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Griffith Pugh

Lewis Griffith Cresswell Evans Pugh (29 October 1909 – 22 December 1994), generally known as Griffith Pugh, was a British physiologist and mountaineer. He was the expedition physiologist on the 1953 British expedition that made the first ascent of Mount Everest, and a researcher into the effects of cold and altitude on human physiology.

Childhood, education and family edit

Pugh's father was Lewis Pugh Evans Pugh KC, a Welsh barrister who practised in Calcutta,[1] and who had two children: Griffith, and Gwladys Mary Pugh.[2] Pugh went to Harrow School, and between 1928 and 1931 took a degree in law at New College, Oxford University, although he switched to medicine, which he studied for three more years, after which he qualified at St Thomas' Hospital, London, in 1938, where he subsequently worked.[3]

On 5 September 1939, Pugh married Josephine Helen Cassel, daughter of Sir Felix Cassel and Lady Helen Grimston, and they had four children: David Sheridan Griffith Pugh, Simon Francis Pugh, Harriet Veronica Felicity Pugh (whose married name is Harriet Tuckey) and Oliver Lewis Evans Pugh.[4]

Skiing edit

Pugh was a keen skier, learning the skill in the Swiss resort of Engelberg as a child,[5] and later competing in the World Championships.[1] He was selected to represent Britain in the 1936 Winter Olympics in Garmisch-Partenkirchen in all three skiing disciplines but was unable to compete as a result of injury.[3] He also made frequent trips to the Mont Blanc massif and the Bernese Oberland to climb.[3]

Wartime service edit

Having served in the Royal Army Medical Corps in Britain, Greece, Crete, Egypt, Ceylon, Iraq and Jerusalem,[1] Pugh was invited by fellow Harrovian W. J. Riddell, on the basis of his skiing and climbing expertise, to join the recently established School of Mountain Warfare at the Cedars resort in Lebanon, working for two years alongside A. D. M. Cox (an Oxford don and a considerable alpinist in his own right) and John Carryer.[3] Pugh wrote papers for the School that were later used in the Army Training Manual, did much ski mountaineering, often ascending 3,000 to 4,000 feet, crossing 20 miles on trips that lasted up to 12 hours in self-contained units that could be self-sufficient for over a week,[3] and training troops to oppose crack German mountain formations.[1]

Mountaineering and physiology edit

After the war, Pugh worked in Hammersmith in clinical research at the Post-Graduate Medical School. His much-noted eccentricity was already evident, as when he attached electrodes to his body and submerged himself in an ice bath from which he had to be rescued as the cold had paralysed him.[citation needed] He moved in 1950 to the Medical Research Council laboratories in Hampstead to work under Professor Otto Edholm in the Department of Human Physiology as head of the Laboratory of Field Physiology.[3] He stayed there for the rest of his career.[1]

Cho Oyo 1952 edit

Expedition leader Eric Shipton invited Pugh, now on the High Altitude Committee of the Medical Research Council,[6] to accompany the British 1952 Cho Oyo expedition to perform research on oxygen equipment that would be useful on the following year's expedition to Mount Everest. Pugh realised that the best way to do this was to study climbers in the field at altitude, and he analysed rates of breathing, and food and fluid intake. His report on his findings was, according to George Band, a climber on the 1953 Mount Everest expedition, of "fundamental value" to that expedition.[7] These included the need to drink considerably more than the usual three or four pints of liquid per day;[7] on Mount Everest. Hunt reports that Pugh's advice was that they drink six or seven pints of fluid a day.[8] In June 1952, Pugh reported to the Joint Himalayan Committee that the failure of the Swiss on Mount Everest in the spring of that year suggested that the British, who he deemed to be less fit and less experienced mountaineers, therefore needed to be supplied with "only the best oxygen equipment ... to put up a better performance than the Swiss".[9]

Pugh's 1952 "seminal" report for the Medical Research Council was never published. The writer Michael Gill unearthed a copy with Pugh's other papers in the Mandeville Special Collection of the University of California, San Diego. He was surprised that it did not answer questions like the height at which to use oxygen, flow rates other than 4 L/m, and whether to use sleeping oxygen.[10]

