Dorothy Pilley Richards
Dorothy Pilley Richards | |
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Born | Dorothy Eleanor Pilley |
Occupation | Writer & Mountaineer |
Notable work | Climbing Days, 1935 |
Dorothy Pilley Richards (16 September 1894 in Camberwell, London – 24 September 1986 in Cambridge) was a prominent female mountaineer. She began climbing in Wales and joined the Fell and Rock Climbing Club, later helping found The Pinnacle Club in 1921.
In the 1920s, she climbed extensively in the Alps, Britain, and North America after her marriage to educator, literary critic, and rhetorician Ivor Armstrong Richards.
In 1928, she made the celebrated first ascent of the north north west ridge of the Dent Blanche, with Joseph Georges, Antoine Georges and her husband [1], which she described in her well-regarded memoir, Climbing Days (1935).[2]
Pilley’s great-great-nephew Dan Richards has written a biography of her life, published Faber in 2016 and also called Climbing Days.[3][4]
References
- ^ Alpine Club Guide Books: Pennine Alps Central (1st ed.). The Alpine Club, London. 1975. pp. 107–109. ISBN 090052314X.
- ^ Dorothy Pilley Richards (1935). Climbing Days (1st ed.). London: G. Bell and Sons.
- ^ "Climbing Days". Faber & Faber. Retrieved 26 October 2017.
- ^ Norbury, Katharine (26 June 2016). Book of the Day: Climbing Days by Dan Richards – review The Guardian
Sources
- Dorothy Pilley (Mrs. I. A. Richards), Climbing Days (London: Bell, 1935)
- Carol A. Osborne, "Richards , Dorothy Eleanor (1894–1986)" in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 15 August 2010
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