Aconcagua is the highest mountain in
the world outside the Himalayas. It was climbed on the 5th
of February 1925 by a party that included Mervyn Frederick Ryan.
Aconcagua. Wikipedia CC A. Backer.
The surname Ryan is closely linked with Tipperary and is unlikely to be thought of as being associated with Alpine climbing achievements. However, Valentine Ryan was an outstanding Alpinist in the early years of the twentieth century, making numerous first ascents and is remembered by the 'Ryan-Lochmatter' route on the Aiguille du Plan. His brother, Lionel, had the first winter ascent of the Weisshorn.
Almost totally forgotten is their
cousin, Mervyn, of the same family, the Ryans of Inch (near Thurles).
Mervyn was born in Malta in December 1883. This came about because
his parents, Thomasine (Shaw) and Major Charles Ryan, British Army,
were traveling home - from a posting in India, or the Anglo/Egyptian
War - when the pregnancy intervened. Some time was spent in India –
his mother was the daughter of the CO of the Royal Irish Regiment
there. He was educated, as was his father, at Stonyhurst College,
the Jesuit school in
Lancashire, from 1898 to 1902, where he excelled academically, captained the college football eleven and was involved in cricket and athletics.
| Stonyhurst football |
It may have been this appointment, or possibly the accounts of his cousins' Alpine exploits, that brought the mountains to his attention, for their followed five consecutive seasons of climbing in the Andes. In 1922, after a solo climb of Cerre Penitentes (4,440m) in Argentina, he made his only visit to the Alps, went on the Gorner Glacier and climbed Monte Rosa, the Rothorn, Gabelhorn and Wellenkuppe with Pollinger as guide.
The Alpine experience may have fired his enthusiasm, for the following
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| Aconcagua Party |
few years saw him make unsuccessful
and guideless attempts of Almacenes (4,926m), Tolosa (5,432m), and
Aconcagua (6,961m). The experience gained was beneficial for in
1925, along with climbing partners, Clayton, Cochrane and Mc Donald,
he reached the summits of all three, culminating on 5th
February with the ascent of Aconcagua. This is considered the fourth
ascent of the mountain and the second 'completely British' ascent.
He joined the Alpine Club in 1926, proposed by Sidney Young, an English businessman in Argentina. As linguistic qualifications he listed Hindustani with Spanish and school French, an indication of time spent in India. There seems to have been no climbing afterwards but he went on in his career to survey railways in India and Thailand.
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| Puenta del Inca |
The experience of climbing in the Andes was likely to have been significant, for at his own request, he was to be buried at Puenta del Inca, the starting point of his summit attempt on Aconcagua. For his retirement he had intended to settle down in Ireland, had bought an estate here, but his final illness prevented this and he died in Argentina in 1952.
Acknowledgements: Thanks to Desmond
Ryan of Edinburgh for use of the photographs; Institution of
Mechanical Engineers for the portrait; Stonyhurst College; Emma Mc
Donald of the Alpine Club, London, and its archive that is so easily
accessible on its website (http://www.alpine-club.org.uk);
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