Andrew "Sandy" Irvine was one of the mountaineers (the other being George Mallory) who attempted to make a first ascent of Mount Everest in 1924. He was born in Birkenhead England on 8 April 1902, to a family with strong Scottish and Welsh roots, and was educated at Birkenhead School, Shrewsbury School and Merton College, Oxford. He was a keen sportsman and excelled at rowing, and was a member of the crew that won the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race in 1923.
Irvine was compassionate, expressive, shy and creative. He was also being immensely fit and strong, and possessed a natural engineering genius to fix or improvise almost anything mechanical. During the First World War, whilst still a schoolboy, he submitted to the War Office a design for an interrupter gear which would allow a machine gun to fire from a propeller plane without damaging the blades.
In 1923 he was chosen for a university expedition to Spitzbergen, where he excelled on every front; and, recommended by the Spitzbergen expedition leader, Noel Odell, he was selected for the forthcoming 1924 Everest expedition when he was still a 21 year old undergraduate on the grounds that he might be the "superman" that the expedition felt it needed.
His companion and friend George Mallory later wrote home, having set sail for the Himalayas, that Irvine "could be relied on for anything except perhaps conversation". He was later to make major, crucial, innovations to the expedition's professionally designed oxygen sets that radically improved their functionality, lightness, and strength. He also maintained the expedition’s cameras, camp beds, primus stoves and many other devices. He was universally popular and respected by his elder colleagues for his ingenuity, companionability and unstinting hard work.
The ascent itself took place in early June, and the last day that the climbers were seen was 8 June 1924. Keen-sighted expedition colleague Noel Odell reported seeing them at 12.50 p.m. ascending one of the major "steps" on the ridge and "going strongly for the top" but no evidence thus far has proved conclusively that they reached the summit. They never returned to high camp and died somewhere high on the mountain. It is still uncertain if they ever reached the summit, and Irvine's body has never been recovered.
In 1999, Mallory's body was found at 26,760 ft (8,155 m) on the North Face of Everest by an American expedition. Two details noted when Mallory's body was discovered further fuelled the speculation as to whether the pair did in fact reach the summit that day in 1924:
In 1975, a Chinese climber named Wang Hongbao had reported seeing the body of an "old English dead" near the summit. Tragically, he was killed in an avalanche a day later, before the location could be precisely fixed. Current information indicates to most analysts that the body he saw would have been Mallory's. Inspired by the importance of the discovery of Irvine's body and the invaluable camera, high-altitude research expeditions spent weeks on Everest in 2001, 2004 and 2005 but were able to shed little further light on what had previously been known about his fate; speculation and debate continues, as does what is known in mountaineering circles as "The Mystery of Mallory and Irvine".
Trivia
the ghost of a climber has allegedly been seen by other climbers, two of whom in 1975 claimed to have shared a snow hole with the ghost during their climb. Some who have seen him believe this is the ghost of climber Andrew Irvine, who disappeared in an attempt to summit the mountain with George Mallory in 1924.
1902 births | 1924 deaths | Anglo-Scots | English mountain climbers | Natives of Merseyside | Old Salopians
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"Andrew Irvine (mountaineer)".
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