Difference between revisions of "Freda du Faur"

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==Description==
 
==Description==
  
Mountaineer.  First woman to climb New Zealand's Mount Cook and in a record time of six hours, which caused an international sensation given the restrictions placed on Edwardian women at the time.  Even her mountaineering dress - a skirt worn to just below the knee over knickerbockers and long puttees - was contrary to gender expectations of the time.  Given her attraction to other women, and the fact she was an unmarried woman partaking in a gentleman's endeavor at the time, added fuel to the fire.  Wrote a book about her adventures, 'The Conquest of Mount Cook and Other Climbs' (1915).  Had a long term relationship with Muriel Cadogan.  The main divide of the Southern Alps, Du Faur, Pibrac and Cadogan Peaks are named in memory of this pioneering mountaineer.
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Mountaineer.  First woman to climb New Zealand's highest peak, Mount Cook, and in a record time of six hours, which caused an international sensation given the restrictions placed on Edwardian women at the time.  Even her mountaineering dress - a skirt worn to just below the knee over knickerbockers and long puttees - was contrary to gender expectations of the time.  Given her attraction to other women, and the fact she was an unmarried woman partaking in a gentleman's endeavor at the time, added fuel to the fire.  Wrote a book about her adventures, 'The Conquest of Mount Cook and Other Climbs' (1915).  Had a long term relationship with Muriel Cadogan.  The main divide of the Southern Alps, Du Faur, Pibrac and Cadogan Peaks are named in memory of this pioneering mountaineer.
  
 
==Further Reading/Research==
 
==Further Reading/Research==

Revision as of 00:20, 13 May 2014

Freda du Faur

Country

New Zealand

Birth - Death

1882 - 1935

Occupation

Sports

Description

Mountaineer. First woman to climb New Zealand's highest peak, Mount Cook, and in a record time of six hours, which caused an international sensation given the restrictions placed on Edwardian women at the time. Even her mountaineering dress - a skirt worn to just below the knee over knickerbockers and long puttees - was contrary to gender expectations of the time. Given her attraction to other women, and the fact she was an unmarried woman partaking in a gentleman's endeavor at the time, added fuel to the fire. Wrote a book about her adventures, 'The Conquest of Mount Cook and Other Climbs' (1915). Had a long term relationship with Muriel Cadogan. The main divide of the Southern Alps, Du Faur, Pibrac and Cadogan Peaks are named in memory of this pioneering mountaineer.

Further Reading/Research



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