Trevor Braham

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Trevor Braham in the Alps, 2004

Trevor H Braham (22 April 1922 – 2 March 2020) was a British Himalayan explorer and mountaineer, mostly active during the mid-20th century.

Braham was born in April 1922.[1] He joined the Himalayan Club in 1946, becoming its regional secretary based in Calcutta by March 1949.[1] He had joined the Swiss Alpine Club in 1948, and later the Alpine Club in 1951. He was Vice President of the Himalayan Club (1958–1965), Honorary Editor of the Himalayan Journal (1957–59) and was elected as an Honorary member of the Himalayan Club in 1980.

Trevor Braham's halycon years (1950–1972), corresponded with the "Himalayan Golden Age"[2] when an international frenzy developed to achieve the first ascent of the world's highest peaks. He organized and took part in 15 Himalayan expeditions, including in 1954 a reconnaissance of the South West face of 8,586-metre Kangchenjunga,[3] the world's third highest mountain, which paved the way for the first successful ascent by a British expedition in 1955. Together with Peter Holmes, he made the second ascent of 6,303-metre Chau Chau Kang Nilda, in Spiti, in 1955.[4]

Braham's numerous travels and explorations in little-known and isolated Himalayan regions included 3 visits to mountains in the tribal areas on Pakistan's North-West frontier, which were made in an environment and under conditions very different from those today and about which he has written numerous articles to the Alpine and Himalayan Journals. At the request of the editor of the , he wrote an annual Chronicle of Himalayan activities during the years 1977–1985.

Trevor Braham has authored three books: Himalayan Odyssey (Allen & Unwin, 1974), When The Alps Cast Their Spell (Neil Wilson, 2004), Himalayan Playground (Neil Wilson, 2008). His second book won the ,[5] awarded annually to the leading mountain book of the year.

He has lectured to the Alpine and Himalayan Clubs, and to schools and societies in England, India and Switzerland. At celebrations held in India by the Himalayan Club in 2008 to mark the 80th anniversary of its founding there, Braham was invited to be the principal speaker on the club's history.The Early Years

Braham died in Switzerland in March 2020, a few weeks shy of his 98th birthday.[6]

Climbing associates[]

Peter Boardman, who died on Mount Everest in 1982, was a personal friend of Trevor Braham. Erhard Loretan, who died in April 2011, a leading Swiss climber, and the 3rd person to have ascended the 14 highest summits of the world, requested Trevor Braham to translate into English his book, Himalayan Reflections, which was published in Switzerland in 1998. Albert Eggler was leader of the Swiss attempt in 1952 to climb Mount Everest. On this death in 1998, his obituary, which appeared in the Independent of London, was written by Trevor Braham at the request of members of his family.

Bibliography[]

  • Himalayan Odyssey, Allen & Unwin, 1974
  • When the Alps Cast Their Spell, Neil Wilson Publishing, 2004
  • Himalayan Playground, Neil Wilson Publishing, 2008

References[]

  1. ^ a b Smythe, Tony (5 February 2015). My Father, Frank: The Forgotten Alpinist. Mountaineers Books. ISBN 9781594859151.
  2. ^ Purtschert, P; Fischer-Tiné, H. (26 May 2015). Colonial Switzerland: Rethinking Colonialism from the Margins. Springer. ISBN 9781137442741.
  3. ^ Climbing Kangchenjunga - A Collection of Historical Mountaineering Accounts of Expeditions to the Himalayas. Read Books Ltd. 26 August 2016. ISBN 9781473355699.
  4. ^ Kapadia, Harish (1999). Spiti: Adventures in the Trans-Himalaya. Indus Publishing. p. 107. ISBN 9788173870934.
  5. ^ "Author returns to Himalayan Golden Age". International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation (UIAA). 21 January 2009. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
  6. ^ Trevor Braham obituary

External links[]

  • [1] The Boardman Tasker Prize
  • [2] The Himalayan Club
  • [3] Swissinfo.ch
  • [4] Albert Eggler obituary, the Independent
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