What Year Was the Mt Whitney Hut rebuilt?

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BBA

climber
Topic Author's Original Post - Nov 12, 2014 - 02:32pm PT
In 1956 I was up Mt Whitney and we slept on the summit. The hut was pretty much destroyed by the elements, and I slept on the big metal door which was the only flat spot on the ground. Recent photos show the hut rebuilt. When was that? Anybody know?
Jon Beck

Trad climber
Oceanside
Nov 12, 2014 - 06:39pm PT
I remember being up there and seeing them adding grounding after the tragic lightning strike incident around 1990. The hut had a tin roof and no grounding.

http://articles.latimes.com/1990-07-16/news/mn-100_1_whitney-portal
julton

climber
Nov 12, 2014 - 07:15pm PT
In 1956 I was up Mt Whitney

So that makes you... 80?


The hut was pretty much destroyed by the elements

Was the original hut made of straw?


I slept on the big metal door which was the only flat spot on the ground

Ah, memories. I also spent a miserable night in that hut, despite a working door.
BBA

climber
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 12, 2014 - 09:54pm PT
Actually I'm 73. I was 15 at the time. Me and two friends packed to the top and slept there. I found a reference written by a school age kid to rebuilding the hut, but it doesn't say when:


"My great-grandparents are Dean Hathaway Prewitt who was born September 8th, 1911 in Fort Morgan, Colorado, and Audrey Milton King who was born on January 12th, 1914 in Artesia, California. They married in 1934 in Long Beach, California. They loved nature and spent many summers at the base of Mt Whitney in California. They also were active members of the Sierra Club for many years. They had three girls: Deanne, Denise, and my grandma Donna. My grandma Donna spent her first 18 summers at the Whitney Portals and climbed to the top of Mt Whitney four times. Donna's daughter, my mom, spent the night in a cabin at Whitney Portals when she was only one year old.
Mt. Whitney is located in the Sierra Nevada Mountains in California. Mt. Whitney is the highest mountain in the continental United States. The highest peak is 14,494 feet. Many people come from all over the world to hike Mt. Whitney. Some people can hike it in one day, but many stay overnight along the trail. The starting point is at Whitney Portals, and a popular camping area is called Outpost Camp. Outpost Camp is 3.5 miles up the trail. People also camp a lot at Trail Camp which is 6.5 miles up. It is 11 miles to get to the top from Whitney Portals. Because of the altitude, it is slow hiking for many people. If you hiked it in one day then it might take around 10 hours depending on how fast or slow you walked.
My great-grandpa spent 50 summers working at and around Mt Whitney. He helped rebuild stoves in campsites, and worked for cabin owners building their sturdy rock fireplaces and chimneys. He became especially close to the Knoeppel family and they would let him use their cabin anytime he wanted. Some of the fireplaces were florescent or glow-in- the dark. For firewood he would put a stick of dynamite in a tree and then he would blow it up, then he would have a lot of firewood for all the fireplaces that he built. He also repaired the Smithsonian hut on the very top of Mt. Whitney. The National Forest Service hired him because of his excellent reputation as a stone-worker and mountaineer. He had to haul supplies up there with a mule. The hut had originally been built in 1909.
My great-grandma ran a cook-tent at Outpost camp for two summers. She fed hikers that spent the night at Outpost Camp before they would head for the summit the next day. She even baked pies! Again, they had to bring the supplies in by mule. When my great-grandma was up there alone she would sleep with a hammer under her pillow so that she could protect herself if she ever needed to.
Today, over 50 years have passed since my great-grandparents first went to Mt. Whitney. Many cabins with their rock fireplaces, including the Knoeppel cabin, still stand. The campfire stoves are still being used, and the Smithsonian hut continues to shelter travelers at the very peak of Mt. Whitney. Although my great-grandma died in 1996, my great-grandpa is still alive at age 93. He lives in Joshua Tree, California. He still helps out on Sierra Club projects, and as recently as 2001 he was back to visit Mt. Whitney.
Dean Hathaway Prewitt passed away May 25, 2005 in Colton, California"
John M

climber
Nov 12, 2014 - 10:02pm PT

Great stories.. thanks. Please let us know if you find this information..


my great-grandpa is still alive at age 93.


Your great-grandpa is only 20 years older then you? My parents are more then 20 years older then me. How do you get a great grand parent that close in age? Just curious..
BBA

climber
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 13, 2014 - 06:49am PT
The great grandfather is not mine. I found a reference which looks like it was written by a school age person based in the syntax. To make that clear I edited just now
Reilly

Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
Nov 13, 2014 - 09:27am PT
I spent what I thought would be my last night in the hut in '69. I was
hoping the lightning would hit and get it over with but, no, it was not to be.
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