Mount Everest 1953 edit

Pugh accompanied the Mount Everest expedition as field physiologist under the sponsorship of the Medical Research Council,[11] although he did not travel with the main party, which left England for India in February 1953 aboard the S.S. Stratheden. As well as the oxygen equipment, which he developed alongside Tom Bourdillon,[9] much of the other high-altitude equipment – boots, tents, clothing, stoves and airbeds – was designed by him.[12] Pugh also designed the diet, which included 400g of sugar a day for the assault party, most of which "astonishing amount", according to Band, was consumed by the Sherpas in their tea.[13] In addition to his research on Cho Oyo, Pugh had taken part in tests of the oxygen equipment in a decompression chamber at the Royal Aircraft Establishment in Farnborough, where according to Hunt he displayed symptoms of anoxia when taken to the artificial height of 29,000 ft and had his oxygen mask removed;[14] Band records his "spasmodic twitching" and attempts to prevent the instructor to replace his mask".[15] Pugh arranged for the use of "sleeping oxygen" at higher camps, where one oxygen bottle supplied two men through masks of the type used by BOAC; Pugh was with Hunt at Camp IV, where Hunt reported a restful night using the system.[16]

Pugh's scientific equipment was carried from Kathmandu to Everest Base Camp in a "shining aluminium trunk of coffin-like dimensions",[17] and during the walk-in he subjected expedition members to a number of physiological tests, including a "maximum work test", which involved going uphill as fast as possible and then breathing into a bag on collapsing exhausted at the top.[18] He continued these tests at the camp at Thyangboche, where he set up his physiological tent, which contained scales, medical tools, thermometers and other equipment.[19] His dress for the walk-in was pyjamas, a deerstalker's hat and sunglasses;[18] he wore these pyjamas at the reception given by the King of Nepal at the expedition's end.[20] Band accounts for them by stating that Pugh was protecting his fair skin from the sun, which suffered badly before he started wearing them, and relates that the Sherpas treated him as the expedition's "holy man" on account of his appearance and his "absent-minded" air.[21]

Pugh was part of the first party to ascend from Thyangboche to find a route through the Khumbu Icefall.[22]

In Everest – The First Ascent: The Untold Story of Griffith Pugh, the Man Who Made It Possible by Pugh's daughter Harriet Tuckey, published in 2013, Tuckey argues that her father was given insufficient credit in the official accounts of the first ascent – The Ascent of Everest by expedition leader John Hunt and the film The Conquest of Everest – for his role in making it possible. These accounts stressed the derring-do and "grit and determination" of the expedition team, while simultaneously downplaying the important role that science, in particular the science of Pugh, played.[23] Indeed, in the film, Pugh was depicted as a mad scientist, "belittled, his work passed over without mention", because to the British establishment of the time, Tuckey maintains, science was perceived as unheroic and to stress its key role would have undermined the heroism of the ascent.[23] In a section of George Band's Everest: 50 Years on Top of the World (2003) entitled "Why Did We Succeed?", Band lists among the factors "the research of those, such as Griff Pugh, Dr Bradley and the developers of our oxygen sets who all helped to ensure that our acclimatization, clothing and equipment were better than ever before".[24]

1960–61 Silver Hut expedition edit

Having been on three previous expedition with Edmund Hillary, the New Zealand mountaineer invited him in 1960–61 on a nine-month-long expedition to the Himalaya on which the long-term effects of altitude on human physiology were studied. The prefabricated "Silver Hut" was carried up to an altitude of 19,000 feet (5,800 m) and experiments on the cardiac and pulmonary response to a prolonged period at altitude were carried out.[1] Here Pugh showed that Mount Everest could be climbed without oxygen, which was shown to be the case by Reinhold Messner and Peter Habeler in their ascent of 1978.[3] Two attempts were made to climb the world's fifth-highest mountain, Makalu, (27,790 feet (8,470 m)) without oxygen, but they were unsuccessful.

