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AT THE TOP: A track star at Stanford,
Starr is still admired for his athleticism as a climber.
Courtesy William Alsup
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On an August evening
in 1933, the president
of the Sierra Club, Francis Farquhar, greeted 27 dinner
guests at his San Francisco home. Among them were Ansel Adams
and
the elite of California’s conservationists. They had
come to hear the latest about a search-and-rescue operation
in the Sierra Nevada that had animated San Francisco
conversation for weeks.
The subject of the search was Peter
Starr, a prominent
local attorney, Stanford graduate and well-known mountaineer
who had disappeared during a solo exploration in the
Minarets, a collection of sawtooth peaks on the eastern side
of the
Sierra.
Starr was an icon in the climbing world. He had
scaled more than 40 prominent summits in the Sierra and
several in the Alps, including France’s Mont Blanc. He had almost
completed an audacious, one-person project to survey the
recently completed John Muir Trail and its lateral routes
through the
Sierra, and to publish a guidebook. Nobody had seen him
in more than three weeks, and newspapers throughout California
speculated almost daily on his whereabouts.
Farquhar was
in charge of the search. Ten days earlier,
he had crisscrossed the Minarets area in a biplane, finding
no sign of Starr, and pulled together a squad of expert
climbers to scour the mountains. One of them, Adams’s
former photography assistant, Jules Eichorn, was at the
dinner to report on what
he and his search team had found: an entry by Starr on
a summit register, a cigarette butt, a roll of film and
a bloodied strip
of handkerchief. The Minarets had yielded clues but not
Pete Starr, and most of the searchers had abandoned the
effort to
find him.
But one climber was still high in the Sierra,
looking—an
iconoclastic mountain man who scaled dizzying peaks by
day and read Homeric epics beside the campfire at night.
He and
Starr had never crossed paths, but they were about to.
Together, the pair would become part of California lore.
Walter ‘Peter’ Starr
Jr. was 30 years old in July 1933. He was single, handsome
and athletic, the son of
a prominent Bay Area businessman and, since 1927, an attorney
at Pillsbury,
Madison & Sutro (now Pillsbury Winthrop) in San Francisco.
He had been a gifted student at Stanford, where he earned
both undergraduate (’24) and law (’26) degrees
in only five years.
Confident and charismatic, Starr was
his family’s bon
vivant. He could charm a roomful of guests, whether playing
the piano at family gatherings or leading sing-alongs at
Delta Kappa Epsilon parties. Yet he preferred solitude
in the mountains
and often hiked alone.
From an early age, he loved the outdoors.
He built an elaborate tree house in an ancient oak at
the family’s
ranch near Livermore, Calif., spent his days exploring the
nearby
hills and canyons, and wrote poems and stories inspired
by nature.
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LOFTY MISSION: Clyde and Eichorn,
front row, center, Farquhar, back row, far left,
and Dawson, back row, center, were among the former
Palisades Climbing School instructors who searched
for Starr in the Minarets (right).
Courtesy Glen Dawson
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Emulating his father, Walter—one of the earliest
members of the Sierra Club and an accomplished climber
himself—Starr
spent much of his free time mountaineering. A track star
at Stanford, he was virtually unrivaled for his endurance—on
one 4 1/2-day trip in the Sierra, he covered 143 miles.
His
equipment was crude; lacking the specialized footwear
that came decades later, Starr usually climbed in tennis
shoes. Yet he challenged sheer rock faces and glaciers
that even today’s
climbers would find daunting, unaided by pitons or a safety
rope. By 1933, Starr was one of the nation’s leading
alpinists.
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Courtesy William Alsup
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On Saturday, July 29, he attended the wedding
of his best friend and DKE fraternity brother Whiting
Welch, ’24,
and left soon after the ceremony to drive to the Minarets,
journeying through the Yosemite backcountry over Tioga
Pass Road. Later, when it would matter, no one would
know exactly where he was headed.
The first sign of trouble came
on
Monday, August 7. Starr
had arranged to meet his father that day at Glacier Lodge,
a crude collection of cabins at 7,800 feet that was a
popular watering hole for Sierra cognoscenti. When young
Starr
still had not appeared by August 8, his father returned
to the family’s
home in Piedmont, vaguely anxious but assuming that Pete
had changed his plan—he wasn’t due back until August
13.
