SHAWORDS
A

Annie Smith Peck

Annie Smith Peck

Annie Smith Peck

author
5Quotes

Annie Smith Peck was an American mountaineer and adventurer The northern peak of the Peruvian Cordillera Blanca mountain chain, Huascarán was named Cumbre Ana Peck in Peck's honor She was an ardent suffragist and noted speaker She lectured extensively for many years throughout the world, and wrote four books encouraging travel and exploration

Popular Quotes

5 total
Quote
"Interest was heightened by the knowledge that the 162,000 acres of land already cultivated in the , where is located, were to triple through a great irrigation project inaugurated by . In 1930 it was well under way when the project was abandoned. An American engineer, Charles W. Sutton, long in the service of Peru, was adding to his fame and usefulness by undertaking to bring from the Huancabamba River, tributary to the Amazon, by means of a tunnel through the mountains, water to supplement the service of the coastal streams."
A
Annie Smith Peck
Quote
"Fortunate the traveler, who, 7 or 8 miles below Las Cuevas, has at the head of a side valley at the north a glimpse of colossal 15 miles away, a long ridge of snow arching into two domes, with a sheer drop of 10,000 feet on its black southern wall; and farther on a sight of , 30 miles away at the south: both mountains first climbed in 1897 by the , though he unfortunately was compelled by to forego the satisfaction of attaining either summit himself. The first to reach the supposed apex of the , the top of Aconcagua, according to the latest measurement, 22,817 feet, was , the celebrated Swiss guide, who in almost every land has led English and Americans to the summits of noted mountains. Alone, January 14, 1897, he gained this height, and there erected a stone man as is the custom where possible. In April of the same year, the first ascent of Tupungato, 21,451 feet, was made also by Zurbriggen, and the Englishman, Vines."
A
Annie Smith Peck
Quote
"... this woman, now nearly sixty, with graying hair and steel-rimmed glasses, was a monster of persistence. She was determined to become the first known human to ascend the summit of the forbidding , which she hoped would prove to be the highest in the , the "apex of America." And so she went on to reach Huascaráns summit on her sixth onslaught. Her achievement was heralded by as "one of the most remarkable feats in the history of mountain-climbing." Upon her death at eighty-four, the called her the most famous of all women mountain climbers."
A
Annie Smith Peck

Similar Authors & Thinkers