Polar Research Today:

The "Fake Peak" Serials
1910-1998

 

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Belmore Browne, 1910
Fake Peak I 1910

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American Alpine Journal, 1958
Fake Peak II 1957

As shown in The New York Times
Fake Peak III 1998

 


DIO's Denali Denial & the Media Campaign for a 'Final Solution' to Cook as Discoverer

1 The DIO Genesis & One-sided Media 'Controversy'

by Russell W. Gibbons

On November 22, 1998 this writer received a call from a reporter at The New York Times asking for materials which would support the claims of Frederick A. Cook to the first ascent of Mt. McKinley in September 1906. They were interested, he said, because of the "recent" article in the Baltimore journal, DIO, which had earlier in the year proclaimed that the Cook-McKinley controversy was "closed" because of the research of a contributor, Robert M. Bryce. ......... guys.jpg (14284 bytes)

It was the "Final Solution," declared Dennis Rawlins, founder and publisher of the journal, a critic of orthodox history of science with a somewhat mixed track record for accuracy and timing (more on this later). Heading the cheering section in the background was the indefatigable Bradford Washburn, spiritual heir to Cook's critic of his 1906 climb and the creator of "Fake Peak," the 89-year-old thesis that was supposed to have demolished the explorer, but never did.

The sense of urgency was apparent in the request by the reporter, John Tierney, who asked that the materials (the reprint edition of To the Top of the Continent, the last five numbers of Polar Priorities and a copy of the balanced profile on the controversy in the Baltimore Sun in September) by express mail to his home the next day. With these, the writer strongly suggested that Tierney talk to Ted Heckathorn of Seattle, the leader of the 1994 Ruth Glacier Expedition which determined that Cook had been at least 7,000 feet higher than his detractors at DIO had declared.

The timing was important because Tierney acknowledged their receipt on November 24, had talked with Heckathorn that day, and was working on his story. As it turned out, he had to file his story early on the 25th because it appeared on Thanksgiving morning, November 26 on the bottom front page of the Times. By any objective review of the history of this story, it had been written and was waiting only for reaction quotes, which were selective and exclusionary.

Heckathorn, leader of a party of five seasoned-climbers who had all summited McKinley, was not quoted because, as Tierney told him, "if you don't speak for the Cook Society, I am not interested in what you have to say." Heckathorn is not a member and has always remained an independent scholar, as well as being an alpine and arctic traveler.

Thus the Times, with its vast syndication network and prestige, had participated in the DIO mission to "close" a historical controversy without even a semblance of balance, refusing to quote the climber, who along with Washburn, has contributed the most to the literature of Cook and McKinley. They declined to expand upon Cook's pioneer role in circumnavigating the mountain, the 1994 expedition that determined he had been at 11,500 feet in 1906, and failed to mention the previous dubious "explorer exposes" of DIO's Rawlins.

The media campaign would expand on two other fronts: Times syndicate pick-up stories and an Associated Press summary that also would gain attention--both of them at home and overseas. Yet just a week previous, another assault on Cook and McKinley was published in an Alaska newspaper, the Anchorage Daily News. While quoting the DIO charges, its thrust was a Washburn-commissioned study touted as "global positioning."

The Anchorage newspaper at least sought out and quoted Heckathorn, but the article repeatedly used "debate" and "controversy" in its article yet failed to present a balanced account. Cook critics were "experts" or "researchers" while his advocated became "amateur polar historians." The piece, occupying the sports section, was accompanied by an editorial commentary by the sports editor declaring that the debate had "ended."

Typically, both newspapers declined to publish responses from members of the Society or Heckathorn. This curious practice of one-sided journalism had its roots in the DIO article of early 1998. Thus reviewing these origins has merit.

Rawlins, a sometimes astronomer in Baltimore, pricks the underside of the scientific establishment with an occasional journal called DIO which is subtitled The Journal of Hysterical Astronomy. Its contents goes for both the funny bone and the jugular. He has been a critic of both Cook and Peary, and has consigned both to what he feels is a historical ashcan.

