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Francis Fox Tuckett

Francis Fox Tuckett FRGS (10 February 1834 – 20 June 1913)[1] was an English mountaineer. He was vice-president of the Alpine Club from 1866 to 1868, and a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.[2]

Tuckett in 1868

Life and family edit

Tuckett was born in 1834 at the Old House, Frenchay Common, near Bristol, the eldest child of Francis and Mariana Tuckett.[3]

His father, Francis Tuckett of Frenchay (1802–1868), was a world traveller as well as a leather merchant, horticulturalist, social reformer, philanthropist and Quaker. Himself the son of Philip Debell Tuckett (1749–1816),[4] Francis Tuckett married Mariana Fox (1807–1863), a daughter of Robert Were Fox the Elder (1754–1818) and a member of the notable Fox family of Falmouth, on 29 March 1833.[5] Francis Tuckett was in Naples when he died in 1868.[6]

Tuckett's grandfather Robert Were Fox the Elder was a Quaker ship broker and business man in Cornwall,[7] while his uncle Robert Were Fox the Younger (1789–1877) was a geologist and natural philosopher who became a Fellow of the Royal Society.[8][9]

Francis Fox Tuckett was the eldest of five children, and his parents' only son. His eldest sister Elizabeth Fox Tuckett, born in 1835, died young, and his other sisters were a second Elizabeth Fox (1837), followed by Mariana Fox (1839) and Charlotte Fox (1842).[5]

Tuckett entered his father's business as a leather factor and was also a gentleman farmer all of his life, taking two to three months off each year for alpine exploration. In 1882, his business, under the name of 'Tuckett and Rake', was at 18 & 20, Victoria Street, Bristol, and was described as 'Leather, Valonia, and Raw Hide factors'.[10]

On 17 January 1896, at the age of 62, Tuckett married Alice Fox while he was in New Zealand.[3]

He died in 1913 at his birthplace, the Old House, Frenchay Common, and was buried at the Friends' Meeting House in Frenchay.[3]

Alpinism edit

Tuckett was one of the main figures of the Golden age of alpinism, making the ascent of 269 peaks and the crossing of 687 passes.[11] In Scrambles amongst the Alps Edward Whymper called Tuckett "that mighty mountaineer, whose name is known throughout the length and breadth of the Alps".[12] Geoffrey Winthrop Young called Tuckett's approach to climbing "encyclopaedic".[13]

His first trip to the Alps was in 1842 in the company of his father. They went to Chamonix and he explored the Mer de Glace.

 
The Aletschhorn from the north

On 18 June 1859 he made the first ascent of the Aletschhorn in the Swiss Alps together with the guides Johann Joseph Bennen, Peter Bohren and V. Tairraz. Here he showed his passion for scientific observation, making barometric calculations during the climb and on the summit in the teeth of a strong gale. Of the scene at the summit he wrote:

The wind of such violence as almost to carry off one's legs, driving snow, and twenty degrees Fahrenheit of frost, are not quite the companions one would select for examination of so vast a landscape . . . but . . . I unhesitatingly maintain that there is a joy in these measurings of the strength of nature in her wildest moods, a quiet sense of work done, in the teeth of the opposition.

— [14]

In 1861, Tuckett tested a prototype Alpine sleeping bag. Within a few years he had perfected a bag design which consisted of blanket material with rubber-coated fabric on the underside.[15]

He pioneered exploration within the Dauphiné Alps in the French Alps, in 1862 making the first crossings of the col des Ecrins, the col du Sélé and the col du Glacier Blanc in the Massif des Écrins with the guides Michel Croz, Peter Perren and Bartolommeo Peyrotte. He also made an attempt, with the same party, on the highest mountain in the range, the unclimbed Barre des Ecrins. In Tuckett's own words:

Arrived on the plateau [of the Glacier de l'Encula] a most striking view of the Ecrins burst upon us, and a hasty inspection encouraged us to hope its ascent would be practicable. On the sides of La Bérade and the Glacier Noir it presents, as has already been stated, the most precipitous and inaccessible face that can be conceived, but in the direction of the Glacier de l'Encula, as the upper part of the Glacier Blanc is named on the French map, the slopes are less rapid, and immense masses of névé and séracs cover it nearly to the summit. The snow was in very bad order, and as we sank at each step above the knee, it soon became evident that our prospects of success were extremely doubtful. A nearer approach, too, disclosed traces of fresh avalanches, and after much deliberation and a careful examination through the telescope, it was decided that the chances in our favour were too small to render it desirable to waste time in the attempt