The following Monday, the 14th, Walter Starr telephoned
his son’s law firm and asked if Pete had reported for
work. He had not.
Alarm quickly spread. Farquhar, the Sierra
Club president, organized both air and land search efforts.
A certified
public accountant in San Francisco, he had been instrumental
in organizing
the Sierra Club’s annual High Trips, extravagant multiweek
excursions with full provisions and pack animals, and he
knew the terrain well. For two days, flying perilously
close to
the mountain walls in a two-seat, open-cockpit biplane,
Farquhar strained to detect any trace of Starr but saw
none. It was
the first aerial search in Sierra history.
Back in San
Francisco, Farquhar tracked down three of the best climbers
to have emerged during the High Trips—Jules
Eichorn and Glen Dawson, both 21, and a pugnacious 40-something
loner named Norman Clyde.
Norman Clyde rivals john muir
for the title of foremost Sierra mountaineer. While Muir
did more to preserve the
range through his inspiring writings and lectures, Clyde’s
granite exploits are unsurpassed. In 1928, he became
the first to climb what is now known as Clyde Minaret,
the tallest peak
in the chain at 12,281 feet. By July 1933, he had achieved
82 first Sierra ascents, and by some accounts he notched
more than 1,000 during his lifetime.
Clyde came to California
around 1911, married in 1915 and
lost his wife to tuberculosis four years later. In 1924,
he became a high school teacher and principal in Independence,
Calif., a small crossroads in the shadow of the Sierra.
His
teaching career ended abruptly in 1928 after he tried
to foil a Halloween prank on the school building by firing
gunshots into the air. Irate parents had him fired.
For the
rest
of his life, Clyde was an itinerant mountain
man, hiking, climbing and guiding in the Sierra, the
High Trips being one of his major employments. He lived in
makeshift
camps
and in winter occupied a caretaker cabin at Glacier Lodge
or some other resort that had closed for the season.
Clyde
was variously described as short-tempered, moody,
stubborn, taciturn, indefatigable, brave and strong.
Despite his small frame—he weighed about 160 pounds—Clyde
carried enormous loads even on long trips. During one
extended Sierra Club hike, his pack was weighed at more
than 90
pounds. The son of a preacher, he had learned to read
Latin and Greek
as a boy and usually carried classic literature on his
journeys. And he walked everywhere. “I can carry a
mule faster than he can carry me,” he once told a hiking
companion.
Although
Pete Starr and Clyde had never met, each admired the
other. One passage in the guidebook Starr was working
on noted that Clyde was the only person to have climbed
North Palisades via the glacier below, although many
had reached the peak using easier routes. “It is amusing
to compare Clyde’s brief and modest account of this very
difficult ascent appearing in the register with the lengthy
and exhilarated
accounts of some of the parties who made the ascent by
the route I have described,” Starr wrote.
When summoned
to help search for the missing Starr, Clyde had been
climbing a Palisades glacier with a friend, Oliver
Kerhlein. A few hours later they were at the base camp
for the rescue operation near Lake Ediza, at the eastern
base of
the Minarets in the Ritter Range.
Like Mt. Shasta in California
and the Grand Tetons in Wyoming, the Ritter Range soars
dramatically above its neighbors.
At the northwest end are Banner Peak (12,945 feet) and
Mt. Ritter
(13,157), the tallest pinnacle in the range and the highest
point in the northern Sierra. Continuing to the southeast
is the jagged crest of the Minarets, a two-mile-long,
serrated set of black teeth. Lake Ediza lies 3,000 feet below
and
feeds
Shadow Creek, a tumbling cascade that drops another 1,200
feet to the San Joaquin River.
Clyde and Kehrlein joined what
was arguably the strongest
search-and-rescue team in Sierra history. In addition
to an all-star climbing corps, it included members of the
Highway Patrol, forest rangers, local police, young men
working
for
the Civilian Conservation Corps, and several of Starr’s
friends, including Whiting Welch and other Stanford mates.
