*** Welcome to piglix ***

Lincoln Hall (climber)

Lincoln Hall
Personal information
Nationality Australian
Born (1955-12-19)19 December 1955
Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
Died 20 March 2012(2012-03-20) (aged 56)
Camperdown, Sydney, Australia
Climbing career
Type of climber Mountaineer
First ascents Mount Minto, Antarctica (1988), many first Australian ascents of major peaks.
Named routes Hall Route, Carstensz Pyramid (1993)
Major ascents Mount Everest (2006), Makalu (1999), Annapurna II (1983), Dunagiri (1978)

Lincoln Ross Hall OAM (19 December 1955 – 20 March 2012) was a veteran Australian mountain climber, adventurer, author and philanthropist. Hall was part of the first Australian expedition to climb Mount Everest in 1984, which successfully forged a new route, and he reached the summit of the mountain on his second attempt in 2006, surviving the night at 8,700 m (28,543 ft) on descent.

Hall was a founding Director of the Australian Himalayan Foundation. He was the author of seven books, was a founding member of the philanthropic organisation the Australian Himalayan Foundation and was a speaker, sharing his experiences with audiences around the world.

In 1987 Hall was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia for service to mountaineering and in 2010 he won the Australian Geographic Society's Lifetime of Adventure award. He was a life member of the Australian National University Mountaineering Club. He died of mesothelioma aged 56 on 20 March 2012.

Hall was born in Canberra, Australia, and went to Telopea Park High School. He studied Zoology at the Australian National University and learned to climb at climbing crags in the Australian Capital Territory, most notably Booroomba Rocks (where he pioneered a number of classic routes). He developed his ice climbing skills in the Snowy Mountains at Blue Lake and trained to climb by traversing the walls of buildings at his university campus.

Hall had his real start with mountaineering when he participated in the Australian National University Mountaineering Club expeditions to New Zealand from 1975 to 1978. This culminated in the ANUMC 1978 expedition to the Himalayan peak Dunagiri (7066m) in India. Hall and his climbing partner Tim Macartney-Snape (Australia) were invited by Expedition Leader Peter Cocker to join him at Col Camp so the pair could force through a route through to the summit ridge. They did so then made an audacious push for the summit after spending a night out on the mountain. Hall was pivotal in the successful summit bid by Macartney-Snape.


...
Wikipedia

...