John Harlin at home in Switzerland with his young family
John Harlin III
Harlin, an air force pilot, was transferred to Germany with his family in 1959
John Harlin III
Eiger as seen from the Kleine Scheidegg saddle at the mountain’s foot
AS-Verlag
John Harlin and his two climbing partners, Layton Kor (m) and Dougal Haston (r)
AS-Verlag
(l to r) Kor, Haston and Harlin with their gear for their planned ascent
John Harlin III
John Harlin in a snow cave
John Harlin III
Karl Golikow ferrying a load ("Bomb") across the Second Icefield
March 21, 1966: Layton Kor photographs Jörg Lehne jumaring up the fixed ropes towards the Spider. Head of Central Pillar below.
AS-Verlag
March 25, 1966: Roland Votteler climbing the last metres of the Eiger
March 25, 1966: Roland Votteler and Sigi Hupfauer on the summit
AS-Verlag
March 26, 1966: The two teams of the Eiger Direct together at Kleine Scheidegg (from left): Harri Frey, Roland Votteler, Karl Golikow, Chris Bonington, Layton Kor, Peter Haag, Jörg Lehne, Günter Schnaidt, Sigi Hupfauer, Rolf Rosenzopf, Günther Strobel, Dougal Haston, Peter Gillman, Mick Burke
AS-Verlag
March 25, 1966: Harlin’s funeral procession in Leysin
John Harlin III
A scene from the funeral with Harlin's wife and children (John Harlin III 2nd from l)
AS-Verlag
It was 50 years ago on March 25 when five exhausted climbers achieved what no one had before – summited the Eiger North Face following the most direct route. The price was high: the ‘direttissima’ claimed the life of team leader John Harlin.
The record nowadays for climbing the imposing 1,800m high wall that casts its dark shadow over the alpine resort of Grindelwald is less than two and a half hours.
In 1966, Harlin – an American – assembled a small team, limiting the number of climbers to three to ensure speed. His aim was to follow a vertical line straight up to the summit in about 10 days. A competing eight-man German party arrived at the foot of the mountain around the same time in February, and, according to Harlin’s British team member Chris BoningtonExternal link, had enough food and provisions to last three weeks.
Bad weather made treacherous what were in ordinary circumstances very difficult climbing conditions. It became known as the slowest race on earth as the teams lived out of snow holes and pulled up equipment, the two sides scratching and crawling their way up the mountain face. Members would even descend for rest at the hotels near the base of the mountain, before climbing back up again.
On March 22, the Eiger North Face – where so many ambitious climbers had died in the preceding decades – claimed the life of Harlin when he fell about 1,200m to his death after his rope broke.
A member of Harlin’s team, Dougal Haston – who had by now joined forces with some of the Germans – decided to press on. He and four of the Germans reached the summit three days later, more than a month after they had set out. They named the route after the American in his honour.
Harlin’s son, John Harlin III, along with some members of the German party, travelled to the foot of the Eiger to commemorate the events of 50 years ago.
(Text: Dale Bechtel, pictures: John Harlin III collection/AS-Verlag, picture editor: Christoph Balsiger)
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.
Read more
More
Recalling the first Eiger North Face rescue
This content was published on
Three climbers died but one was spectacularly rescued in an effort involving an international team of 50 alpinists. The fallen climbers were from Italy and Germany. In their book “Corti-Drama: Tod und Rettung am Eiger 1957-1961”, (Corti Drama: Death and Rescue on the Eiger 1957-1961), authors Daniel Anker and Rainer Rettner describe and comment on…
This content was published on
The American adventurer, writer and editor, who grew up partly in Switzerland, talks about his love for the Alps and some of the problems facing the world’s mountain communities. Set against a backdrop of magnificent alpine peaks, the IMAX film tells the story of Harlin’s quest to conquer the formidable north face of the Eiger…
This content was published on
“Good conditions on the Eiger. So cool morning climbing the Heckmair Route,” the 39-year-old alpinist stated on Movescount, the online community hosted by electronics company Suunto. Steck’s climbExternal link involved a vertical ascent of almost 1,600 m at an average speed of 1.1 km/h. At his fastest he managed speeds of up to 4.7 km/h. His 2008…
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.