In a Washington radio station on February 25, 1997, Rawlins teamed up with newly-published author Bryce, a librarian at a community college in Maryland, to discuss the latter's new book about both polar explorers, Cook & Peary: The Controversy Resolved (Stackpole, 1997). On the Diane Rehm Show on station WAMU, a match was made and two would-be debunkers joined forces to front for a third party who has made his lifelong obsession the denial of Cook on the summit of Mount McKinley.

Thus did Washburn, defender of the established truth of Mount McKinley/a.k.a. Mount Denali, find two converts in his grand crusade to "unmask the exploration hoax of the century."

Publisher Rawlins sets the tone in his editorial mission statement: "Each issue of DIO is printed on paper which is certified as acid-free. The ink isn't." He also cautions against the "scientific mufia" (Rawlins' version of "mafia"?). Nursing a 25-year-old grudge against a pro-Cook writer whose publisher chose the same release date as Rawlins' Peary at the Pole: Fact or Fiction? (Luce 1973), he has over the years combined scholarly papers with pure vitriol against Cook and in this latest tirade supplements primary contributor Bryce with a summary that drips in venom.

The cover of DIO (vol. 7 nos. 2-3) is billed as a special double issue, December 1997 to July 1998. The cover titles recall the lurid conflict journalism of the Cook-Peary era and later tabloids.

Not to let a good grudge to rest--even if it is a quarter of a century old--he again trashes the conclusion of Eames, whose book Winner Lose All: Frederick Cook and the Theft of the North Pole (Little, Brown, 1973) disagreed with his thesis. What Rawlins could not tolerate was the fact that his tome was relegated to a "double title" review with Eames because of the similarity of book subjects (in some instances he was ignored completely while Eames received generally favorable reviews). In an aside of self-congratulation of the efforts of his new DIO contributor, Rawlins fawns about Bryce's "epochal recovery and analysis" of Cook's "uncropped summit photo" and then proceeds to lay the seeds of doubt about the veracity of the historian of the Frederick A. Cook Society, which had since 1990 made available every uncatalogued scrap of notes, data, clippings, images and photos at the Collection then deposited at the Sullivan County Museum to the same Bob Bryce.

'HONEST BROKERS' AND 'COOKITES'

In the rarefied and teckie world of Rawlins there are but two camps: those who agree with him and those who reside in doctrinal error and/or ignorance. In 1973 they were the "Cook movement...of decent, if overinnocent folk" (Rawlins, 1973, p. 93) to today's "Cookites" who he suggests are now folks who are not so innocent when it comes to records and photos (Rawlins, 1998, p. 84).

That is a variation of the derision initiated many years ago by Washburn, whose zeal and passion to discredit Cook--described as "obsessive" earlier this year in Climbing (March 1998)--promoted a 1956 journey to the tiny hamlet of Talkeetna at the base of McKinley, designed only to discredit the expedition of Walter Gonnason (the seventh to summit McKinley), which had sought to establish Cook's route on the east ridge. "Cookies" is the tag which scholar Washburn uses when seeking to deny his opponents any intellectual dialogue.

Those who have attacked Cook on McKinley over ninety years of this century have become in the lexicon of Rawlins "honest brokers" (Rawlins, 1998, p. 84), referring specifically to Belmore Browne, Herschel Parker and Bradford Washburn. Despite the "smoking gun" of the Peary Arctic Club in the 1909–10 efforts to discredit Cook (see Ted Heckathorn in Polar Priorities, numbers 14-15-16 and 17, issues 1994, 1995, 1996 and 1997 as well as this issue) Rawlins and Bryce in the current DIO assault just think that was "coincidental." These "brokers" deserve an apology from--we may assume--the Cookite folks, according to Rawlins (1998, p. 84).

They are going to have to wait. The Parker-Browne legacy was taken up by Washburn, who has declined to face Cook advocates on three separate occasions since 1996 (Alaska Airlines Magazine, 1998) and has spent his retirement years after leaving the Boston Museum of Science in securing anti-Cook "resolutions" by any and every group he has had an association with over the years. Just as another 1930s--era "scientist," William Herbert Hobbs, busied himself securing letters to deny Cook's early release from prison, so has Washburn sought to deny any status of Cook as an explorer (see Arctic, 1983).