— [16]

According to Whymper, Tuckett "halted before the Pointe des Ecrins [as the Barre was then called], and, dismayed by its appearance, withdrew his forces to gather less dangerous laurels elsewhere". The expedition did have the benefit, however, of "[throwing] some light on the Ecrins".[17]

 
The Rifugio Tuckett

Tuckett was also one of the first alpinists to explore the Dolomites in Italy; in 1865, together with Douglas William Freshfield, he traversed the Pale di San Martino group in eastern Trentino, crossing the San Martino Dolomites for the first time, a feat which astonished the mountaineering world as they had no maps and little equipment, relying on skill and intuition. In Trentino, the names of Tuckett, Freshfield, John Ball, and Edward Robson Whitwell are remembered as the pioneers who put the Dolomites on the map.[18] In 1871, in the Brenta Dolomites, Tuckett, with Freshfield and guide Devouassou climbed the Cima Brenta (3,150 m) via the Vedretta di Brenta Superiore on the west side; at the time this peak was thought to be the highest summit in the range.[19] The Rifugio Tuckett above Madonna di Campiglio,[20] situated at an altitude of 2,272 metres in the Brenta Dolomites, is named after him, as is the Bocca del Tuckett (2,648 m), a pass between two steep, rocky peaks that may be seen from the hut.[21]

In the Bernina Range in Italy and Switzerland, Tuckett and E. N. Buxton made the first crossing of the Fuorcla dal Zupò, the "fairly difficult" pass between Piz Zupò and Piz Argient, together with guides Peter Jenny, Christian Michel and Franz Biner on 28 July 1864;[22] on the same day, with the same party, he made the first crossing of the Fuorcla Crast' Agüzza.[23] In the same range Tuckett and F. A. Y. Brown made the first ascent of the south ridge (or Spallagrat) of Piz Bernina together with guides Christian Almer and Franz Andermatten on 23 June 1866.[24] This is today the normal route up the mountain.

His sister Charlotte wrote that "He kept himself in good training for his beloved pursuit of mountaineering by his daily walks to and from Bristol, five miles each way. He used to get home for six and for more years than I can say, the institution existed of an apple tart served with his tea".[3]

Another sister, Elizabeth, who was a traveller, writer and artist in her own right, illustrated her Alpine Journal with sketches. One is of the first ascent of the Cimon della Pala by Edward Robson Whitwell in 1870.[18]

Collector and antiquarian edit

A Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society[2] and a member of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, on his travels Tuckett built up a collection of objects which by 1917 had been donated to the Pitt Rivers Museum at Oxford.[25]

As a member of the Clifton Antiquarian Club, Tuckett published antiquarian papers in its Proceedings, including Notes of ancient Norwegian wooden churches (1888)[26] and Notes on ancient Egyptian methods of hewing, dressing, sculpturing and polishing stone (1889).[27]

Author edit

Tuckett's A Pioneer in the High Alps: Alpine Diaries and Letters of F. F. Tuckett, 1856–1874 was published posthumously in 1920.[28][29]

