Frank Smythe Explained

Francis Sydney Smythe
Birth Date:6 July 1900
Birth Place:Maidstone, Kent
Death Place:London
Occupation:botanist, explorer, mountaineer photographer, writer

Francis Sydney Smythe, better known as Frank Smythe or F. S. Smythe (6 July 1900 – 27 June 1949), was an English mountaineer, author, photographer and botanist. He is best remembered for his mountaineering in the Alps as well as in the Himalayas, where he identified a region that he named the "Valley of Flowers", now a protected park. His ascents include two new routes on the Brenva Face of Mont Blanc, Kamet, and attempts on Kangchenjunga and Mount Everest in the 1930s.[1] It was said that he had a tendency for irascibility, something some of his mountaineering contemporaries said "decreased with altitude".[2]

Biography

Smythe was born at Maidstone in Kent[3] and educated in Switzerland after an initial period at Berkhamsted School. He trained as an electrical engineer and worked for brief periods with the Royal Air Force and Kodak before devoting himself to writing and public lecturing. Smythe enjoyed mountaineering, photography, collecting plants, and gardening; he toured as a lecturer; and he wrote a total of twenty seven books.[4] Smythe's focused approach is well documented, not only through his own writings, but by his contemporaries and later works.

Among his many public lectures, Smythe gave several to the Royal Geographical Society, his first in 1931 titled "Explorations in Garhwal around Kamet" and his second in 1947 titled "An Expedition to the Lloyd George Mountains, North-East British Columbia".

Smythe was a prodigious writer and produced many popular books. However his book The Kangchenjunga Adventure launched Smythe as a legitimate and respected author.[5]

During the Second World War he served in the Canadian Rockies as a mountaineer training officer for the Lovat Scouts, and in Braemar, Scotland, where he led the Commando Mountain and Snow Warfare Centre, and where John Hunt worked for a while with him as an instructor.[6] He went on to write two books about climbing in the Rockies, Rocky Mountains (1948) and Climbs in the Canadian Rockies (1951). Mount Smythe (10,650 ft) was named in his honour.

In chapter 11 of his autobiography "Man of Everest", Tenzing Norgay reports that in the spring of 1949 Frank Smythe visited Darjeeling -they had climbed on Everest together in 1938. Tenzing describes how Smythe "was not the same as before", he had trouble remembering his name and thinking it was October and then December when it was actually May, demanding an ice axe when walking on grass covered slopes. Tenzing says he was soon after flown back to England but died; "so the life of one of the finest of all mountaineers came to a sad and too early end".

In 1949, in Delhi, he was taken ill with food poisoning; then a succession of malaria attacks took their toll. He died on 27 June 1949, at age 48.

Mountaineering

Bibliography

The following is a list of the books written by Frank Smythe;

Many were subsequently republished in the USA, some of the best have been gathered into collections.

References

Notes and References

  1. Nature . 164. 266. 1949. 10.1038/164266a0. Mr F S Smythe. Odell, NE. 4163. 1949Natur.164..266O. free.
  2. Book: Everest: The Official History . George Band . HarperCollins Publishers Ltd. 2003.
  3. Web site: Search Results for England & Wales Births 1837-2006.
  4. Book: Smythe, Frank S . The Six Alpine/Himalayan Climbing Books . 2000 . Baton Wicks . Appendix V . 1-898573-37-9 . 933 and 934 .
  5. Book: Smythe's Mountains: F. S. Smythe and his Climbs. Harry Calvert. Gollancz. 1985.
  6. Book: Hunt, John . Life Is Meeting . 1978. Hoddon and Stoughton . London . 63–64 . 0340229632.
  7. Book: F. S. Smythe. 1949. The Valley of Flowers. registration. W.W. Norton.
  8. Book: Hugh Ruttledge. 1933. Everest 1933. Hodder and Stoughton.
  9. Book: H. W. Tilman. 1938. Mount Everest 1938. Pilgrims Publishing.