Skip to main content

Climbing Legends #9: Knox Grammar Scientific Expedition, 1950 Part 2

Climbing legends 
Series of posts celebrating climbers of Ayers Rock.
#9 Knox Grammar Scientific Expedition: First Schoolboys and Masters to climb the Rock, 1950 
Knox Grammar boys walking across the top of Ayers Rock,1950.
The Knox Grammar Ayers Rock Scientific Expedition is a remarkable achievement. There's a wonderful movie of the expedition "Red Horizon", narrated by Edrich Chaffer, one of the student participants, that we highly recommend viewing (see Part 1). 
The expedition left Sydney on August 30, 1950 and travelling by plane, train and automobile arrived at Ayers Rock late on the evening of the 5th of September. The same trip these days takes about three and half hours. 

In Red Horizon Edrich ends his narration about the expedition stating: "It set me on a career where I personally had learnt one of the most important lessons of all, and that was: how to think. And I found it invaluable in my career ever afterwards. And I can only thank Tom Erskine, William Bryden, our headmaster, for making the opportunity for young formative minds to be developed in such an excellent way". 
So sad that the scientific nature of the Knox Expedition has been replaced with myth, superstition and political correctness that dominates modern school visits to Ayers Rock. Very soon they will not even be able to experience the joy, wonder and awe of climbing the Rock. Without the spirit of science, adventure and discovery that characterised the Knox Grammar Expedition few students these days are likely to gain memories and experiences that will leave such a lasting, life changing impression. A few Instagram moments of the "climb is closed" sign and being told "what to think" is unlikely to inspire the next generation of student visitors above mediocrity.
Australasian photo-review articles
The story of the expedition was written down by GRW Latham, in a series of articles published in the Australasian photo-review available on-line through the National Library of Australia's Trove website. 
Articles are spread over three issues.
Part 1: April 1951 Page 233-237 Departing Sydney and arriving at Ayers Rock
Part 2 (May 1951) Page 299-303 Exploration around Ayers Rock and the Climb
Part 3 (June 1951) Page 350-353, and 357. Anthropological lessons and the journey home.
The articles include some remarkable photographs. 
Charles Mountford and four Aboriginals on the rock - likely Old Bob, Chulki, Barney and Unknown

27 members of the group climbed to the summit on Thursday September 7, 1950. Latham recounts: 
"The Great climb occupied all of Thursday morning. On the western side there is the most gentle slope averaging about 45° but in places it probably exceeds 60° or so. Except for little flakes which may 'give' when trodden upon the rock surface is smooth, offering nothing upon which the hands can grip.  Down each side of the climbing ridge the Rock slopes down precipitously to the ground. You would only slip once on that climb! This ridge finishes directly above the top of the ravine; away down below we could see the camp, barely visible at the end of the road as it snaked its way in and from the sand dunes. 
From the base of the Rock, running out to die in the desert, were green tracts of vegetation. These were the ends of small creeks, fed by the huge catchment area of the Rock, but incapable of far penetration into the sandy wastes. The wild grasses growing in these river beds stood fully six feet tall; in the larger water holes, water still lingered from recent heavy rains. 
A short walk and a final climb completed the ascent to the cairn at the summit. Here beneath a heap of stones, was a coffee jar serving to keep safe the names of previous climbers - practical and theoretical; some lists were obviously written by the one hand, and it is therefore open to doubt whether all those listed really climbed to the top. The names we found are given in the accompanying table (ed see below): some of them were very difficult to read and I apologise in advance for any errors. 
There was little grass and a few shrubs growing at the top, while a group of boys claimed to have seen a wallaby. In some of the wind holes a little water remained. Three of us went out to the eastern end, but honour was hardly worth the effort , since the route is crossed by innumerable wind furrows. These measure up to  fifteen feet deep, all running NW-SE. They are the result of differential weathering of the Rock's strata which are vertical to the ground. From the eastern end, Lake Amadeus could be seen as a thin white line extending along the horizon. 
Two of the more energetic boys achieved the 1100ft climb in twenty five minutes; and another climbed twice in the one morning for a wager!"

