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Michael Ward, 80; Assisted in Everest Climb

LA Times
Michael Ward, who unearthed maps and aerial photographs that were crucial to the first successful ascent of Mt. Everest in 1953 and who accompanied Sir Edmund Hillary as the expedition’s doctor, has died. He was 80.

Ward, who was controversial among some mountaineers for giving science as much credit for the feat as the men who reached the top of the world, died Oct. 7 in Lurgashall, England.

Ward contended the conquest was a victory for science because doctors had figured out how to cope with the physiological effects of high altitude that had doomed earlier attempts to scale Mt. Everest, the 29,035-foot peak in the Himalayas on the border of Nepal and Tibet.

While scouring the Royal Geographical Society archives in London in 1951, Ward came across aerial photographs taken on clandestine flights over Mt. Everest. They “showed a perfectly good route up the mountain” from the Nepalese south side, Ward recalled in 2003.

He also uncovered a forgotten map of the mountain’s south side from the 1930s.

The discoveries were important because foreigners had little knowledge of the south side after being kept out of Nepal until 1949.

The expeditions in the 1920s and ’30s had scaled the Tibetan side of Everest.

When Hillary and Tenzing Norgay, his Sherpa guide, descended from summit, Ward was waiting at the 22,000-foot-high camp to examine the mountaineer.
Camp six;: An account of the 1933 Mount Everest expedition,

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