'DR' AS SHOWBOATER: SMOKING GUN IN THE FOOT

Rawlins (who prefers to be known as "DR" in his commentary) had a 1989 revival of his contention that Peary was a hoaxer, but his assertion that he had found calculations in a long-locked archives at Johns Hopkins University which would finally sink the Peary claim proved to be a bust. In an extensive profile in Baltimore Magazine (July 1989) writer Kevin McManus said that DR was someone "who has practically made a career...of trashing other people's pet theories." His Peary charge, he said, was "a smoking gun which has...blown a hole in his foot."

It turns out that the calculations which DR had found and claimed were navigational compilations showing Peary had not been near the Pole, were in fact the serial numbers of his chronometers. The blooper prompted some in the geographic community and the extended fraternity of planetary specialists to suggest that DR was somewhat of an "obnoxious, glory- starved showboater," McManus wrote.

That may be unfair. After all, DR has published on polar topics in the Proceedings of the US Naval Institute, Polar Notes and a variety of journals known to those who deal with sky and space. Yet he also knows how to deal with the media --as did Peary and Cook in their day. And he used "media contacts" which have given him notable headline attention.

The 1989 DR statement, asserted that the document he found was presumed to have been made by Peary at what he said was the Pole, demonstrated that the explorer was actually 105 nautical miles from the Pole. He went to the Washington Post with the story and soon got "egg on his scientific face" when a group hired by the National Geographic Society found that what DR said were compass variations at the Pole, were in reality the serial numbers of Peary's chronometer watches.

The case for Peary was falling apart at the same time, through Wally Herbert's commissioned report to the NGS and the opening of the Peary Papers at the Library of Congress --previously having been restricted by the family. Rawlins had continued the arguments of early Peary critics such as Thomas F. Hall, J. Gordon Hayes, Henshaw Ward and others (with scant acknowledgment) and the controversy over his blooper may have brought greater attention to the Peary question.

'RUSH-TO-JUDGMENT RAWLINS': PEARY & BYRD

Indeed, DR has continued his pattern of finding "smoking guns" in polar history, again with little more than his opinion surviving a dramatic announcement. The latest instance was another explorer as an alleged fraud--Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd. In his 1973 book, DR had concluded that Byrd's 1926 aerial flight to the North Pole had been faked. In 1996 the archivist of the Byrd Polar Research Center at The Ohio State University, Rai Goerler, discovered Byrd's 1926 handwritten diary and notebook when cataloguing the papers of the explorer's collection.

DR insisted on examining the diary, and concluded that erased sextant readings that differed from those in the official report (also to the sponsoring NGS). Again DR rushed to the press and declared that the erasures proved that Byrd had come no more than 150 miles from the Pole. (Washington Post, New York Times, May 9, 1996). The Ohio State archivist and a professor of astronomy disagreed, as did a third navigator.

This year Ohio State University Press published the diary, which was edited by Goerler (To the Pole, OSU Press, 1998), which included the following footnote:

Dennis Rawlins...inspected the diary and the navigational calculations and notes...According to Rawlins, the erased readings prove that Byrd came no closer to the Pole than 150 miles. Rawlins report is contained in a 15-page letter of May 4, 1996, now in the OSU University Archives. Dr. Gerald Newsom, professor of astronomy at Ohio State, also studied the diary. His evaluation is that the erasures are inconclusive...but made by a navigator who realized that he had made an error in his calculations. According to Newsom, Byrd at a minimum got within "tens of miles" of the North Pole and may have reached it. (OSU University Archives)

For the second time in seven years, the man described by Baltimore Magazine as an "intellectual swashbuckler, an intellectual gadfly" was caught with his academic pants down. It would take less than a year for the new anti-Cook axis of Bryce, Washburn and Rawlins to mesh with DIO--as its forum.

Bryce, who had observed in his book that Rawlins had "a general disdain for those who did not agree with him" and was "flippant" in his remarks and "put off many of his readers... (with his) rhetorical excesses" (Cook & Peary, p. 757) now joined forces with the swashbuckler and the "obsessed" Washburn.

It would be a troika worthy of the Parker-Browne-Peary alliance of ninety years ago.

