Edward Hanson "Iceberg" Smith was a United States Coast Guard admiral, oceanographer, and Arctic explorer.
He was born 29 October 1889 at Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts.
He received a Ph.D. in oceanography from Harvard, and commanded the USCGC Marion and the USCGC Northland.
Most famously, he commanded the Greenland Patrol, and led Coast Guard efforts to defend Greenland against the Germans in World War II.
After retirement from the Coast Guard, he assumed the directorship of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
Born in Unley, Adelaide, Australia, the youngest child of John Thomas Edward Tilley, a civil engineer from London, and his wife South Australia-born wife, Catherine Jane Nicholas.
Educated at Adelaide High School, then studied Chemistry and Geology at the University of Adelaide, and the University of Sydney, graduating in 1915.
In 1916 he went to South Queensferry near Edinburgh, Scotland, to work as a chemist Department of Explosives Supply.
He returned to Australia in December 1918.
He won an Exhibition of 1851 scholarship to the University of Cambridge in 1919, where he studied petrology and completed his PhD in 1922.
From 1923 he worked for Cambridge University, first as demonstrator in petrology, and then lecturer in petrology in 1929.
In 1931 he was appointed as the first Professor of Mineralogy and Petrology.
Most of the remainder of his life was spent in England.
In 1938 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London and served as their Vice President 1949/50. He won the Society's Royal Medal in 1967.
1948-51 President of the Mineralogical Society of Great Britain.
1949-50 President of the Geological Society.
1957 Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.
He died at home in Cambridge on 24 January 1973.
Also known as Dorothea Pilley
Born in Camberwell, London, daughter of John James Pilley, science lecturer, and his wife, Annie Maria Young.
Her first exposure climbing was on a family holiday in north Wales, but her parents were not dedicated climbers and felt the activity was dangerous.
She was introduced to rock climbing by Herbert Carr in 1915 and climbed in Wales with mostly male companions. She also climbed in the Lake District and joined the Fell and Rock Climbing Club in 1918. She was quickly elected a committee member, and in 1920 was a founder of its London section. The club was unusual being mixed, and her membership brought her closer to other innovative female climbers.
She climbed in the French Alps and qualified for membership of the Ladies' Alpine Club. During her second season in 1921 she made guideless ascents of the Egginergrat and the Portjengrat with two other female climbers. It was very unusual for women to lead an alpine climb, let alone do so as part of an all-female party. She was also involved with the founding movement of the Pinnacle Club in 1921 which was predominantly a rock climbing club and exclusively for women, it was dedicated to nurturing the skills of female climbers.
Throughout the 1920s she climbed extensively in Britain and Europe. During a two-year world tour, 1925–7, she climbed in the Canadian Rockies, the Selkirks, the Bugaboo, and the American Rockies. In 1926 first ascents of Mount Baker and Mount Shuksau, Washington, were made with Ivor Richards who she married on 31 December that year in Honolulu.
The high point of her climbing career came in 1928, when she made the celebrated first ascent of the north ridge of the Dent Blanche, with her husband, the guide Joseph Georges, and Antoine Georges. This was acknowledged as one of the last great alpine climbing problems.
She wrote Climbing Days (1935; 2nd edn, 1965) which is a comprehensive account of her climbing exploits.
After her marriage to I.A. Richards she continued climbing including in China, Japan, Korea, Burma and America.
Following a car accident in 1958 the scale of her climbing was reduced but she continued to endorse mountain activity through support of the clubs she had joined in her youth and in 1975 was appointed the first vice-president of the Alpine Club (the amalgamated Ladies' Alpine Club and all-male Alpine Club).
Her achievements all over the world marked her as one of the most outstanding mountaineers of the inter-war and post-war periods. One of mountaineering’s most irrepressible personalities, she spent her last new year, aged ninety-one, at the climbers' hut at Glen Brittle, Skye, drinking whisky and talking mountains with a party of Scottish climbers. She died in Cambridge, on 24 September 1986.
Admitted to Clare College on 14 January 1931 where he took Classics and graduated in Law.
In his student days, Greenwood developed a lifelong passion for mountaineering, scaling numerous peaks in the Alps, Dolomites, Tyrol, and Norway, as well as mountains closer to home in Scotland and Wales. He was elected to the Alpine Club at the age of 24. His mountaineering expertise proved crucial during his military service in the Second World War. He went on to marry a fellow-mountaineer. He celebrated his 80th birthday by scaling the 6121-meter high Stok Kangri Himalayan peak in Ladakh.
1940 - joined the Royal Artillery as a temporary Captain.
1943 - at a mountain warfare conference at Lochailort, Scotland, he was transferred to the New Zealand Squadron as a climbing instructor for mountain warfare. He accompanied the New Zealand Squadron in its ultimately doomed attempt to occupy the Italian controlled Dodecanese Islands. Escaping to Turkey, he went on to become a liaison officer for the Long Range Desert Group of a British brigade in Montenegro in 1945. In June 1945, he joined the Allied Military Government Organization in Austria, serving until March 1946. Shortly afterwards, he joined the Colonial Office. He was awarded the Military Cross in 1944.