Latham concludes the series thus: No matter what expenses have been incurred or what work yet remains, there are no regrets by any member. A chance like this comes to very few in a lifetime. Should you think it futile sending BOYS so far, just recall that they will be MEN soon: men with first hand knowledge of the heart of their own country .... Australia. 

Knox Grammar School Expedition Cairn List  (7 September 1950)
7/3/1931 W McKinnon 
19/2/1932 W McKinnon
21/7/1933 H Fuller, TI Whalker
28/5/1936 The Foy Expedition which included Bob Buck
4/11/1939 Cutlack’s Expedition including V Dumas, F Clune, E Bails
7/8/1940 CP Mountford, LE Sheard
14/8/1940 CP Mountford, LE Sheard
30/6/1946 LA Borgelt, Cliff Thompson, Tiger, Metingerie
21/4/1947 Arthur Groom
23/9/1948 JM Bechervaise, DuConnelly, S Staines, Simpson, Parker
1949 Kimber, Ross, Bonython
6/5/1950 Malcolm R Senior
14/8/1950 The Melbourne University Expedition
7/9/1950 Knox Grammar School Expedition: AW Briggs, AC Brown, W Bryden, VFO Francis, GRW Latham, R Miller, B Rhys-Jones, D Patten, M Hughes, EK  Chaffer, I Brown, B Piper, D Grainger, B  Ross, Ww Graham, I Macfarlane, M Lees, I  Quinlan, J Bannigan, J Neave, J Williams, J Young, J Stranger, J Graham, J Laurie, JA Walker, J Schroder.

Knox Grammar: absolute climbing legends!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Mount Warning: Aboriginal claims about summit climb are contested

"How can the public experience the spiritual significance of this land if they do not climb the summit and witness creation."   Ngaraakwal Elder Marlene Boyd RIP   NSW NPWS have the following description about Aboriginal attitudes to people climbing to the summit of Mt Warning on their webpage about the walking track: Wollumbin, which means ‘cloud catcher’ to some Aboriginal People, is a traditional place of cultural law, initiation and spiritual education for the people of the Bundjalung Nation. Under Bundjalung law, only certain people can climb the summit. Out of respect for their law and culture, consider not climbing the summit. These claims, including the very name applied to the mountain, are contested and it seems there is another story that NSW NPWS have not properly acknowledged and have long kept from public attention.  We came across this article from the Daily News February 24 2007 about Ngaraakwal Elder Marlene Boyd that makes for interesting reading. It seems

Mt Warning - Summit signing, time capsule

A Mt Warning Visit, summit signing Drove up the long road from Sydney, leaving early to grab a beer at the Mt Warning Hotel at Uki in the afternoon. There's a nice view of the summit from the smoker's deck. The tip of the mountain was catching clouds and then letting them go. I met Roger, a one-legged ex- navy seal and former security guard to Gloria Estafan. He was an interesting bloke, sucking a large Cuban cigar and slamming spiced rum on ice. He had one eye, apparently, he had lost the other blue pearl in a firefight with Somali terrorists in the Persian Gulf. We had a brief discussion of current affairs and the insanity of public parks being closed for no good reason, and vandalism of the tourism industry by a woke broken Bureaucracy - just light conversation. I mentioned I had a mission that might suit him and he agreed to join in. We headed to the Mt Warning Rainforest Caravan Park. Mt Warning from the Mt Warning Hotel Roads around the area are still not repaired from la

Chain and post removed at Mount Warning Summit Walk

The current situation is a disgrace and an insult to Park users and all Australians.  The Minister must instigate an independent audit and review of NSW NPWS management of the Park and develop a brighter vision of the Park's future.  The walk to the summit of Mt Warning in northern NSW is an iconic experience of the natural world. Views from the summit on a clear day provide an unrivaled vista over the Tweed River Valley, lush rainforests, eroded volcanic landscape and beaches on the coast. They fill visitors with a sense of awe and wonder. From a geological perspective, it is arguably the best-preserved erosion caldera in the world.  The 4.4km (8.8km return) track was completed in 1909 but the hike was firmly established as a popular tourist attraction in  1929  with the declaration of the area around the mountain as a National Park. The opening ceremony was attended at the summit by 200 people, some rode horses up the trail. The standard of the early track construction is extreme