NOTES 1 / THE 'DIO' GENESIS & ONE-SIDED MEDIA 'CONTROVERSY'

Bryce, Robert M. Cook & Peary: The Controversy, Resolved, Stackpole, 1997.
Bryce, Robert M. "Mt. McKinley Hoax Exposed," DIO, Dec. 1997-July 1998, 7:2-3.
Cook, Sheldon S.R. "Concerning the Mt. McKinley Diary of Dr. Frederick A. Cook," in To the Top of the Continent, 90th Anniversary edition, AlpenBooks, 1996.
Donahue, Bill. "Dissent on Denali," Climbing Magazine, May 1, 1998, no. 176.
----. "Quest for McKinley," Alaska Airlines Magazine, July 1998, 22:7.
Eames, Hugh. Winner Lose All: Dr. Cook & The Theft of the North Pole. Little, Brown & Co., 1973.
----. "A Reply to Dennis Rawlins," 1973. Frederick A. Cook Collection, Byrd Polar Research Archives.
Gibbons, Russell W. "Fatal Flaws in the Author's 'fact, lack of care or logic.'" Frederick A. Cook Society Membership News, July 1997, 4:2.
Goerler, Raimund E., ed. To the Pole: The Diary & Notebook of Richard E. Byrd, 1925–1928. Ohio State University Press, 1998.
Heckathorn, Ted. "Mt. McKinley: Who Reached the Top First?" Polar Priorities, vol. 14, 1994.
----. "Belmore Brown's Slippery Slope" and "New Rumbles on Ruth Glacier: McKinleygate II." Polar Priorities, vol. 15, 1995.
----. "Dr. Cook and His McKinley Critics: A Review of the Debunkers from 1909 to 1996." Polar Priorities, vol. 16, 1996.
----. "Sins of Omission & Contradiction: What Was Ignored in 'Cook & Peary' and Why." Polar Priorities, vol. 17, 1997.
Rawlins, Dennis. Peary at the Pole: Fact or Fiction. Luce, 1973.
----. Commentary in DIO, 7:2-3, December 1997–July 1998.
Waale, Hans. Papers and Correspondence, 1956–1984, Frederick A. Cook Collection, Byrd Polar Research Center.
|Washburn, Bradford. Letter to the Editor. Arctic, March 1984, 37:1.

 


 

2 Forgotten Prelude: The 1903 Circumnavigation

 

by Ralph M. Myerson, MD

IN PHOTO: The 1903 Expedition Members (from left): Ralph Shainwald, Fred Printz, Frederick Cook, Robert Dunn and John Carroll. (photo by Walter Miller)

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By the turn of the century, Dr. Frederick A. Cook had established a reputation and was internationally known as an experienced and capable explorer. His service as surgeon and ethnologist for Robert E. Peary's North Greenland Expedition of 1891-92 had earned him well deserved honors and Peary's personal praise for his exploratory expertise and for his "unruffled patience and coolness in an emergency." In 1897-99 he had served as surgeon on the Belgian Antarctic Expedition, the first to winter in the Antarctic, and he was generally credited for having saved the expedition by his medical skills in preventing and treating scurvy and by the first use of phototherapy in the seasonal affective disorder (SAD syndrome). Additionally, he was credited with having devised the means of freeing the ice-bound Belgica after it had been trapped in the antarctic ice pack for about a year. While on the Belgica, he had formed a life-long friendship with a young Roald Amundsen who regarded Dr. Cook as his arctic mentor. In 1893 and 1894, he had conducted private "cruises" to Greenland. Both trips had encountered difficulties, the 1894 venture on the Miranda having ended in near disaster when the ship struck a reef off the coast of Greenland forcing Cook to travel over ninety miles in an open boat to obtain a rescue ship. There were no casualties, in fact, the survivors were so impressed with their experience that they formed the nucleus of the Arctic Club of America.

Despite a return to a successful medical practice, Cook could not resist the lure of adventure and new exploration. He turned his attention to Mount McKinley, North America's highest mountain, whose summit had yet to be attained. As Cook explained: "To men of a polar turn of mind it is easy to be diverted from solitudes of the Arctic ice fields to the snowy slopes of great altitudes. Polar exploration and high mountain climbing are twin efforts which bring about a similar train of joys and sorrows."1 

The mountain had been well known to the Alaskan natives, who called it Denali, "the high one." The first European sighting of the great mountain probably occurred in the spring of 1794 when the British Captain George Vancouver was exploring the upper end of Cook Inlet, the large bay on Alaska's southern coast discovered by James Cook in 1778. Vancouver described the view to the north, mentioning the presence of "distant stupendous mountains covered with snow and apparently detached from each other...."2 He undoubtedly was describing the range of mountains known today as the Alaska Range.

