W. A. B. COOLIDGE

(Redirected from William Augustus Brevoort Coolidge)
'W. A. B. Coolidge' (William Augustus Brevoort Coolidge) (August 28, 1850 - May 8, 1926) was an American historian, theologian and mountaineer.
Coolidge was born in New York as the son of Frederic William Skinner, a Boston merchant, and Elisabeth Neville ''nee'' Brevoort of the Netherlands.
Coolidge studied history and law at Saint Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire, at Elizabeth College, Guernsey, and at Exeter College, Oxford.
In 1875 he became a Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford. From 1880 to 1881 he was professor of British history at Saint David's College in Lampeter and in 1883 he became a priest of the Anglican church.
Coolidge was one of the great figures of the so-called 'silver age' of alpinism, making first ascents of the few significant peaks in the Alps that hadn't been climbed during the golden age of alpinism.
In 1885 he moved to Grindelwald, Switzerland, where he died in 1926.

Contents
First ascents in the Alps
References

First ascents in the Alps



Piz Badile, 27 July 1867, with F. and H. Dévouassoud

Ailefroide, 7 July 1870, with Christian and Ulrich Almer

★ Central peak of La Meije, 1870, with Meta Brevoort and three guides

Unterbächhorn, 1872

★ First winter ascent of the Jungfrau, January 1874, with Christian and Ulrich Almer

★ West summit of Les Droites, 16 July 1876, with Christian Almer Sr and Christian Almer Jr

Pic Coolidge, July 1877 with Christian and Ulrich Almer

Les Bans, July 14 1878, with Christian and Ulrich Almer

Scherbadung, 1886

References



Ronald W. Clark: ''An Eccentric in the Alps: The story of W. A. B. Coolidge, the Great Victorian Mountaineer''. Museum Press, London 1959

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