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Peter Hillary

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Peter Hillary
Hillary in 2015
Born
Peter Edmund Hillary

(1954-12-26)26 December 1954(age 69)
Auckland,New Zealand
Occupation(s)Mountaineer,philanthropist, writer
Spouse(s)
Ann Moorhead
(divorced)

Yvonne Oomen
Children5
Parents

Peter Edmund Hillary(born 26 December 1954) is a New Zealandmountaineerand philanthropist, He is the son of SirEdmund Hillary,who, along with mountaineerTenzing Norgay,completed the first successful ascent ofMount Everest.[1]When Peter Hillary summited Everest in 1990, he and his father were the first father/son duo to achieve the feat. Hillary has achieved two summits of Everest, an 84-day trek acrossAntarcticato theSouth Pole,and an expedition guiding astronautNeil Armstrongto land a small aircraft at theNorth Pole.He has climbed many of the world's major peaks, and on 19 June 2008, completed theSeven Summits,reaching the top of the highest mountains on all seven continents, when he summitedDenaliinAlaska.[2]

Personal life[edit]

Peter Hillary, as aninfant,with his parents, Louise andEdmund,1955

Peter Edmund Hillary was born inAuckland,New Zealand on 26 December 1954. He had two younger sisters, Sarah Louise and Belinda Mary, and was the eldest of the three children of Sir Edmund Hillary and his first wife, Louise Mary Rose.[3]Peter Hillary received his education atKing's College, Aucklandand atAuckland University.[4]

As a child, Hillary travelled the world extensively. In 1962, when he was seven, his family travelled all over the United States and Canada while Sir Edmund was on an extended lecture tour. On the way back to New Zealand, the Hillary family capped off their year abroad in Nepal for a visit withTenzing Norgay.Additional travels included trips to the United Kingdom; drives in the deserts of Australia; learning to ski on New Zealand's South Island; climbing New Zealand's highest peak,Aoraki / Mount Cook;and sitting around campfires in theHimalayas.[5]At age eleven, his father took him to climb Mount Everest.[6]

On 31 March 1975, after having spent a year in Nepal, Hillary's mother and youngest sister, sixteen-year-old Belinda, were killed when their plane crashed shortly after taking off from aKathmanduairfield.[3]Hillary, then twenty, was inAssam,India, visiting a friend, when he received the news that there were no survivors in the crash.[7]He described Lady Hillary and Belinda as 'the glue that bonded the family together'.[8]

Hillary's climbing friend, Australian Mark Moorhead, died on 15 October 1983 attempting to ascendMakalu,a Himalayan mountain that is the fifth-highest in the world.[citation needed]When Hillary went to pay his respects to the family, he met Moorhead's sister Ann, whom he would later marry. They separated in 1993 when Hillary began talking about resuming his mountaineering career after a three-year hiatus, and were subsequently divorced.[9]: 57 Hillary later married Yvonne Oomen, with whom he has two children, Alexander and Lily; he also has two children, Amelia and George, from his first marriage.[10]

On 11 January 2008, Hillary was inLisbon,Portugal, at a dinner with some clients when he was informed his father had died of a sudden heart attack atAuckland Hospital.[7]Sir Edmund lay in state at the Auckland Cathedral of the Holy Trinity and his funeral on 22 January 2008 at Auckland's St. Mary's Church was televised live throughout New Zealand.[11]Hillary delivered a eulogy for his father in which he said, recalling his childhood, 'Growing up in the Hillary family, was quite an adventure... Adventure was compulsory'.[12]On 29 February 2008, Hillary, his sister Sarah, and Sir Edmund's widow, Lady Hillary (formerly June Anderson Mulgrew) scattered most of his ashes, in a private ceremony held on Auckland'sHauraki Gulf,from the youth sail training shipSpirit of New Zealand.[13]Apa Sherpa,who at the time had summited Everest more than anyone else, proposed a small portion of Sir Edmund's ashes should be held in reserve to be scattered on the summit of Mount Everest, and Hillary transferred them to a nearby Nepalese monastery. However, in 2010, a committee of Sherpas decided against it, concerned that it could set a precedent.[14]