After Alaska became a U.S. possession in 1867, there had been a relative lull in its exploration under U.S. government sponsorship. 

The full appreciation of Mount McKinley's magnificence and height was not brought to public attention until William Dickey, a Princeton student turned gold prospector in 1896, made the following report to the New York Sun on January 24, 1897: 

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"We named our great peak Mount McKinley, after William McKinley of Ohio, who had been nominated for the Presidency.... We have no doubt that this peak is the highest in North America, and estimate that it is over 20,000 feet high."3 Dickey's estimate of McKinley's stature was quite accurate, its height being confirmed at 20,320 feet after the turn of the century. Until that time, 18,000 foot Mount Saint Elias was believed to be the continent's highest, and Mount Logan was still unknown.

After Alaska became a U.S. possession in 1867, there had been a relative lull in its exploration under U.S. government sponsorship. The full appreciation of Mount McKinley's magnificence and height was not brought to public attention until William Dickey, a Princeton student turned gold prospector in 1896, made the following report to the New York Sun on January 24, 1897: "We named our great peak Mount McKinley, after William McKinley of Ohio, who had been nominated for the Presidency.... We have no doubt that this peak is the highest in North America, and estimate that it is over 20,000 feet high."3 Dickey's estimate of McKinley's stature was quite accurate, its height being confirmed at 20,320 feet after the turn of the century. Until that time, 18,000 foot Mount Saint Elias was believed to be the continent's highest, and Mount Logan was still unknown.

In 1898, more than thirty years after the acquisition of Alaska, the U.S. Geological Survey began extensive Alaskan explorations. A series of expeditions ensued, including those of Eldridge and Muldrow, Spurr and Post, and Peters and Brooks in 1898; Lieutenant Joseph Herron in 1899, and Brooks and Reaburn in 1902. In 1903, Judge James Wickersham, the colorful U.S. District Judge for Alaska, and a party of four others, made the first serious attempt to climb Mount McKinley. Following a branch of the Peters Glacier, the party reached an altitude of about 8,100 feet, at which point they were disappointed in finding that the glacier they were following did not connect with the high ridge they were attempting to reach and the party was forced to turn back.4 

With these explorations as a background, Dr. Frederick A. Cook planned and undertook his 1903 planned assault on the summit of Mount McKinley. Harper's Monthly Magazine financed part of the expedition. Robert Dunn, then 26 years old, a former reporter for the New York Commercial Advertiser, was chosen to serve as geologist, having been recommended to Cook by Lincoln Steffens, the editor of the Commercial Advertiser. In 1898 Dunn had been a gold prospector on the Klondike Trail and in 1900 had explored the Mount Wrangell's volcano. He had also served as a reporter in Martinique two weeks after the disastrous eruption of Mount Pelée. Also included in the party were Fred Printz, who had served as a horse packer on the 1902 Brooks expedition, and Jack Carroll as assistant packer. Ralph Shainwald of New York, a fellow member of the Arctic Club and a participant in the Baldwin-Ziegler Polar Expedition, was designated as botanist. Shainwald's wealthy father had contributed $1,000 to ensure a place for his son on Cook's expedition. The fifth member of the party, Walter Miller, had been recruited in Seattle as photographer for the expedition. None of the party had had extensive high mountaineering experience.

On June 9, 1903, the assembled party boarded the Alaska coastal steamer, Santa Ana, its decks loaded with gold seekers, dogs, pigs, cattle, chicken and horses. On June 24, the steamer arrived at its destination, Tyonek, on the north shore of Cook Inlet.  

In addition to the endless torment of the mosquitoes, the pack horses were attacked by hordes of horse flies often resulting in bleeding and loss of skin. The strain of the journey was continuing to tell on the men. Tempers flared; interpersonal relations deteriorated and threats of mutiny arose. Dunn continued his written tirade against Cook. Progress continued, however, and by August 3 they were in the drainage area of the Kuskokwim River. By this time there were only four sacks of flour remaining, but fortunately, they shot a grizzly bear and the food supply was temporarily restored. Caribou became plentiful.  