Honours edit

References edit

  1. ^ D.W.F., 'Obituary: Francis Fox Tuckett' in The Geographical Journal, Vol. 42, No. 2 (August 1913), pp. 206–207
  2. ^ a b Index to 'Proceedings of the Clifton Antiquarian Club' at cliftonantiquarian.co.uk, accessed 11 July 2008
  3. ^ a b c d e Francis Fox Tuckett at frenchaymuseumarchives.co.uk, accessed 8 July 2008
  4. ^ Dates for P. D. Tuckett from Milligan's Biographical dictionary of British Quakers in commerce and industry, p. 444 (NB, there were at least three members of this family called Philip Debell Tuckett.)
  5. ^ a b Mariana Tuckett at frenchaymuseumarchives.co.uk, accessed 11 July 2008
  6. ^ Francis Tuckett at frenchaymuseumarchives.co.uk, accessed 11 July 2008
  7. ^ Payton, Philip, 'Fox, Robert Were (1754–1818)' in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004)
  8. ^ Crook, Denise, 'Fox, Robert Were (1789–1877)', in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004)
  9. ^ Collins, John Henry, A Catalogue of the Works of Robert Were Fox, F.R.S., with a Sketch of his Life (Truro: Lake & Lake, 1878)
  10. ^ "No. 25114". The London Gazette. 2 June 1882. p. 2610.
  11. ^ Helmut Dumler and Willi P. Burkhardt, The High Mountains of the Alps, London: Diadem, 1994, p. 33.
  12. ^ Edward Whymper, Scrambles amongst the Alps, 6th edition, London: John Murray, 1936, p. 134.
  13. ^ Geoffrey Winthrop Young, 'Mountain Prophets', Alpine Journal, Vol. LIV, reprinted in Peaks, Passes and Glaciers, ed. Walt Unsworth, London: Allen Lane, 1981, p. 127.
  14. ^ Quoted in The High Mountains of the Alps, p. 33.
  15. ^ Sleep Well Part 1: Temperature Ratings: A Review of Temperature Standards for Sleeping Bags 27 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine at mammut.ch, accessed 11 July 2008
  16. ^ Francis Fox Tuckett, Alpine Journal, Vol. 1, 1863, pp. 166–7.
  17. ^ Scrambles amongst the Alps, p. 135.
  18. ^ a b The British Mountaineering Tradition in Trentino 13 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine at italtourism.com, accessed 8 July 2008
  19. ^ Gillian Price, Walking in the Dolomites, Milnthorpe: Cicerone, 1991, p. 234.
  20. ^ Walking in the Dolomites, p. 234.
  21. ^ Walking in the Dolomites, p. 234.
  22. ^ Robin Collomb, Bernina Alps, Goring: West Col Productions, 1988, p. 47.
  23. ^ Bernina Alps, p. 51.
  24. ^ The High Mountains of the Alps, p. 8; Bernina Alps, p. 59.
  25. ^ Relational Museum Collector Information: Collector Francis Fox Tuckett at prm.ox.ac.uk, accessed 8 July 2008
  26. ^ Proceedings of the Clifton Antiquarian Club, Vol. I (1888) pp. 114–129
  27. ^ Proceedings of the Clifton Antiquarian Club, Vol. II (1889) pp. 115–135
  28. ^ Tuckett, F. F., ''A Pioneer in the High Alps: Alpine Diaries and Letters of F. F. Tuckett, 1856–1874 (London: E. Arnold, 1920
  29. ^ Reviewed in The Geographical Journal, Vol. 58, No. 2 (Aug. 1921), p. 138