After Sir Edmund's death, there was an immediate clash between his son and his widow over the future of theHimalayan Trustthat Sir Edmund had established to assist the people of Nepal, resulting in Hillary not being appointed to its board of directors.[15]In 2010, Hillary and his sister had to get an injunction to stop Lady Hillary from having their father's watches sold through a Swiss auction house, including one that was presented to him after his Everest triumph. Hillary said he and his sister owned the watches as per their father's will. It was ruled that, under New Zealand's heritage laws, the Everest watch should never have left the country and was a violation of the Protected Objects Act. Lady Hillary had to withdraw the items from auction.[16]Hillary then spent a year in mediation attempting to establish ownership of the watches and other items that were of great significance to the family, as Lady Hillary had given away an additional 17 items of sentimental value without consulting the family.[17]When the courts awarded ownership of the watches to Sir Edmund's children, Hillary donated them to theAuckland War Memorial Museum.[18]Finally, in October 2011, Lady Hillary resigned as the head of the Himalayan Trust, with five additional board members going with her.[19]

Mount Everest[edit]

Hillary has been to Everest five times, once reaching 8,300 metres on the West Ridge and twice reaching the summit by theSouth Colroute. With his first summit of Mount Everest in 1990, he and Sir Edmund became the first father and son to achieve the feat.[20]The 1990 expedition was led by veteran Everest climberPete Athans,who held the record for the most summits of Everest by a Western climber.

His second ascent in May 2003[21]was part of aNational Geographic Societyexpedition to mark the 50th anniversary of Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay's historic first ascent in 1953. The anniversary expedition brought together Peter Hillary,Jamling Norgayand Brent Bishop, the sons of Sir Edmund, Tenzing Norgay, andBarry Bishop,a member of the first successful American team to reach the summit in 1963.

Philanthropy[edit]

Peter Hillary now devotes most of his time to fundraising in support of his father'sHimalayan Trust,which was established in 1960 to fund capital projects in theKhumbuValley region of Nepal. He is also a director of the Australian Himalayan Foundation.[22]

Hillary is also the patron for the Everest Rescue Trust, a non-profit, independent trust set up to operate and manage a self-funding rescuehelicopterservice for the high altitude regions of Nepal.[23]

Since 2017, Hillary has also been the Patron of theKea Conservation Trust,a Charitable Trust set up in 2006 to support conservation and research into New Zealand's Alpine parrot, the Kea.[24]

Media[edit]

Peter Hillary has written and co-written several books, including:A Sunny Day in the Himalayas(1980);[25]First Across the Roof of the World: The First-ever Traverse of the Himalayas, 5,000 Kilometres from Sikkim to Pakistan(with Graham Dingle, 1982);[26]Two Generations(with his father, Sir Edmund Hillary, 1984);[27]Ascent: Two Lives Explored – The Autobiographies of Sir Edmund and Peter Hillary(also with his father, 1986);[28]Rimo: Mountain on the Silk Road(1992);[29]Bridgit was Bored(a children's book written with his first wife, Ann Moorhead, 1992);[30]andIn the Ghost Country: A Lifetime Spent on the Edge(with John Elder, 2003).[31]

Hillary wrote the afterword for the bookLetters from Everest: A First-hand Account from the Epic First AscentbyGeorge Lowe,who was Sir Edmund Hillary's best friend and accompanied him on the 1953 Everest expedition.[32]In the wake of the1996 Mount Everest disaster,Hillary wrote an article forThe New York Times Magazineentitled "Everest is Mighty, We are Fragile".[33]He also wrote an article called "In the Name of the Father", describing what it was like onK2 in August 1995when the mountain claimed the lives of seven summiters, leaving him as one of three survivors of that expedition.[34]