On
August 15, the day after Starr failed to show up at work,
a search patrol discovered his camp in a wooded flat
on the north side of Shadow Creek. Among his gear were
a Kodak camera, an ice axe, crampons, his pack and food
for several
days. The searchers sent out the camera’s roll of film
to be developed in hope that the photographs might show
where Starr had already been.
On the morning of the 16th,
the volunteers fanned out in
several directions. Most of them searched the lowland
areas around the mountains. The experienced rock climbers
tackled
the mountains themselves. Walter Starr and Pete’s younger
brother, Allen, climbed Banner Peak. Two CCC men climbed
Mt. Ritter and came upon the first clue about Pete’s
recent activity. The last entry in the peak register
read: July
30, 1933 Walter A. Starr, Jr.
3rd ascent—this time
deluxe with crampons and ice ax via glacier from Lake
Ediza
Since the ice axe and crampons
were found at his camp, Pete had obviously returned there
after climbing Mt. Ritter.
The film in the camera later revealed eight images taken
during the ascent.
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BEFORE THE FALL: The last photograph
of Starr, right, taken the day before he left for
the Sierra, with best friend and Stanford fraternity
brother Welch. Two weeks later, Welch joined the
search team, but never saw his friend again.
Courtesy William Alsup
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Meanwhile, Clyde and Kerhlein ascended
Clyde Minaret, taking
the glacier route Clyde had pioneered five years earlier.
They found no Starr record at the top. Near the base
of the mountain
on their way back to camp, Clyde spotted a strip of torn
handkerchief on the ground. It was stained with blood,
as if used to wrap
a cut finger. Walter Starr later examined the strip and
noticed that the embroidery matched that on Pete’s handkerchiefs.
The
fourth team, Jules Eichorn and Glen Dawson, headed up
12,276-foot Michael Minaret, located a quarter-mile
west of Clyde Minaret. On a narrow ledge near the top,
they found
a half-smoked Chesterfield cigarette, Pete’s brand. Above
them loomed the summit—300 feet straight up. It was the
kind of pitch where one mistake might be your last, the
kind that could have claimed even somebody as skilled as
Pete Starr.
They scanned the nearby terrain, but saw only a jumble
of ledges and crags.
The two men struggled to the top and located
the register,
a beat-up notebook in a discarded tin can. The last entry
was the one Eichorn and Dawson had written two years
earlier. This
was odd, and significant. Starr was well known for his
playful notes in summit registers and the length to which
he would
go to record his ascents. Twice, Starr had reached peaks
only to discover he had no pen or pencil. Both times,
he made a
small cut in his ear, collected the blood droplets and
scrawled his name and the date in the register. Assuming
the cigarette
they had found was Pete’s, the fact that his name did
not appear in the register suggested two possibilities:
he had abandoned the route, or he had fallen off the mountain.
As
the climbers compared notes back at camp, word of the
discovery of Starr’s artifacts filtered down to Mammoth
Lakes and on to journalists. The search had become front-page
news. The San Francisco Chronicle speculated that Starr
had drowned while swimming at Lake Ediza.
The next day, August
17, Eichorn and Dawson tried a different
route up Michael Minaret, and Clyde and Kerhlein returned
to Clyde Minaret. There were no visible signs of Starr.
On the
18th, working on a hunch, they climbed Banner Peak. Nothing.
Slowly,
hope slipped away.
Back in Piedmont, Pete’s mother,
inconsolable, waited for word about her oldest son. Carmen
Starr was the daughter
of pioneers who had crossed the plains in a covered wagon,
and she had encouraged her own children’s adventurous
spirits. She knew that any number of injuries or mishaps
could have stranded Peter high on a mountain, alive but
suffering. Now, with the chances of finding him alive all but
gone,
she
yearned to know what had happened, where he rested, and
whether his death had been swift. She had not written a
word in her
journal since July 29: “Peter left on vacation to his
beloved mountains.” Almost two years would pass before
she made another entry.
Late in the day on August 18, Walter
Starr called off the search. He gathered up Pete’s gear
and headed home to make arrangements for a memorial service.
The other climbers
grimly filed out of camp. Only Norman Clyde remained; he
really had nowhere else to go. Clyde later told Farquhar
he held no
hope of finding Starr alive but felt that locating him “would
afford a good deal of consolation to his parents.”
