Steve Taylor, 07-66
John Russell
5 Others
1967 Wilcox Expedition
Joe Wilcox was leader of 12-man Denali climb in 1967 where 7 perished in a fierce
storm. Howard Snyder's 3-man team was forced by the park rules on team size to combine
with the Wilcox team. Controversy arose after Snyder wrote Hall Of The Mountain
King, his version of events and who was responsible. The climb was made via the
classic Muldrow Glacier - Karstens Ridge route, the same route pioneered by Belmore
Browne and first climbed by Hudson Stuck for the first ascent of this Alaska giant,
the highest peak in North America.
Some members of Wilcox's team were lacking in experience, but it was mostly poor
judgement and the storm that killed the climbers very close to the top of the mountain.
Wilcox goes into great detail here to describe the mistakes and the bad luck. He
was criticized by Bradford Washburn after the tragedy for blaming the storm more
than anything else for the deaths. Hardcover, DJ, New.
Howard Snyder, was the leader of a 3-man team that was forced by Park rules to join
Joe Wilcox's larger team. 7 members from Wilcox's group perished in a fierce storm.
Controversy arose after Snyder wrote a book, The Hall Of The Mountain King, his
version of events and who was responsible. The climb was made via the classic Muldrow
Glacier - Karstens Ridge route, the same route pioneered by Belmore Browne and first
climbed by Hudson Stuck for the first ascent of this Alaska giant, the highest peak
in North America. Some members of Wilcox's team were lacking in experience, but
it was mostly poor judgement and the storm that killed the climbers very close to
the top of the mountain. Snyder and another member of his team reached the summit
ahead of the Wilcox members (except for Joe Wilcox who summited with Snyder).
Joe Wilcox was criticized by Bradford Washburn after the tragedy for blaming the
storm more than anything else for the deaths. Snyder's book was the first to be
published about the expedition. Joe Wilcox's White Winds about the expedition published
several years after Snyder's book, partly in rebuttle to points in Snyder's account.
Wilcox presents some valid & good arguments, and the bottom line is that the poor
guys who perished on the mountain got screwed by a combination of bad luck and bad
judgement due to lack of experience with semi-arctic conditions; the disaster wasn't
Wilcox's fault.