Polar work 1956–57 edit

Pugh was invited by the University of California's Nello Pace in 1956–57 to the Scott Base in Antarctica to carry out research into carbon monoxide poisoning in huts and tents, the adaptation to and tolerance of cold, and the warming effect of solar radiation.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Milledge, James S. (27 January 1995). "OBITUARIES: Griffith Pugh". Independent.
  2. ^ "Person Page – 8267". The Peerage.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Ward, Michael (1995). "Lewis Griffith CressweIl Evans Pugh 1909–1994" (PDF). Alpine Journal: 326–327.
  4. ^ "Person Page – 20706". The Peerage.
  5. ^ Riddell, W. J. (1995). "Lewis Griffith CressweIl Evans Pugh 1909–1994" (PDF). Alpine Journal: 328–329.
  6. ^ Hunt 1953, p. 23.
  7. ^ a b Band 2003, p. 115.
  8. ^ Hunt 1953, p. 83.
  9. ^ a b Band 2003, p. 120.
  10. ^ Gill, Michael (2017). Edmund Hillary: A Biography. Nelson, NZ: Potton & Burton. pp. 218, 219. ISBN 978-0-947503-38-3.
  11. ^ Hunt 1953, p. 29.
  12. ^ Hunt 1953, p. 37.
  13. ^ Band 2003, p. 135.
  14. ^ Hunt 1953, pp. 50–51.
  15. ^ Band 2003, p. 130.
  16. ^ Hunt 1953, p. 147.
  17. ^ Hunt 1953, p. 65.
  18. ^ a b Hunt 1953, p. 71.
  19. ^ Hunt 1953, p. 78.
  20. ^ Hunt 1953, p. 224.
  21. ^ Band 2003, p. 136.
  22. ^ Band 2003, p. 141.
  23. ^ a b Kavenna, Joanna (1 June 2013). "Everest, by Harriet Tuckey". The Spectator.
  24. ^ Band 2003, p. 174.

Bibliography edit

  • Band, George (2003). Everest: 50 Years on Top of the World. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 0007147481.
  • Hunt, John (1953). The Ascent of Everest. London: Hodder & Stoughton.
  • Tuckey, Harriet (2013). Everest – The First Ascent: The Untold Story of Griffith Pugh, the Man Who Made It Possible, London: Rider. ISBN 9781846043482.

External links edit

  • L. G. C. E. Pugh Papers, 1940–1986 at the Mandeville Special Collections Library, UC San Diego

