Dorothy Pilley Richards Explained

Dorothy Pilley Richards
Birth Name:Dorothy Eleanor Pilley
Occupation:Mountaineer, writer
Notable Works:Climbing Days, 1935

Dorothy Pilley Richards (16 September 1894 in Camberwell, London  - 24 September 1986 in Cambridge) was a prominent mountaineer. She attended Queenwood Ladies' College and went on a climbing tour with fellow student Bryher (novelist)[1] in Wales and around this time joined the Fell & 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, I.A. Richards.

In 1928, she made the celebrated first ascent of the north north west ridge of the Dent Blanche in the Swiss Alps, with Joseph Georges, Antoine Georges and her husband,[2] which she described in her well-regarded memoir, Climbing Days (1935)[3] – republished by Canongate Books in 2024.[4]

Pilley's great-great-nephew Dan Richards has written a biography of her, published by Faber and Faber in 2016 and also titled Climbing Days.[5] [6]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bryher . The Heart to Artemis . Harcourt, Brace & World.
  2. Book: Alpine Club Guide Books: Pennine Alps Central . . 1st . 1975 . 107–109 . 090052314X.
  3. Book: Dorothy Pilley Richards . Climbing Days . London: G. Bell and Sons. . 1st . 1935.
  4. Book: Dorothy Pilley Richards . Climbing Days . July 2024 . Canongate Books . 9781805302537 . Canon .
  5. Book: Dan Richards . Climbing Days . Faber and Faber . 978-0571311934 . 2017-10-26.
  6. Katharine Norbury (26 June 2016). Book of the Day: Climbing Days by Dan Richards – review The Guardian