Neha Patil (Editor)

Philip Stanley Abbot

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Occupation
  
Lawyer

Cause of death
  
Major trauma

Years active
  
1893–1896

Resting place
  
Cambridge

Born
  
1867
Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.

Died
  
3 August 1896, Lake Louise, Canada

Phillip Stanley Abbott was a graduate of Harvard, class of 1889, and of Harvard Law School, class of 1893. He practiced law until 1894 with Samuel D. Warren and Louis Brandeis of Boston. He then went to Milwaukee, where he was employed as assistant attorney for the Wisconsin Central Railroad (1871–99), of which his father, Edwin Hale Abbot, was president. The original family home was at 1 Follon Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts the now renowned Edwin Abbot House; but the family in 1896 were at Bar Harbor, Maine.

Contents

Mountaineer

Phillip S. Abbot was considered an experienced mountain climber, in the United States; one who had made expeditions to the Alps and ascended the Matterhorn and Weisshorn; with Swiss guide Peter Sarbach. In 1893, Phillip S. Abbot published, "An Ascent of the Weisshorn". In 1895, with Professor Charles Ernest Fay of Tufts College, and Charles Sproull Thompson, General Agent for the Illinois Central Railroad, the three climbers failed in two ascents of Mount Lefroy in the Bow Range near Lake Louise, Alberta; but managed to make the first Ascent of Mt. Hector. The next year, Professor George Little, Librarian of Bowdoin joined the trio for the 1896 Expedition.

Catastrophe

On Aug. 3, 1896 Phillip Stanley Abbott slipped from the rock precipice while free climbing Mount Lefroy in the Bow Range near Lake Louise, Alberta, Canada. As described by Charles E. Fay, "The unfortunate Phillip S. Abbot fell past us and landed within 15 feet; while tumbling the remaining distance, to a rocky projection, one thousand feet below our perch". It took the three survivors most of the afternoon to descend to where the body rested; each depending on their own skill with an ice axe for Safety. Upon their arrival, Mr. Abbott was still breathing but unable to speak; and he died soon thereafter. As it was impossible to carry the body down the slippery descent the party was compelled to leave the body, and return the next Tuesday with a rescue party.

Rescue

The rescue party was led by outfitter Thomas Edmonds Wilson and included George Little, Willoughby Astley, and Professor Charles Ernest Fay. The rescue party wrapped the body in several blankets and let it slide down 2000 feet to the foot of the mountain. The body was then put on its way to Cambridge.

Memorial

In memory of the first mountaineering fatality in North America, the Pass, which took the life of Phillip S. Abbot was named in his honor. Abbot Pass Hut was built between Mt. Lefroy and Mount Victoria (Bow Range) on the Continental Divide of Alberta and British Columbia.

References

Philip Stanley Abbot Wikipedia