1946 - Deputy Registrar of the High Court of Uganda
1947 - Registrar
1950 - Resident Magistrate
1952 - called to the bar at London's Inner Temple
1954 - Crown Counsel
1956 - served briefly as Solicitor General of Fiji
1956-1963 - Attorney General
1963 - Attorney General of Gibraltar
He later filled in as Acting Attorney General of Montserrat, as well as a legal adviser in Hong Kong. He was also to spend a year in Washington, D.C. as an adviser to the Telstar Conference
Married fellow mountaineer Rosemary Farmborough Howard in 1956. They had first climbed together before the war. Up until 1978, they together climbed mountains in New Zealand, Austria, Italy, Greece, Nepal, India and Peru. They both belonged to the Eagle Ski Club.
Born in Palmanova, Friuli, Italy and educated at the University of Florence (1916–1920) graduating with a degree in Natural Sciences.
First World War - served in the military corps of the alpini and was captured by the Austrians.
Worked in the Universities of Florence, Pavia (1923–1924) and Milan (1924–1927) and as a consultant geologist for the Edison Company for hydroelectric plants in Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Greece, Turkey and Brazil, and the same capacity for the Public Power Corporation of Greece.
1973 he became Professor Emeritus at the University of Milan.
Led geographical and geological expeditions in Europe, Africa, and Asia. He also explored Antarctica.
In 1954 he led the Italian expedition to K2 when Achille Compagnoni and Lino Lacedelli became the first people to reach the summit
He spent his last four years in Rome, where he died in December 2001, aged 104.
Born in 1907 in Bordon Camp, Bordon, Hampshire, the first son of The Very Reverend Harry Blackburne
Educated at Marlborough College
Admitted to Clare College on 15 January 1926 where he studied Modern Languages and Geography
1930 - entered the colonial service and served in Nigeria, Palestine and the Gambia
1943-1947 - served in the West Indies
1947-1950 - Director of colonial information services in London
1950 - returned to the West Indies
1950-1956 - Governor of the Leeward Islands
1957-1962 - Governor of Jamaica. When Jamaica received its independence in August 1962, Blackburne was appointed as the Governor-General; he served in that position for three months till 30 November 1962 when his Jamaican replacement, Clifford Campbell, took office.
He died on 4 November 1980 in Douglas, Isle of Man
Born in Wallasey, Cheshire, the son of a John Hinkes Tilman (wealthy sugar merchant) and his wife Adeline.
Educated at Berkhamsted Boys school.
First World War - commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Royal Field Artillery. He fought at the Battle of the Somme, and was twice awarded the Military Cross for bravery.
Known for climbing with Eric Shipton in Kenya and East Africa including Kilimanjaro.
Involved in two of the 1930s Mount Everest expeditions - participating in the 1935 Reconnaissance Expedition, and reaching 27,200 feet without oxygen as the expedition leader in 1938.
1936 - lead an Anglo-American expedition to Nanda Devi. Tilman and Noel Odell succeeded in making the first ascent of the 25,643 ft mountain, which remained the highest summit climbed by man until 1950.
1939 - was the first man to attempt climbing in the remote and unexplored Assam Himalaya.
1947 - he attempted Rakaposhi, then made his way to Kashgar to join up with Eric Shipton to make an attempt on Muztagh Ata which nearly succeeded.
He was awarded in 1952 the Royal Geographical Society's Founder's Medal for his achievements.
Second World War - he volunteered for service seeing action during the Battle of France helping to cover the retreat in Flanders before getting to the beaches at Dunkirk. He then served in North Africa, Iraq and Iran before being called on for special duty in 1943. He was dropped by parachute into Albania behind enemy lines to fight with Albanian and Italian partisans. For his actions there he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order and was given the keys to the city of Belluno which he had helped save from occupation and destruction.
Following the War he took up deep sea sailing. On his last voyage in 1977 (aged 80) he travelled with mountaineers to the South Atlantic to climb Smith Island. En route to the Falkland Islands the crew disappeared and it was presumed the ship sunk.
Mr Parsons retired from the office of Kitchen Manager in the autumn of 1949 after serving the College for more than 50 years. At the Clare Association Dinner, held in London on 10 July 1950, Mr Parsons was the chief guest, and about 200 old members of the College were present to convey their good wishes in person.
Born in Liscard, Cheshire he was educated at Rossall School and Clare College, Cambridge.
After graduation he worked with the Air Ministry on structural problems of airships.
At 28, in 1929, he contracted tuberculosis. Upon recovering, he became a technical officer with the Structural Steel Research Committee and developed the plastic theory of design, a revolutionary method of design of steel structures. In 1932 he was awarded the Telford Gold Medal of the Institution of Civil Engineers for the work.
1933 - Professor of Engineering at Bristol University
1939-1943 - scientific adviser to the Design and Development Section of the Ministry of Home Security. He created the Morrison indoor shelter
1943-1968 - Professor of Mechanical Sciences and Head of Department at Cambridge University Engineering Department.
1941 - appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)
1956 - elected a Fellow of the Royal Society and awarded their Royal Medal in 1970
1961 - received a knighthood
1963 - honorary graduate as Doctor of Science at the University of Edinburgh
1977 - created a life peer as Baron Baker of Windrush in the County of Gloucestershire
Born in 1749 in Scarborough
Admitted to Clare College as a pensioner in 1767, matriculated 1768
B.A. 1772 (2nd Wrangler), M.A. 1775
Fellow 1773-90
Junior Proctor 1778
Ordained deacon (Peterborough) 1773; priest 1774; Vicar Lillington, Warks. 1782-1790
Died 1790