Coast Range, British Columbia

Author: Expedition Members. Climb Year: 1947. Publication Year: 1948.

On 22 July 1947, in the Mount Waddington-Tiedemann district of western British Columbia, Charles Shiverick, of the Harvard Mountaineering Club, lost his life in a snow avalanche on the highest peak of Mount Serra, at about 11,000 feet. A high camp party of four men had made an extended reconnaissance of this peak two days before. They had kicked steps to the top of a long 45-degree snow slope leading to a rock saddle on a ridge of the highest Serra peak. After the reconnaissance, they had descended the same slope to a steep névé basin. The last snow had fallen a week earlier. Snow on the descent was somewhat mushy. The 21st was a brilliant day. On the 22nd the party had again left camp, at 7.00 A.M., for an attempt on Mount Serra, the plan being to continue the route established on the 20th. While they were ascending the old steps in the basin, they emerged into the sunlight. Three unusually heavy ice (?) avalanches echoed across the valley, probably from Mount Munday or Mount Wad- dington. At about 9.45 A.M., on two ropes, the climbers moved diagonally up and to the right leaving the old steps to reach the descending track of two days before, still some 250 feet away. Though by now each man was beginning to sink in six or eight inches, the névé was judged to be fundamentally safe. Fred Beckev was leading, tied to Winchester. King, leading the second rope with Shiverick, was close behind. All were climbing in unison. When they were but a few feet below the rocks supporting the ridge, the whole slope began to slide to a depth of one and a half to two feet, leaving a marked line of cleavage, probably 700 feet across. The avalanche occurred half an hour after the sun had hit the upper reaches of the slope. The force of the slide was irresistible, tumbling Beckey and Winchester down some 1500 feet before their rope caught on a pinnacle of ice. King and Shiverick were carried down some 700 feet to an outcrop of rock which caught their rope. During the slide Shiverick received a blow in the back which injured him internally. He was the only member of the party who wore no pack. Striking the rock island, or the sudden tightening of the rope, may have crushed his ribs or complicated injuries already suffered. He was tied with a single bowline (somewhat loose), unlike the bowline- on-a-coil which the others had used. Beckey suffered several broken ribs, and King a dislocated shoulder; Winchester had lacerated hands and lost his axe and rucksack.

Immediately after the accident, King dug a snow shelf, placed Shiverick on it and did as much as possible to make him comfortable. Shiverick was apparently unconscious. King then descended as quickly as possible to meet and help the others. When they were able to climb back to the injured man, they discovered that Shiverick had in some manner dislodged himself from the ledge and had fallen several hundred feet farther, despite the fact that King had carefully braced him on the ledge with an ice-axe. Several hours were required to transport Shiverick across the slope to a safe ledge, during which time he died.

Source of information: members of the expedition.

Analysis. A careful study of this accident has been made by members of the Harvard Mountaineering Club and American Alpine Club. While it cannot be stated that an error in judgment was made —the accident was avoidable—the decision to repeat an ascent already acomplished without misadventure was one which, in all probability, would have been made also by a majority of more experienced parties. If a lesson is to be learned from this accident, it must be that judgment of snow conditions is perhaps the most difficult phase of a mountaineer’s training. It is not to be learned in one season and may not be acquired even after many seasons. Few mountaineers attain a working mastery of the subject of snow slope analysis. No better shortcut to an appreciation of the manifold facets of snowcraft is to be found than in the pages of Snow Structure and Ski Fields by Gerald Seligman (Macmillan, 1936), and this work should be considered a “must” by all who undertake ascents in terrain characterized by ice and snow.