On August 14, Printz led the party to a Brooks campsite, estimated to be 14 miles from the summit of Mt. McKinley. They had finally reached the terminus of the Peters Glacier on the north side of the mountain--the beginning of Alfred Brooks' suggested climbing route. They also stumbled on a campsite of Judge Wickersham's party, salvaging a much-needed container of salt. A dedicated assault was now made along what Cook termed the "south-west arête," also called Cook's Shoulder, and now known as the Northwest Buttress of the North Peak. On the night of August 29, they made a campsite clinging to the steep icy slopes at an estimated altitude of 9,800 feet. After reaching an estimated altitude of 11,300 feet on August 31, they were confronted by an impenetrable wall with no discernible passage around it and were forced to admit defeat. 

Summarizing his party's admirable effort on the great mountain's flanks, Dr. Cook related: "Though thwarted by an insurmountable wall, we had ascended Mt. McKinley far enough to get a good view of its entire western face... Avalanche after avalanche rush down the steep cliffs and deposit their downpour of ice, rock, and snow on the (Peters) glacier."5 Cook also took note of the presence of two very large glaciers that drained the eastern slope of Mt. McKinley. He named Fidele Glacier after his daughter, describing it has probably the largest in interior Alaska, taking the output of several small glaciers about the northern and eastern slopes. It then takes a northeastern course, is joined by two large glaciers, descends to the Chulitna River where its face is eight miles wide. Ruth Glacier, the second glacier, begins among the amphitheaters about the southeastern slopes, takes a small tributary from Mount Foraker and others from smaller mountains to the east, descending southward into the Chulitna River. This he named after his then three-year-old daughter Ruth.

Cook was reluctant to descend the mountain by the route that they had taken. "Our purposes could be best served if we could cross the range and get into the Sushnita Valley; but the possibility of such an effort seemed doubtful in the time at our disposal, unless we were fortunate to find a pass within a few days' traveling. Accordingly, we resolved to make a desperate attempt to cross the eastern slope of this great range, and, in the event of failure in this, our alternative was to make the deep waters of the Toklat and then by raft to the Tanana River." 6

 The party moved east about 50 miles, fortunately locating a pass that horses could use and thus were able to complete their circumnavigation of Mount McKinley. In its course, the expedition passed the tongue of the Muldrow Glacier, and Cook appears to have recognized it as the "best way to climb McKinley."7 The exhausted party, near depletion, barely managed to reach the Chulitna River, where they built two rafts and abandoned the horses. After a wild and reckless run down the churning canyon waters, the party finally met some prospectors and returned safely to Cook Inlet on September 26, three months after their departure from Tyonek.

 At the Arctic Club's annual dinner in December, 1903, Cook presented an account of his McKinley Expedition illustrated with the excellent photographs he and Miller had taken.

 NOTES 2 / FORGOTTEN PRELUDE

1. Cook, FA. "Round Mt. McKinley," Bull Am Geo Socy, 36:321-327, 1904. 2.Vancouver, G. Voyage of Discovery to the North Pacific Ocean, and Round the World, vol. 3, 1798. Quoted by F. Beckey in Mount McKinley: Icy Crown of North America, 1993, Seattle: The Mountaineers, p. 41. 3. New York Sun, January 24, 1897. 4. Wickersham, J. Old Yukon Tales, Trails and Trials. Washington: Washington Law Book Co., 1938, pp. 288-89. 5. Cook, FA. To the Top of the Continent, London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1908, p. 92. 6. Cook, FA. "America's Unconquered Mountain," Harper's Monthly Magazine, 108:335, 1904. 7. Washburn B. Letter to Warren B. Cook, December 4, 1998

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3 Ignoring the Pegasus Peak Sketch in Cook's Diary

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by Sheldon S.R. Cook

Robert M. Bryce, in his DIO attack on Cook's account of his ascent of Mount McKinley fails to take account of the significance of the sketch on page 52 of his Mount McKinley Diary. The sketch depicts features of the main mass of Mount McKinley located beyond the East Ridge which can only be seen from the crest of the East Ridge at 11,500 feet to 11,700 feet near Traleika Col. These features are not visible from below in the approach to the mountain up Ruth Glacier because they are hidden by the East Ridge which towers between Ruth Glacier and the central massif. They were unknown before Cook sketched them in September 1906, no climber or explorer had reached that point before him.

