Agnes Vaille Shelter

Agnes Vaille Shelter
Agnes Vaille Shelter is located in Colorado
Agnes Vaille Shelter
Agnes Vaille Shelter is located in the United States
Agnes Vaille Shelter
Nearest cityEstes Park, Colorado
Coordinates40°15′38″N 105°37′13″W / 40.26056°N 105.62028°W / 40.26056; -105.62028
AreaLess than one acre
Built1927 and 1935
Built byNational Park Service
Architectural styleNPS Rustic
MPSRocky Mountain National Park MRA
NRHP reference No.92001669[1]
Added to NRHPDecember 24, 1992

The Agnes Vaille Shelter is a beehive-shaped stone shelter along E. Longs Peak Trail near the summit of Longs Peak in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, USA. The first shelter was built in 1927 by the National Park Service after a number of climbers died ascending Longs Peak. The shelter was named for Agnes Vaille, who died while descending from the first winter ascent of the east face of Longs Peak on January 12, 1925. Herbert Sortland also died of exposure during an attempt to rescue Vaille. Vaille's family rebuilt the shelter in 1935.

Agnes Vaille

Agnes Wolcott Vaille was born in 1890 and graduated from Smith College. She came from a prominent Denver family; her father was president of the first telephone company in Denver. During World War I, Vaille volunteered to work overseas for the Red Cross. After the war, Vaille was appointed secretary of the Denver Chamber of Commerce.[2][3]

Vaille was a member of the Colorado Mountain Club, served as Outing Chairman and was an early member of the '14,000 Footers Club'.[4][5] In 1923, she made a solo winter ascent, the first known, of James Peak.[6] Mountaineer Carl Blaurock called Vaille "a strong, husky woman, just crazy about climbing".[6]

Vaille's death on Longs Peak

Vaille met Walter Kiener in the Colorado Mountain Club; they decided to be the first climbers to make a winter ascent of the east face of Longs Peak. Their first three attempts were unsuccessful. The fourth attempt began on the morning of January 11, 1925.[2] On January 12, 1925, they reached the peak at 4:00 a.m. Kiener noted that the temperature was −14 °F (−26 °C). On the way down from the summit, the temperature dropped further and the wind picked up. At 13,000 ft (4,000 m), Vaille slipped and fell 100–150 ft (30–46 m). She survived but was exhausted, and her hands and feet were frozen.[3] Kiener went for help but when rescuers arrived, Vaille had died of hypothermia.[3][7] One of the rescuers, Herbert Sortland, suffered a broken hip from a fall, and also died of hypothermia. His body was found in late February, a few hundred yards from Longs Peak Inn.[8][2]

Vaille was buried in Fairmount Cemetery, Denver, Colorado.[3]

The first stone shelter was built in 1927 under the direction of Roger Toll, Superintendent of Rocky Mountain National Park and Vaille's cousin.[9] Recent scholarship asserts that the present shelter was built by Vaille's family in 1935 to replace the 1927 Park Service shelter.[10] The shelter was designed in the spirit of the National Park Service rustic style to blend with the local landscape, located above 13,400 feet (4,100 m) elevation on the edge of an area known as the Boulder Field. The stone for the shelter came from this area.[11] It consists of a single circular room with a conical ceiling formed by the walls and roof of the shelter, entered by a single door opening whose door has been removed. As a result, the interior may be partially filled with snow for much of summer. There are two glazed windows and one filled-in opening, and the floor is paved with stone.[11]

A plaque mounted near the shelter reads,[2]

Agnes Wolcott Vaille

This shelter commemorates
a Colorado mountaineer
conquered by winter after
scaling the precipice
January 12, 1925
and one who lost his life
in an effort to aid her
Herbert Sortland

The Agnes Vaille Shelter was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on December 24, 1992.[1]

Walter Kiener

Kiener was born in Bern, Switzerland, on 18 October 1894, the son of a sausage maker.[12] He left school at 15 to help support his family. In his free time, Kiener became an expert mountaineer in the Alps. After serving his mandatory military service, he immigrated to the United States. Kiener arrived in Denver in 1923, took a job as a butcher, and joined the Colorado Mountain Club where he met Vaille.[8]

Kiener suffered frostbite as a result of the Longs Peak expedition and lost several fingers, most of his toes, and part of a foot.[12] Vaille's father, who was grateful for Kiener's rescue attempt, paid Kiener's medical bills. The accident left Kiener unable to continue his job as foreman of a Denver sausage factory. He was given the job of seasonal ranger, manning the fire lookout station on top of Twin Sisters, by Superintendent Toll.[8] He worked there for five summers, then, with financial assistance from the Vaille family, he enrolled in biology at University of Nebraska,[13] graduating in 1930. He earned his master's degree in 1931 and his Ph.D. in 1940.[12][2] His doctoral thesis was titled, Sociological Studies of the Alpine Vegetation on Longs Peak.[14]

Kiener taught at the University of Nebraska and served as chief biologist for the State of Nebraska Game, Forestation, and Parks Commission. He also founded the Nebraska Game Commission's Fisheries Research Department.[14] He died of pancreatic cancer on August 24, 1959.[14] Keiner's extensive collection of plant specimens, catalogs, field notes, reference books is housed at the University of Nebraska State Museum.[15]

References

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e MacDonald, Dougald (2004). Longs Peak: The Story of Colorado's Favorite Fourteener. Big Earth Publishing. pp. 86–91. ISBN 978-1-56579-497-9.
  3. ^ a b c d Taylor, Carol (January 11, 2013). "A fatal winter climb in 1925". DailyCamera.com. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
  4. ^ "Agnes Vaille · Women in High Places, 1880-1950 · The Collections of the American Alpine Club Library". library.AmericanAlpineClub.org. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  5. ^ Fleming, Barbara (June 14, 2015). "Fleming: The story behind a name: Agnes Vaille Shelter". Coloradoan.com. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  6. ^ a b Robertson, Janet (2003). The Magnificent Mountain Women: Adventures in the Colorado Rockies. University of Nebraska Press. pp. 49–56. ISBN 0-8032-8995-2.
  7. ^ "East face of peak in Colorado defies efforts to scale it". Democrat and Chronicle. Rochester, New York. January 28, 1927. p. 29. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
  8. ^ a b c Colorado Historical Society (2004). Western Voices: 125 Years of Colorado Writing. Fulcrum Publishing. pp. 205–224. ISBN 978-1-55591-531-5.
  9. ^ "Agnes Vaille Storm Shelter". coloradoencyclopedia.org. August 3, 2016. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  10. ^ Perry, Phyllis J (2008). It Happened in Rocky Mountain National Park. Morris Book Publishing, LLC. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-7627-4238-7.
  11. ^ a b Mehls, Steven F. (August 4, 1991). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Agnes Vaille Shelter". National Park Service. Retrieved August 24, 2011.
  12. ^ a b c Jessen, Kenneth (June 20, 2015). "Tragedy haunted Longs Peak climber Walter Kiener". ReporterHerald.com. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
  13. ^ "Walter Kiener, mountain climber and hero of a winter tragedy on Longs Peak last January, attending University of Nebraska". The Lincoln Star. Lincoln, Nebraska. September 20, 1925. p. 13. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  14. ^ a b c "Archives & Special Collections". archivespec.unl.edu. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  15. ^ "UNSM Botany Collections & Research | Collections". museum.unl.edu. Archived from the original on July 6, 2017. Retrieved September 5, 2017.