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Isabella Charlet-Straton

Isabella Charlet-Straton
Straton.jpg
Personal information
Nationality British
Born 1838
Sussex, England
Died 12 April 1918
La Roche-sur-Foron, France
Climbing career
Type of climber Mountaineer
Known for first winter ascent of Mont Blanc
First ascents Aiguille du Moine
Named routes Pointe Isabella, Pointe de la Persévérance

Mary Isabella Charlet-Straton (née Straton; 1838 – 12 April 1918) was a British female mountain climber. She made several first ascents in the Alps with Emmeline Lewis Lloyd as well as the first winter ascent of Mont Blanc with her future husband in January 1876. The peak Pointe Isabella was named in her honour after she had taken part in its first ascent.

Straton was born in Sussex, England in 1838. When she was eight years old she moved to Kingston upon Hull and relocated again at the age of seventeen to London in pursuit of a better education. Following the deaths of her parents and sisters, she inherited the Straton family fortune in her twenties, becoming financially independent with an income of roughly £4,000 per year.

Straton was introduced to climbing through her friend Emmeline Lewis Lloyd, with whom she travelled throughout the Alps and Pyrenees on hiking and climbing expeditions in the 1860s–70s. One of their first climbs was an attempt on the Matterhorn in 1869. In 1870 they became one of the first women to climb Monte Viso and the following year did make the first ascent of Aiguille du Moine. When Lewis-Lloyd retired from climbing in 1873, Straton climbed with Jean Charlet, a French mountain guide from Chamonix who had accompanied her and Lewis-Lloyd on their previous expeditions.

Straton and Charlet climbed together for twenty years and eventually married. Some of the ascents they made together included the Aiguille du Midi, the Aiguille de Blaitière, the Dents du Midi, and the Dom. In 1875 they made the first ascent of a peak on the Aiguille de Triolet, which Charlet named Pointe Isabella. This peak actually has two summits joined by a small ridge. The northern peak in 3,761 metres (12,339 ft) high and is the usual one that is climbed. They climbed a new peak in the Aiguilles Rouges in 1881, which they named Pointe de la Persévérance in honour of "the perseverance that they had shown before they had dared to confess their affection for one another".


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Wikipedia

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