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Tatoosh Range

Tatoosh Range
Tatoosh Range WA MRNP1.jpg
The Tatoosh Range from Paradise, in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington
Highest point
Elevation 6,971 ft (2,125 m)
Geography
Country United States
State Washington
Range coordinates 46°45′N 121°42′W / 46.75°N 121.7°W / 46.75; -121.7Coordinates: 46°45′N 121°42′W / 46.75°N 121.7°W / 46.75; -121.7
Parent range Cascades

The Tatoosh Range is a mountain range located in Mount Rainier National Park and the adjacent Tatoosh Wilderness in the state of Washington, in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. The range runs roughly east–west, beginning with the southeastern Tatoosh Peak and concluding with the western Eagle Peak. The range includes 13 prominent named peaks. The peaks average approximately 6,000 ft (1,800 m) in summit elevation, with the highest, Unicorn Peak, measuring at a height of 6,917 ft (2,108 m). Visitors to Mount Rainier can view the range from the Paradise area, and the range is popular with hikers.

While some of the peaks, including the distinctive Unicorn Peak, are named for their appearance, others are named in honor of notable individuals. Lane Peak, for example, honors Franklin Knight Lane, former United States Secretary of the Interior.

Like other ranges, the Tatoosh Range has seen its share of casualties. In 1924, an assistant mountain guide named Paul Moser fell to his death attempting to scale Unicorn Peak by a new route. In 2004, 16-year-old Vasiliy Kozorezov fell and died while hiking off-trail below the Eagle Peak Trail. Unexpected or extreme weather conditions can also cause problems. In 1946, heavy fog caused park employees Donald Carlson and James Pratt to get lost in the range for two days, but as the weather improved, they were able to find their way back.

In 1910, a USGS crew made the first recorded summit of the peaks. In the 1920s and 1930s, farmers regularly let their cattle graze along the Tatoosh Range. In 1937, attempts were made to film the movie Thin Ice on location, but blizzards made it impossible, so the crew and actors Tyrone Power and Sonja Henie returned to California to shoot the movie in a studio, while director Dave Butler and a cameraman stayed behind to collect footage of the Tatoosh Range to use for the background images.


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