Chandra Prakash Vohra

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Born
India
Died(2026-02-21)21 February 2026
India
Occupationsgeologist, glaciologist and Mountaineer
KnownforMountaineering
Chandra Prakash Vohra
1965 Indian stamp dedicated to the 1965 Everest Expedition
Born
India
Died(2026-02-21)21 February 2026
India
Occupationsgeologist, glaciologist and Mountaineer
Known forMountaineering
SpouseSatinder Vohra
AwardsPadma Shri
Arjuna Award
National Mineral Award
Nain Singh – Kishen Singh Lifetime Achievement Award
Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi meets the members of Indian Everest Expedition 1965 on the occasion of Golden Jubilee of this on 20 May 2015
Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi meets the members of Indian Everest Expedition 1965 on the occasion of Golden Jubilee of this on 20 May 2015

Chandra Prakash Vohra was an Indian geologist, glaciologist and a mountaineer who climbed Mount Everest, the highest peak in the world, in 1965.[1][2] He was one of the 9 summiters of the first successful Indian Everest Expeditions that climbed Mount Everest in May 1965 led by Captain M S Kohli. On 24 May 1965 Vohra and Ang Kami Sherpa together reached the top of Mount Everest.[3][4][5][6][7][8] He was the first Indian civilian to scale the peak[9] a feat he accomplished on 24 May 1965.[2] A winner of the Arjuna Award (1965),[10][11] and the National Mineral Award, Vohra was honoured by the Government of India in 1965, with the award of Padma Shri, the fourth highest Indian civilian award.[12][13] He was the 4th Indian man and 19th man in the world to climb Mount Everest.

Chandra Prakash Singh Vohra did his schooling in Jammu and Kashmir[14] and started his career with the Geological Survey of India (GSI). He spent his entire career with GSI becoming the first director of the Division for Snow, Ice and Glacier Studies and retired in 1994 as its director general.[2][14][15] A geologist by profession, he carried out several geological expeditions and is known to have visited many glaciers around the world. He participated in three Everest expeditions and summitted the peak in 1965,[16] becoming the first Indian civilian to achieve the feat.[2][14] In 1973, he was part of a team that explored Antarctica and was successful in camping at the southern tip of the continent.[16] He was the leader of the landing group of the First Indian Expedition to Antarctica in 1981.[2]

Honors and awards

See also

References

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