Awards[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "National Geographic Speakers Bureau: Peter Hillary".National Geographic Society.Archived fromthe originalon 3 June 2006.Retrieved13 November2007.
  2. ^"Peter Hillary completes climb of seven summits".The New Zealand Herald.NZPA.19 June 2008.Retrieved2 November2011.
  3. ^abCalder, Peter (11 January 2008)."Sir Edmund Hillary's life".The New Zealand Herald.Retrieved4 March2015.
  4. ^"Keynote Speakers".Retrieved18 May2013.
  5. ^Salter, Jessica (10 February 2012)."The great adventures of Sir Edmund Hillary's family".The Telegraph.London.Retrieved18 May2013.
  6. ^"Peter Hillary – About".Peterhillary.com.Retrieved18 May2013.
  7. ^ab"In his father's footsteps".The Sydney Morning Herald.9 August 2008.Retrieved4 March2015.
  8. ^Laxon, Andrew (13 October 2012)."Sir Edmund Hillary: Down to earth".The New Zealand Herald.Retrieved4 March2015.
  9. ^Hillary, Peter; Elder, John E. (2003).In the Ghost Country: A Lifetime Spent on the Edge.Simon & Schuster.ISBN978-0-7432-4369-8.Retrieved4 March2014.
  10. ^du Chateau, Carroll (23 January 2008)."Two families share long connection".The New Zealand Herald.Retrieved4 March2015.
  11. ^McManus, Ruth; Du Plessis, Rosemary."Death and dying - Funeral and memorial services: Sir Edmund Hillary's state funeral".Retrieved4 March2014.
  12. ^"Minute by minute coverage: Sir Edmund's funeral".The New Zealand Herald.22 January 2008.Retrieved4 March2015.
  13. ^"Sir Edmund Hillary takes final voyage, ashes scattered at sea".The New Zealand Herald.NPZA. 29 February 2008.Retrieved4 March2015.
  14. ^"Sherpas cancel plan to spread Hillary ashes on Everest".BBC. 9 April 2010.Retrieved18 May2013.
  15. ^Powley, Kathryn (7 November 2010)."Hillary family rift widens".The New Zealand Herald.Retrieved4 March2015.
  16. ^"Lady Hillary unlikely to be charged over watch row".The New Zealand Herald.NZPA. 16 November 2010.Retrieved4 March2015.
  17. ^Irvine, Katherine (13 November 2010)."Sir Ed's children stop sale of historic watches".The New Zealand Herald.Retrieved4 March2015.
  18. ^Wade, Ameila (27 October 2011)."Sir Ed's Rolex on show at museum".The New Zealand Herald.Retrieved4 March2015.
  19. ^Douglas, Ed (5 October 2011)."Edmund Hillary family feud comes to a head as widow quits charity".The Guardian.London.Retrieved4 March2015.
  20. ^Daly, Michael (29 May 2013)."Everest's history marked in blood".Stuff.co.nz.Retrieved4 March2015.
  21. ^ Arnold, Elizabeth (25 April 2013)."NPR: Everest: To the Top of the World".NPR. Archived fromthe originalon 30 September 2013.Retrieved4 March2015.
  22. ^"Peter Hillary – Giving Back".Peterhillary.com.Retrieved30 July2013.
  23. ^"Lindblad gExpeditions".Retrieved30 July2013.
  24. ^"Kea trust has Hillary as patron".19 February 2019.Retrieved7 December2019.
  25. ^Hillary, Peter (1980).A Sunny Day in the Himalayas.Hodder and Stoughton.ISBN978-0-340-25685-5.Retrieved4 March2015.
  26. ^Dingle, Graham; Hillary, Peter (1982).First Across the Roof of the World: The First-ever Traverse of the Himalayas, 5,000 Kilometres from Sikkim to Pakistan.Hodder and Stoughton.ISBN978-0-340-32040-2.Retrieved4 March2015.
  27. ^Hillary, Edmund; Hillary, Peter (1984).Two Generations.Hodler & Stoughton.ISBN978-0-340-35420-9.
  28. ^Hillary, Edmund; Hillary, Peter (1986).Ascent: Two Lived Explored - The Autobiographies of Sir Edmund and Peter Hillary.Doubleday.ISBN978-0-385-19831-8.Retrieved4 March2014.
  29. ^Hillary, Peter (1992).Rimo: Mountain on the Silk Road.Ulverscroft Large Print Books.ISBN978-0-708-98632-5.Retrieved4 March2015.
  30. ^Hillary, Peter (1992).Bridgit Was Bored.Contributed to by Ann Moorhead.Hodder and Stoughton.ISBN978-0-340-57844-5.Retrieved4 March2015.
  31. ^Hillary, Peter; Elder, John (2003).In the Ghost Country: A Lifetime Spent on the Edge.Simon and Schulster.ISBN978-0-7432-4369-8.Retrieved4 March2015.
  32. ^Lowe, George (2013).Letters from Everest: A First-hand Account from the Epic First Ascent.ISBN978-1-775-54033-5.Retrieved4 March2015.
  33. ^Hillary, Peter (26 May 1996)."Everest is Mighty, We are Fragile".The New York Times.Retrieved4 March2015.
  34. ^Hillary, Peter."In the Name of the Father".Peterhillary.com.Retrieved5 May2013.

External links[edit]