George Mallory and Andrew Irvine disappeared on the North Ridge of Mount Everest on 8th June 1924. Their fate has remained a mystery.
Expedition Leader, Edward Norton, ordered an immediate withdrawal from the mountain and dispatched a coded message to the Royal Geographical Society in London informing them of the tragedy.
The expedition returned to Darjeeling by a circuitous route which included an unsanctioned crossing over the border into Nepal. Despite the loss of the two climbers and the failure to reach the summit they were welcomed back by marching bands and speeches from local dignitaries.
George Mallory and Andrew Irvine disappeared on the North Ridge of Mount Everest on 8th June 1924. Their fate has remained a mystery.
Expedition Leader, Edward Norton, ordered an immediate withdrawal from the mountain and dispatched a coded message to the Royal Geographical Society in London informing them of the tragedy.
The expedition returned to Darjeeling by a circuitous route which included an unsanctioned crossing over the border into Nepal. Despite the loss of the two climbers and the failure to reach the summit they were welcomed back by marching bands and speeches from local dignitaries.
Bentley Beetham carving the memorial stone
Bentley Beetham carving the memorial stone
Memorial cairn
Memorial cairn
The last to leave
The last to leave
The expedition members were photographed, suitably cleaned up and smartly dressed, at a social gathering at Darjeeling Natural History Museum hosted by the wife of the Governor of Bengal, Lady Pamela Lytton. Poignantly, Mallory and Irvine are absent.
Back in Britain Mallory and Irvine’s disappearance was met with dismay and disbelief. Private and national grief culminated in a memorial service at St. Paul’s Cathedral attended by the royal family and hundreds of mourners.
Theories regarding their deaths and speculation as to whether or not they got to the summit of Everest have continued to this day but the immediate reaction of their fellow climbers is probably correct – that they climbed to within striking distance of the top but ran out of time and slipped and fell to their deaths during the descent.
This version of events was partly confirmed in 1999 when the body of George Mallory was discovered on the North Face of the mountain. Andrew Irvine is still missing.
Bentley Beetham returned to Barnard Castle School where he continued to teach and to introduce his pupils to the thrills of rock climbing until his retirement in 1949. His slide show lectures recounting the story of the 1924 Everest Expedition became a much anticipated annual event.
Click the button below to find out more about the work we have done with Nepali communities in North East England as part of this project.
You can also visit the Photography page to find out more about the documentation of the 1924 expedition and see more of the Bentley Beetham collection at Durham University.
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