External links edit

francis, tuckett, frgs, february, 1834, june, 1913, english, mountaineer, vice, president, alpine, club, from, 1866, 1868, fellow, royal, geographical, society, tuckett, 1868, contents, life, family, alpinism, collector, antiquarian, author, honours, reference. Francis Fox Tuckett FRGS 10 February 1834 20 June 1913 1 was an English mountaineer He was vice president of the Alpine Club from 1866 to 1868 and a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society 2 Tuckett in 1868 Contents 1 Life and family 2 Alpinism 3 Collector and antiquarian 4 Author 5 Honours 6 References 7 External linksLife and family editTuckett was born in 1834 at the Old House Frenchay Common near Bristol the eldest child of Francis and Mariana Tuckett 3 His father Francis Tuckett of Frenchay 1802 1868 was a world traveller as well as a leather merchant horticulturalist social reformer philanthropist and Quaker Himself the son of Philip Debell Tuckett 1749 1816 4 Francis Tuckett married Mariana Fox 1807 1863 a daughter of Robert Were Fox the Elder 1754 1818 and a member of the notable Fox family of Falmouth on 29 March 1833 5 Francis Tuckett was in Naples when he died in 1868 6 Tuckett s grandfather Robert Were Fox the Elder was a Quaker ship broker and business man in Cornwall 7 while his uncle Robert Were Fox the Younger 1789 1877 was a geologist and natural philosopher who became a Fellow of the Royal Society 8 9 Francis Fox Tuckett was the eldest of five children and his parents only son His eldest sister Elizabeth Fox Tuckett born in 1835 died young and his other sisters were a second Elizabeth Fox 1837 followed by Mariana Fox 1839 and Charlotte Fox 1842 5 Tuckett entered his father s business as a leather factor and was also a gentleman farmer all of his life taking two to three months off each year for alpine exploration In 1882 his business under the name of Tuckett and Rake was at 18 amp 20 Victoria Street Bristol and was described as Leather Valonia and Raw Hide factors 10 On 17 January 1896 at the age of 62 Tuckett married Alice Fox while he was in New Zealand 3 He died in 1913 at his birthplace the Old House Frenchay Common and was buried at the Friends Meeting House in Frenchay 3 Alpinism editTuckett was one of the main figures of the Golden age of alpinism making the ascent of 269 peaks and the crossing of 687 passes 11 In Scrambles amongst the Alps Edward Whymper called Tuckett that mighty mountaineer whose name is known throughout the length and breadth of the Alps 12 Geoffrey Winthrop Young called Tuckett s approach to climbing encyclopaedic 13 His first trip to the Alps was in 1842 in the company of his father They went to Chamonix and he explored the Mer de Glace nbsp The Aletschhorn from the north On 18 June 1859 he made the first ascent of the Aletschhorn in the Swiss Alps together with the guides Johann Joseph Bennen Peter Bohren and V Tairraz Here he showed his passion for scientific observation making barometric calculations during the climb and on the summit in the teeth of a strong gale Of the scene at the summit he wrote The wind of such violence as almost to carry off one s legs driving snow and twenty degrees Fahrenheit of frost are not quite the companions one would select for examination of so vast a landscape but I unhesitatingly maintain that there is a joy in these measurings of the strength of nature in her wildest moods a quiet sense of work done in the teeth of the opposition 14 In 1861 Tuckett tested a prototype Alpine sleeping bag Within a few years he had perfected a bag design which consisted of blanket material with rubber coated fabric on the underside 15 He pioneered exploration within the Dauphine Alps in the French Alps in 1862 making the first crossings of the col des Ecrins the col du Sele and the col du Glacier Blanc in the Massif des Ecrins with the guides Michel Croz Peter Perren and Bartolommeo Peyrotte He also made an attempt with the same party on the highest mountain in the range the unclimbed Barre des Ecrins In Tuckett s own words Arrived on the plateau of the Glacier de l Encula a most striking view of the Ecrins burst upon us and a hasty inspection encouraged us to hope its ascent would be practicable On the sides of La Berade and the Glacier Noir it presents as has already been stated the most precipitous and inaccessible face that can be conceived but in the direction of the Glacier de l Encula as the upper part of the Glacier Blanc is named on the French map the slopes are less rapid and immense masses of neve and seracs cover it nearly to the summit The snow was in very bad order and as we sank at each step above the knee it soon became evident that our prospects of success were extremely doubtful A nearer approach too disclosed traces of fresh avalanches and after much deliberation and a careful examination through the telescope it was decided that the chances in our favour were too small to render it desirable to waste time in the attempt 16 According to Whymper Tuckett halted before the Pointe des Ecrins as the Barre was then called and dismayed by its appearance withdrew his forces to gather less dangerous laurels elsewhere The expedition did have the benefit however of throwing some light on the Ecrins 17 nbsp The Rifugio Tuckett Tuckett was also one of the first alpinists to explore the Dolomites in Italy in 1865 together with Douglas William Freshfield he traversed the Pale di San Martino group in eastern Trentino crossing the San