Adolphus Warburton Moore

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Born1841 (1841)
Died1887 (aged 4546)
KnownforMountaineering
Adolphus Warburton Moore
1871 portrait of Moore (top right) with Lucy Walker, seated beside her father Frank Walker, and Melchior Anderegg (standing, centre). The identity of the other man is not known.
Born1841 (1841)
Died1887 (aged 4546)
EmployerCivil service
Known forMountaineering

Adolphus Warburton Moore (1841–1887) (known generally as A. W. Moore) was a British civil servant and mountaineer.

The son of Major John Arthur Moore and Sophia Stewart Yates,[citation needed] Moore was an India Office official from 1858 to 1887, holding the role of Assistant Secretary, Political Department from 1875 to 1885.[1] He was also private secretary to Lord Randolph Churchill.[2]

Alpinism

Moore made a first ascent during his first visit to the Alps in 1862 and immediately became a central figure in the golden age of alpinism.

Moore's first ascents include:

This last route, the Brenva Spur, was the first to be climbed on the remote southern side of Mont Blanc and exceeded in difficulty anything that had thus far been attempted on the mountain. Moore's description of the Brenva ascent is, according to Claire Engel, 'amongst the finest Alpine tales in existence'.[3]

Moore went to the Caucasus with Douglas Freshfield, Charles Comyns Tucker and the guide François Devouassoud in 1868, making the first ascent by a non-native of Mount Elbrus (the lower of the two summits), the highest mountain in the Caucasus,[4] and the first ascent of Kazbek with the same party.[5]

Commemoration

References

Bibliography

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