford University, in oak-carpeted Palo Alto, he joined the Stanford Alpine Club. The club explored the Sierra Nevadas, and climbed the granite walls of Yosemite Valley. Clinch eventually earned a law degree from Stanford and joined the Air Force, serving as legal counsel. He was once posted in Iceland, not a bad place for a bookish alpinist.
After Clinch casually challenged some of his fellow climbers to scale Hidden Peak on that California evening in 1955, he went to work piecing together logistics. He was a careful, patient planner, aware that the greatest challenge to scaling such high peaks was not entirely physical; meticulous care and strategy were just as important as strong legs and steel cables for arms. Important, considering Clinch didnโt much resemble an athlete with his thin build and asthmatic wheezing.
โThe mountains donโt care who you are,โ Clinch once told his nephew, Richard Kylberg. โHe saw the mountains as a great human equalizer,โ Kylberg said.
โNick was not lacking in drive,โ remarked friend and climbing partner Hornbein.
That drive got two men to the top of Hidden Peak in the spring of 1958, before anyone else: Pete Schoening and Andy Kauffman. They were part of a team led by Clinch, though Clinch himself did not summit. It was the only American team to make the first ascent of one of the worldโs 8,000-meter mountains.
โThrough the years as we had clung to ice and rock, chopped steps, and dangled from pitons, we had dreamed of climbing an Eight Thousander,โ Clinch wrote in A Walk in the Sky. โNow the culmination of our mountaineering careers was going to be a trudge through soft snow with heavy packs. Just a walk โ a walk in the sky. It seemed ridiculously simple. Yet we could barely move . . ..โ