Henri Cordier (mountaineer)

Henri Cordier's corpse, photographed by Henry Duhamel

Henri Cordier or Henry Cordier (1856 – 7 June 1877)[1] was a French mountaineer. In his short two-year career, he became the first Frenchman to reach the level of the English members of the Alpine Club, in the silver age of alpinism in the second half of the 19th century, which was dominated by the development of mountaineering in the Alps. With some of the Alpine Club's mountain guides and mountaineers, he led significant first ascents in the Mont Blanc massif and in the Dauphiné Alps (the Massif des Ecrins).

Biography

A grandson of geologist Louis Cordier and a great-nephew of politician and scientist Louis Ramond de Carbonnières, Henri Cordier pursued studies at the École libre des sciences politiques, founded in 1872, where he received high honors.[2] He was first attracted by the Pyrenees, to which he traveled in 1874, before visiting the Swiss Alps the following year. His brief Alpine career combined talent and audacity. In the 1876 season he succeeded in making eleven first ascents. He claimed to have climbed the western peak of the Meije that year, but was subsequently forced to retract the claim.[3]

Major ascents

Accident

Descending from Le Plaret, the group left the glacier, successfully passed the crevasse zone, unroped and ate a meal. Afterwards, Cordier went ahead. In front of his horrified companions, he performed a standing glissade down a steep snow slope above the glacial torrent of La Clause below the surface. The snow surface broke suddenly and Cordier was carried away by the white water under the ice and drowned.[1][2][5][8] Jakob Anderegg was lowered into the twelve-foot hole on a rope, but could find no trace of Cordier and nearly suffocated before being pulled up.[2][5] According to Henri Béraldi, Cordier had very poor eyesight, but refused glasses due to vanity. As he amused himself by slipping on the snowy slope, he was alerted by his guides and replied, "Ne vous inquiétez pas, je vais m'arrêter sur ce rocher noir" ("Do not worry, I'll stop on the black rock"). Unfortunately for Cordier, the rock in reality was a hole.[9]

Cordier's body was recovered the next morning forty feet below the location of his disappearance.[5][8] The corpse was photographed by Henry Duhamel at La Bérarde.[10] Henri Cordier was only 21 years old.[2][7]

Legacy

In memory of Henri Cordier, the Pic de Neige Cordier, located above the Glacier Blanc in the Massif des Ecrins, was named after him. It was climbed for the first time on 3 August 1877 by Paul Guillemin, Émile Pic, and Pierre Estienne. Cordier also gave his name to posterity in two first-routes, which he had executed in 1876 with Thomas Middlemore, John Oakley Maund and guides Jakob Anderegg, Andreas Maurer and Johann Jaun: the Cordier Couloir on the North Face of the Aiguille Verte and the Cordier route on the north face of Les Courtes (both in the Mont Blanc massif).

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Braham, Trevor (2011). When the Alps Cast Their Spell: Mountaineers of the Alpine Golden Age. The In Pinn. ISBN 978-1-906476-34-2.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Freshfield, Douglas W., ed. (August 1877). "The Death of M. Cordier". The Alpine Journal: A Record of Mountain Adventure and Scientific Observation. London: Longmans, Green, and Co. VIII (LVII): 284–286.
  3. Fleming, Fergus (2000). Killing Dragons: The Conquest of the Alps. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press. p. 308. ISBN 0-87113-778-X. LCCN 00-04335.
  4. 1 2 Labande, François (1995). Guide du Haut-Dauphiné: Massif des Écrins. 1. Éditions de l'envol.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Dangar, D. F. O. (1961). "Jakob Anderegg" (PDF). Alpine Journal: 97–98.
  6. 1 2 3 Ballu, Yves (1997). Les alpinistes. Glénat.
  7. 1 2 Frison-Roche, Roger; Jouty, Sylvain (1996). A History of Mountain Climbing. Trans. Deke Dusinberre. Paris, New York: Flammarion. pp. 83, 319. ISBN 2-08013-622-4. LCCN 96-85980. OCLC 36019037. This book incorrectly gives the year of the Aiguille Verte climb as 1875.
  8. 1 2 "Extraordinary Alpine Accidents". West Coast Times (Putanga 2629). 3 Mahuru 1877. p. 3. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. Béraldi, Henri (1898–1904). Cent ans aux Pyrénées [One hundred years in the Pyrenees]. Paris. Seven volumes. Reissue by "Les Amis du Livre Pyrénéen", Pau, 1977.
  10. "Rumeurs, rumeurs...". La montagne c'est pointu. CanalBlog. 12 January 2006. Retrieved 16 January 2013.

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.