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HIGHER CALLING: Starr’s
father made this photo of Michael Minaret (above)
and wrote the legends on the picture. Preparing
for the climb to entomb Starr’s remains (below)
are Eichorn, Ranger Mace, Clyde, Al Norris and
Douglas Robinson.
Walter A. Starr
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For
five more days, Clyde methodically climbed routes in
and around the Minarets, inspecting the rock for scuffs,
cigarette butts, scraps of trash, anything that might
yield an additional
clue. But there was nothing. It was as if the mountains
had swallowed Pete Starr.
On the evening of Thursday, August
24, while Eichorn related
the search effort to Ansel Adams and others in the Farquhar
home back in San Francisco, Clyde stood near his camp
staring at the jagged silhouettes and preparing for a final
climb.
One possibility remained: Michael Minaret, the vertical
spire already checked twice by Eichorn and Dawson, who
had found
the partially smoked cigarette and noted the peculiar
lack of an entry by Starr in the register.
The next morning,
Clyde moved carefully up Michael Minaret, clinging to
the nearly 90-degree rock like a spider. At
the top around midday, he wrote his name and the date
in the register
and paused to peer southeast toward the Palisades, Mt.
Goddard and so many other peaks dear to him. Vexed over
Starr, he began
the descent.
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Courtesy William Alsup
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Then came one of the most climactic encounters
in all of Sierra mountaineering. Clyde later described
it himself: As
I carefully and deliberately made my way down toward
the notch, I scanned and re-scanned the northwestern
face. Much of it was concealed by irregularities. Suddenly
a
fly droned past, then another, and another. . . . I began
to follow a ledge running in a northwesterly direction.
When I had
gone
along it but a few yards, turning about, I looked upward
and across the chute to the northwestern face. There,
lying on
a ledge not more than fifty yards distant, were the earthly
remains of Walter A. Starr, Jr. He had obviously fallen,
perhaps several hundred feet, to instantaneous death.
It was
a poignant first meeting of two Sierra legends:
Clyde, peering out from under his broad-brimmed campaign
hat, rope coiled about his chest, standing among the
ruins of the
ancient range as a storm gathered; Starr, the debonair “club
man,” clad in khaki trousers and white undershirt, arms
outstretched, lying on his back on a narrow ledge, facing
the heavens.
Clyde marched back to the road at Agnew Meadow,
caught
a ride to Mammoth Lakes and telegraphed the Starr family.
The word reached Piedmont the next day, Friday.
That Sunday,
some 200 mourners—Stanford fraternity brothers,
lawyers from Pete’s firm, Sierra Club luminaries—flowed
into the somber Starr home. They were greeted by an enlarged
photograph of Lake Ediza and the Minarets, the last image
in Peter’s recovered Kodak, flanked by his ice axe and
crampons. The eulogy included a recitation of a poem, “The
Mountain’s
Call,” that Pete had written a few days before embarking
on his final journey to the Sierra. The last two lines
read: defiant mountains beckon me
to glory and dream in their
paradise.
Walter Starr organized
a small party to return to Michael Minaret and bury Pete
where he had fallen. On August 30,
Eichorn and Clyde, dressed in black, climbed to the precarious
ledge
on the sheer northwest face where Starr rested. They
placed the body in a canvas sack and covered it with rocks.
The
grave, at 12,000 feet, is the highest known in the Sierra,
perhaps
the highest in the lower 48 states. Carmen Starr wrote to
Norman Clyde two weeks later. “I
know of no words adequate in which to express to you the
gratitude I feel for your great efforts which finally resulted
in your
finding our beloved boy. The knowledge of what had been
his actual fate lifted from our hearts a burden that I
do not see
how we could have lived under.”
In appreciation, the Starrs
gave Clyde a stipend for the rest of his life. They encouraged
Eichorn to go to college
and offered to pay all expenses. He attended UC-Berkeley
and earned a degree in music.
Using the final notes his
son had assembled, Walter Starr
completed Pete’s guidebook, and Starr’s Guide
to the John Muir Trail and the High Sierra Region was
published in 1934. Seventy years later, it is still in print.  |