George Kinney, namesake of Kinney Lake on the Berg Lake
Trail, was a Methodist preacher who first saw, in awe and wonderment, the peak
of Mt. Robson in 1907. To scale this mountain became a bit of an obsession with
Kinney and in 1909 he headed out on his own to claim the peak before a rumoured
group of foreigners could reach it. Along the way he met Donald “Curly”
Phillips, a young outfitter with no mountaineering experience – or even an ice axe,
and decided he would be his climbing companion.
Donald "Curly" Phillips: Peakfinder.com/ Whyte Musuem |
Eventually the two men, on what would be Kinney’s 12th
attempt at the apex, climbed for the top. Amidst a snow storm the two reached
what Kinney thought to be the peak and, baring his head, claimed it in the name of “Almighty God…my own
country and for the Alpine Club of Canada”.
The controversy as to whether they had indeed reached the peak simmers
to this day although the consensus seems to be that they mistakenly stopped just
60 vertical feet short of it. Much of this controversy is owing to Curly
Phillips himself who is said to have confessed it after Conrad Kain’s ascent.
Some say he was pressured to say it though. At any rate George Kinney was
sincere in his belief that he had reached the summit and the two men had
accomplished a truly amazing feat:
“No ascent in the
history of the Canadian Rockies demanded more sheer guts and determination in
the face of hair-raising brushes with death by avalanche, exposure and
starvation.” ( Hart 1979)
This was a statement that Conrad Kain, who had great respect
for Kinney and Philips, echoed himself. Curly Philips went on to become a
renowned outfitter and received the government contract to build the now famous Berg Lake Trail up the side of Mt. Robson and George Kinney continued
his ministry, often going to the most remote places where others did not want
to go to care for the people there. At
one point he even donated a skin graft to a young girl in Keremeos who had
suffered severe burns. He sat next to the girl and comforted her while the
doctor removed 24 square inches of skin from his leg with no anesthetic.
Rev. George Kinney: Peakfinder.com/ Whyte Musuem |
“He was a man of God
who never pushed religion down anyone’s throat but gently slipped it into
conversations. His love of the outdoors, which he referred to as God’s
Cathedral, lent itself well to the role of backwoods preacher…he never forgot his
Mt. Robson days and always kept an ice axe and climbing boots hanging in his
house.” ( Emerson Sanford).
Sources:
peakfinder.com
bivouac.com
Historic Hikes Around Mount Robson and the Snake Indian River ( Sanford & Sanford Beck)
http://www.env.gov.bc.ca/bcparks/explore/parkpgs/mt_robson/
Wikipedia
Sources:
peakfinder.com
bivouac.com
Historic Hikes Around Mount Robson and the Snake Indian River ( Sanford & Sanford Beck)
http://www.env.gov.bc.ca/bcparks/explore/parkpgs/mt_robson/
Wikipedia
Enjoyable short read. Thanks
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