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[[File:Henry Fox.jpg|thumbnail|left|Henry "Harry" Fox]]
[[File:Henry Fox.jpg|thumbnail|left|Henry "Harry" Fox]]


[[File:Extract from Among The Selkirk Glaciers.jpg|right|Among The Selkirk Glaciers]]
[[File:Extract from Among The Selkirk Glaciers.jpg|right|thumb|Among The Selkirk Glaciers]]


[[File:MtFoxandMtDawsonfrom AsulkanPass.jpg|left|Mt Fox & Mt Donkin]]
[[File:MtFoxandMtDawsonfrom AsulkanPass.jpg|left|Mt Fox & Mt Donkin]]

Revision as of 10:47, 1 February 2016

Mount Fox
Mount Fox is located in British Columbia
Mount Fox
Mount Fox
Location British Columbia
Highest point
Elevation3,196 m (10,486 ft)[1]
Prominence411 m (1,348 ft)
Geography
LocationBritish Columbia

Mount Fox in the Selkirk Mountains in Canada was named, by William Green, in honour of Harry Fox who perished with William Donkin and two Swiss guides, in the Caucasus. Mount Donkin is nearby.[1]

  • Mount Fox & Donkin in the Selkirk Range[2]
  • height: 3196 m -> 10486 feet
  • Prominence: 411 m
  • Location: 51.16889, -117.42167 51:10:08, -117:25:18


Henry "Harry" Fox
Among The Selkirk Glaciers
Mt Fox & Mt Donkin
Mt Fox & Mt Donkin

Harry Fox (30 September 1856 – on or after 30 August 1888) was an English gentleman (also lived at Tone Dale House, Wellington, Somerset, England) who was a sportsman and adventurer. He played cricket and rugby for his county, and began climbing mountains in the mid-1880s.[3]

In 1884 he started mountaineering, and within two years he was well-known in the mountain climbing community, and a well-regarded alpine explorer. In 1888, he travelled with William Frederick Donkin to the Caucasus Mountains in the Russian Empire in a bid to be the first people to climb Koshtan-Tau, but the pair, along with their Swiss guides, died in an accident.

For the purposes of his will, Fox's death was recorded as being "on or since the 30th August, 1888, at some place unknown."

References

  • Among the Selkirk Glaciers by William Spotswood Green (1890)
  1. ^ a b https://archive.org/stream/amongselkirkglac00greeuoft#page/102/mode/2up
  2. ^ Source:http://bivouac.com/MtnPg.asp?MtnId=2406
  3. ^ Dorothy, Lomas. The Foxes of Wellington. Amazon: Carly Press. p. 41.