The sketch on page 52 of the diary is incontrovertible proof that Cook reached the crest of the East Ridge of Mount McKinley near Traleika Col at an elevation of 11,500 feet to 11,700 feet. Hans C. Waale, who had studied Cook's climb in detail for years, recognized in 1974 that this sketch proved that Cook reached this point and that it was evidence of the greatest importance, explosive as he termed it. The Ruth Glacier Expedition of 1994 under the leadership of Ted Heckathorn, with climbers Vernon Tejas, Scott Fischer, Doug Nixon, Walter Gonnason, Marty Raney and James Garlinghouse, reached the crest of the East Ridge at 11,700 feet in July 1994 and verified the accuracy of Cook's sketch. It is appaling that both The New York Times and the Fairbanks Daily News ignored this.

The demonstration that Cook indisputably reached the crest of the East Ridge at approximately 11,700 feet through the verification of his sketch on page 52 of his diary proves that a fundamental, primary assertion of the Barrille Affidavit is false. Ed Barrille (also Barrill) asserted in his infamous affidavit that Cook did not reach the summit of Mount McKinley, that he stopped at the southern gateway to Ruth Amphitheatre at about 5,000 feet and then returned to his base camp. We now know beyond a doubt that Barrille swore falsely when he alleged that Cook turned back at 5,000 feet, and this vastly increases the possibility that he also lied when he asserted that Cook did not reach the summit.

Bryce may believe that Barrille's Affidavit "makes more sense" than Cook's account of his ascent but Barrille's Affidavit is clearly false, at least in part, and its credibility as to the remainder of his assertions is severely shaken. Bryce ignores the vital importance of the sketch on page 52 of Cook's Diary. This decisive and obvious evidence is wholly ignored. 

In the book, Cook & Peary: The Polar Controversy, Resolved, Bryce concludes that Cook did not reach the summit of Mount McKinley in 1906, and speaks thereafter of Cook's claimed ascent as a "fake." For his conclusion Bryce relies principally upon photographs in Cook's narrative of his ascent, To the Top of the Continent, bearing captions which falsely state or imply that the photographs in question are of features at the highest elevations on Mount McKinley--including the summit peak--when in fact the photographs depict features at low elevations in the southeastern approaches to the massif. Bryce also relies upon the relatively short time within which the climb to the summit was achieved--eight days--which he regards as impossible or nearly so; and, upon the assertion of Barrille, Cook's sole companion on the climb to the summit, that Cook did not reach the top nor indeed any elevation above 5,500 feet on the mountain (Cook & Peary, pp. 795-844).

But there is a body of evidence which strongly indicates that Cook did attain the summit of Mount McKinley in 1906. Primary are his descriptions in his book, To the Top of the Continent, of the physical features of the mountain at the highest elevations--the first given to the world--some of which cannot have been seen from below, others of which in their exact character can only be known if seen at close range and traversed.

The photographs bearing erroneous captions, declaring the features portrayed to be located at high elevation on the mountain when in fact they are not, if considered separately and independently from the entire body of the evidence pertaining to Cook's climb, place Cook's claim in a negative light. 

Viewed in isolation from the evidence as a whole, the erroneously captioned photographs in Cook's book would tend to cause doubt that Cook had in fact climbed to the top.The photographs obviously do not prove that Cook did not climb to the summit, but merely--if indeed he acted deliberately--that he falsified captions. 

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He almost certainly was unable to secure good, clear photographs at the highest elevations because of snow conditions and bitter cold, or, possibly because he left his camera at his 6,000 foot camp in order to lighten his load to the greatest degree possible for the last segment of his climb.

It should be pointed out that it has not been proven that the peak depicted in the photograph captioned by Cook as the summit is not in fact the summit or a peak in the summit formation. But even if it were positively demonstrated that the peak in Cook's summit photograph is not the true summit but another--even Fake Peak--this fact would not establish that Cook did not reach the top. These photographs may be,