Martino Dolomites for the first time a feat which astonished the mountaineering world as they had no maps and little equipment relying on skill and intuition In Trentino the names of Tuckett Freshfield John Ball and Edward Robson Whitwell are remembered as the pioneers who put the Dolomites on the map 18 In 1871 in the Brenta Dolomites Tuckett with Freshfield and guide Devouassou climbed the Cima Brenta 3 150 m via the Vedretta di Brenta Superiore on the west side at the time this peak was thought to be the highest summit in the range 19 The Rifugio Tuckett above Madonna di Campiglio 20 situated at an altitude of 2 272 metres in the Brenta Dolomites is named after him as is the Bocca del Tuckett 2 648 m a pass between two steep rocky peaks that may be seen from the hut 21 In the Bernina Range in Italy and Switzerland Tuckett and E N Buxton made the first crossing of the Fuorcla dal Zupo the fairly difficult pass between Piz Zupo and Piz Argient together with guides Peter Jenny Christian Michel and Franz Biner on 28 July 1864 22 on the same day with the same party he made the first crossing of the Fuorcla Crast Aguzza 23 In the same range Tuckett and F A Y Brown made the first ascent of the south ridge or Spallagrat of Piz Bernina together with guides Christian Almer and Franz Andermatten on 23 June 1866 24 This is today the normal route up the mountain His sister Charlotte wrote that He kept himself in good training for his beloved pursuit of mountaineering by his daily walks to and from Bristol five miles each way He used to get home for six and for more years than I can say the institution existed of an apple tart served with his tea 3 Another sister Elizabeth who was a traveller writer and artist in her own right illustrated her Alpine Journal with sketches One is of the first ascent of the Cimon della Pala by Edward Robson Whitwell in 1870 18 Collector and antiquarian editA Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society 2 and a member of the British Association for the Advancement of Science on his travels Tuckett built up a collection of objects which by 1917 had been donated to the Pitt Rivers Museum at Oxford 25 As a member of the Clifton Antiquarian Club Tuckett published antiquarian papers in its Proceedings including Notes of ancient Norwegian wooden churches 1888 26 and Notes on ancient Egyptian methods of hewing dressing sculpturing and polishing stone 1889 27 Author editTuckett s A Pioneer in the High Alps Alpine Diaries and Letters of F F Tuckett 1856 1874 was published posthumously in 1920 28 29 Honours editKnight of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus 1865 appointed by King Victor Emmanuel II of Italy for geographical and scientific work in the Italian Alps 3 References edit D W F Obituary Francis Fox Tuckett in The Geographical Journal Vol 42 No 2 August 1913 pp 206 207 a b Index to Proceedings of the Clifton Antiquarian Club at cliftonantiquarian co uk accessed 11 July 2008 a b c d e Francis Fox Tuckett at frenchaymuseumarchives co uk accessed 8 July 2008 Dates for P D Tuckett from Milligan s Biographical dictionary of British Quakers in commerce and industry p 444 NB there were at least three members of this family called Philip Debell Tuckett a b Mariana Tuckett at frenchaymuseumarchives co uk accessed 11 July 2008 Francis Tuckett at frenchaymuseumarchives co uk accessed 11 July 2008 Payton Philip Fox Robert Were 1754 1818 in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Crook Denise Fox Robert Were 1789 1877 in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Collins John Henry A Catalogue of the Works of Robert Were Fox F R S with a Sketch of his Life Truro Lake amp Lake 1878 No 25114 The London Gazette 2 June 1882 p 2610 Helmut Dumler and Willi P Burkhardt The High Mountains of the Alps London Diadem 1994 p 33 Edward Whymper Scrambles amongst the Alps 6th edition London John Murray 1936 p 134 Geoffrey Winthrop Young Mountain Prophets Alpine Journal Vol LIV reprinted in Peaks Passes and Glaciers ed Walt Unsworth London Allen Lane 1981 p 127 Quoted in The High Mountains of the Alps p 33 Sleep Well Part 1 Temperature Ratings A Review of Temperature Standards for Sleeping Bags Archived 27 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine at mammut ch accessed 11 July 2008 Francis Fox Tuckett Alpine Journal Vol 1 1863 pp 166 7 Scrambles amongst the Alps p 135 a b The British Mountaineering Tradition in Trentino Archived 13 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine at italtourism com accessed 8 July 2008 Gillian Price Walking in the Dolomites Milnthorpe Cicerone 1991 p 234 Walking in the Dolomites p 234 Walking in the Dolomites p 234 Robin Collomb Bernina Alps Goring West Col Productions 1988 p 47 Bernina Alps p 51 The High Mountains of the Alps p 8 Bernina Alps p 59 Relational Museum Collector Information Collector Francis Fox Tuckett at prm ox ac uk accessed 8 July 2008 Proceedings of the Clifton Antiquarian Club Vol I 1888 pp 114 129 Proceedings of the Clifton Antiquarian Club Vol II 1889 pp 115 135 Tuckett F F A Pioneer in the High Alps Alpine Diaries and Letters of F F Tuckett 1856 1874 London E Arnold 1920 Reviewed in The Geographical Journal Vol 58 No 2 Aug 1921 p 138External links editWorks by or about Francis Fox Tuckett at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francis Fox Tuckett amp oldid 1050167177, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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