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Lewis Griffith Cresswell Evans Pugh 29 October 1909 22 December 1994 generally known as Griffith Pugh was a British physiologist and mountaineer He was the expedition physiologist on the 1953 British expedition that made the first ascent of Mount Everest and a researcher into the effects of cold and altitude on human physiology Contents 1 Childhood education and family 2 Skiing 3 Wartime service 4 Mountaineering and physiology 4 1 Cho Oyo 1952 4 2 Mount Everest 1953 4 3 1960 61 Silver Hut expedition 5 Polar work 1956 57 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksChildhood education and family editPugh s father was Lewis Pugh Evans Pugh KC a Welsh barrister who practised in Calcutta 1 and who had two children Griffith and Gwladys Mary Pugh 2 Pugh went to Harrow School and between 1928 and 1931 took a degree in law at New College Oxford University although he switched to medicine which he studied for three more years after which he qualified at St Thomas Hospital London in 1938 where he subsequently worked 3 On 5 September 1939 Pugh married Josephine Helen Cassel daughter of Sir Felix Cassel and Lady Helen Grimston and they had four children David Sheridan Griffith Pugh Simon Francis Pugh Harriet Veronica Felicity Pugh whose married name is Harriet Tuckey and Oliver Lewis Evans Pugh 4 Skiing editPugh was a keen skier learning the skill in the Swiss resort of Engelberg as a child 5 and later competing in the World Championships 1 He was selected to represent Britain in the 1936 Winter Olympics in Garmisch Partenkirchen in all three skiing disciplines but was unable to compete as a result of injury 3 He also made frequent trips to the Mont Blanc massif and the Bernese Oberland to climb 3 Wartime service editHaving served in the Royal Army Medical Corps in Britain Greece Crete Egypt Ceylon Iraq and Jerusalem 1 Pugh was invited by fellow Harrovian W J Riddell on the basis of his skiing and climbing expertise to join the recently established School of Mountain Warfare at the Cedars resort in Lebanon working for two years alongside A D M Cox an Oxford don and a considerable alpinist in his own right and John Carryer 3 Pugh wrote papers for the School that were later used in the Army Training Manual did much ski mountaineering often ascending 3 000 to 4 000 feet crossing 20 miles on trips that lasted up to 12 hours in self contained units that could be self sufficient for over a week 3 and training troops to oppose crack German mountain formations 1 Mountaineering and physiology editAfter the war Pugh worked in Hammersmith in clinical research at the Post Graduate Medical School His much noted eccentricity was already evident as when he attached electrodes to his body and submerged himself in an ice bath from which he had to be rescued as the cold had paralysed him citation needed He moved in 1950 to the Medical Research Council laboratories in Hampstead to work under Professor Otto Edholm in the Department of Human Physiology as head of the Laboratory of Field Physiology 3 He stayed there for the rest of his career 1 Cho Oyo 1952 edit Main article 1952 British Cho Oyu expedition Expedition leader Eric Shipton invited Pugh now on the High Altitude Committee of the Medical Research Council 6 to accompany the British 1952 Cho Oyo expedition to perform research on oxygen equipment that would be useful on the following year s expedition to Mount Everest Pugh realised that the best way to do this was to study climbers in the field at altitude and he analysed rates of breathing and food and fluid intake His report on his findings was according to George Band a climber on the 1953 Mount Everest expedition of fundamental value to that expedition 7 These included the need to drink considerably more than the usual three or four pints of liquid per day 7 on Mount Everest Hunt reports that Pugh s advice was that they drink six or seven pints of fluid a day 8 In June 1952 Pugh reported to the Joint Himalayan Committee that the failure of the Swiss on Mount Everest in the spring of that year suggested that the British who he deemed to be less fit and less experienced mountaineers therefore needed to be supplied with only the best oxygen equipment to put up a better performance than the Swiss 9 Pugh s 1952 seminal report for the Medical Research Council was never published The writer Michael Gill unearthed a copy with Pugh s other papers in the Mandeville Special Collection of the University of California San Diego He was surprised that it did not answer questions like the height at which to use oxygen flow rates other than 4 L m and whether to use sleeping oxygen 10 Mount Everest 1953 edit Main article 1953 British Mount Everest expedition Pugh accompanied the Mount Everest expedition as field physiologist under the sponsorship of the Medical Research Council 11 although he did not travel with the main party which left England for India in February 1953 aboard the S S Stratheden As well as the oxygen equipment which he developed alongside Tom Bourdillon 9 much of the other high altitude equipment boots tents clothing stoves and airbeds was designed by him 12 Pugh also designed the diet which included 400g of sugar a day for the assault party most of which astonishing amount according to Band was consumed by the Sherpas in their tea 13 In addition