Ascent of Mount Rainier [pp. 393-403]

Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 14, Issue 5

THE OVERLAND MONTHLY DEVOTED TO THE DEVELOPMfENT OF THE' COUNTRY. VOL. I4.-MAY, 1875.-No. 5. ASCENT OF MOUNT RAINIER. N the summer of I857 I was station ed at Fort Steilacoom, Washington Territory. This post was located near the village of Steilacoom, on the waters of Puget Sound. The post and the village took their names from a little stream near by, which is the outlet of a number of small lakes and ponds emptying into the sound. Quite a family of Indians made their permanent home in the vicinity of this creek in former years, and were known as "Steilacoom Tillicum." According to the Indian pronunciation of the name it should have been spelled "Steelacoom," dwelling long on the first syllable. I was at that time a first-lieutenant, young, and fond of visiting unexplored sections of the country, and possessed of a very prevailing passion for going to the tops, of high places. My quarters fronted Mount Rainier, which is about sixty miles nearly east of Fort Steilacoom in an air line. On a clear day it does not look more than ten miles off, and looms up against the eastern sky white as the snow with which it is covered, with a perfectly pyramidal outline, except at the top, which is slightly rounded and broken. It is a grand and inspiring view, and I had expressed so often my determination to make the ascent, without doing it, that my fellowofficers finally became incredulous, and gave to all improbable and doubtful events a date of occurrence, when I should ascend Mount Rainier. My resolution, however, took shape and form about the first of July. Nearly all the officers had been very free to volunteer to go with me as long as they felt certain I was not going; but when I was ready to go, I should have been compelled to go alone but for the doctor, who was on a visit to the post from Fort Bellingham. I made preparations after the best authorities I could find, from reading accounts of the ascent of Mont Blanc and other snow mountains. We made for each member of the party an alf5enstock of dry ash with an iron point. We sew Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1875, by JOHN H. CARMANY, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. VoL. I4.-26.

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Ascent of Mount Rainier [pp. 393-403]
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Kautz, A. V.
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Page 393
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Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 14, Issue 5

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"Ascent of Mount Rainier [pp. 393-403]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/ahj1472.1-14.005. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 15, 2025.
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