to his research on Cho Oyo Pugh had taken part in tests of the oxygen equipment in a decompression chamber at the Royal Aircraft Establishment in Farnborough where according to Hunt he displayed symptoms of anoxia when taken to the artificial height of 29 000 ft and had his oxygen mask removed 14 Band records his spasmodic twitching and attempts to prevent the instructor to replace his mask 15 Pugh arranged for the use of sleeping oxygen at higher camps where one oxygen bottle supplied two men through masks of the type used by BOAC Pugh was with Hunt at Camp IV where Hunt reported a restful night using the system 16 Pugh s scientific equipment was carried from Kathmandu to Everest Base Camp in a shining aluminium trunk of coffin like dimensions 17 and during the walk in he subjected expedition members to a number of physiological tests including a maximum work test which involved going uphill as fast as possible and then breathing into a bag on collapsing exhausted at the top 18 He continued these tests at the camp at Thyangboche where he set up his physiological tent which contained scales medical tools thermometers and other equipment 19 His dress for the walk in was pyjamas a deerstalker s hat and sunglasses 18 he wore these pyjamas at the reception given by the King of Nepal at the expedition s end 20 Band accounts for them by stating that Pugh was protecting his fair skin from the sun which suffered badly before he started wearing them and relates that the Sherpas treated him as the expedition s holy man on account of his appearance and his absent minded air 21 Pugh was part of the first party to ascend from Thyangboche to find a route through the Khumbu Icefall 22 In Everest The First Ascent The Untold Story of Griffith Pugh the Man Who Made It Possible by Pugh s daughter Harriet Tuckey published in 2013 Tuckey argues that her father was given insufficient credit in the official accounts of the first ascent The Ascent of Everest by expedition leader John Hunt and the film The Conquest of Everest for his role in making it possible These accounts stressed the derring do and grit and determination of the expedition team while simultaneously downplaying the important role that science in particular the science of Pugh played 23 Indeed in the film Pugh was depicted as a mad scientist belittled his work passed over without mention because to the British establishment of the time Tuckey maintains science was perceived as unheroic and to stress its key role would have undermined the heroism of the ascent 23 In a section of George Band s Everest 50 Years on Top of the World 2003 entitled Why Did We Succeed Band lists among the factors the research of those such as Griff Pugh Dr Bradley and the developers of our oxygen sets who all helped to ensure that our acclimatization clothing and equipment were better than ever before 24 1960 61 Silver Hut expedition edit Main article 1960 61 Silver Hut expedition Having been on three previous expedition with Edmund Hillary the New Zealand mountaineer invited him in 1960 61 on a nine month long expedition to the Himalaya on which the long term effects of altitude on human physiology were studied The prefabricated Silver Hut was carried up to an altitude of 19 000 feet 5 800 m and experiments on the cardiac and pulmonary response to a prolonged period at altitude were carried out 1 Here Pugh showed that Mount Everest could be climbed without oxygen which was shown to be the case by Reinhold Messner and Peter Habeler in their ascent of 1978 3 Two attempts were made to climb the world s fifth highest mountain Makalu 27 790 feet 8 470 m without oxygen but they were unsuccessful Polar work 1956 57 editPugh was invited by the University of California s Nello Pace in 1956 57 to the Scott Base in Antarctica to carry out research into carbon monoxide poisoning in huts and tents the adaptation to and tolerance of cold and the warming effect of solar radiation 1 References edit a b c d e f g Milledge James S 27 January 1995 OBITUARIES Griffith Pugh Independent Person Page 8267 The Peerage a b c d e f g Ward Michael 1995 Lewis Griffith CressweIl Evans Pugh 1909 1994 PDF Alpine Journal 326 327 Person Page 20706 The Peerage Riddell W J 1995 Lewis Griffith CressweIl Evans Pugh 1909 1994 PDF Alpine Journal 328 329 Hunt 1953 p 23 a b Band 2003 p 115 Hunt 1953 p 83 a b Band 2003 p 120 Gill Michael 2017 Edmund Hillary A Biography Nelson NZ Potton amp Burton pp 218 219 ISBN 978 0 947503 38 3 Hunt 1953 p 29 Hunt 1953 p 37 Band 2003 p 135 Hunt 1953 pp 50 51 Band 2003 p 130 Hunt 1953 p 147 Hunt 1953 p 65 a b Hunt 1953 p 71 Hunt 1953 p 78 Hunt 1953 p 224 Band 2003 p 136 Band 2003 p 141 a b Kavenna Joanna 1 June 2013 Everest by Harriet Tuckey The Spectator Band 2003 p 174 Bibliography editBand George 2003 Everest 50 Years on Top of the World London HarperCollins ISBN 0007147481 Hunt John 1953 The Ascent of Everest London Hodder amp Stoughton Tuckey Harriet 2013 Everest The First Ascent The Untold Story of Griffith Pugh the Man Who Made It Possible London Rider ISBN 9781846043482 External links editL G C E Pugh Papers 1940 1986 at the Mandeville Special Collections Library UC San Diego Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Griffith Pugh amp oldid 1178875207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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