Climbing History

A selected history of climbing and mountaineering through the climbers, climbs and media.


3671 Climbers

7315 Climbs

19065 Ascents


Featured

The Nose | E9 Trad climb at El Capitan

© Unknown | Source

The first ascent of The Nose (A2) was mainly aided. Sections were freed by many different people, not always formally recorded, before Lynn Hill's landmark completely free ascent.

The Stoveleg Cracks were first freed by Jim Bridwell in June 1967 after attempts in 1965 partnering Frank Sacherer who originally conceived they might be climbable without aid.

In 1975 John Bachar, Dale Bard and Ron Kauk had climbed ~85% free, all bar 120m, at ~5.11+.

In Spring 1980 Ray Jardine spent 4 months working the route, fixing ropes, managing to climb as far as the Great Roof free but only after chipping four holds on the Jardine Traverse to avoid the King Swing pendulum. So far (2025) all subsequent free ascents have taken this traverse.

In Fall 1990, Brooke Sandahl and Scott Franklin climbed all but four pitches free, the remaining aided sections were the Great Roof, Pitch above Camp 5, Changing Corners and the final Harding bolt ladder. Working top-down, Sandhal freed the Harding bolt ladder in 1991 (5.12c/7b+) and, with Dave Schultz, freed the pitch above Camp 5 in 1992 (5.12d/7c). They prepared the route for a free ascent including bolting a variation just the left of the aid line on the Changing Corners pitch but were unable to climb this.

Lynn Hill partnered by Simon Nadin first free climbed the Great Roof on a ground-up attempt in 1993 (5.13b/8a) but they were unable to completely free the Changing Corners by either the original line or the Sandhal/Schultz variation. All bar 10 feet of the route had now been free-climbed.

Hill and Sandahl joined forces later in the summer of 1993 and began working the Changing Corners pitch top-down, Sandhal focusing on his left hand variation, Hill on the original aid line. Hill was able to climb all the moves on the latter with two falls. The completely free ascent was made from the ground with Hill leading all the hard pitches.

References

[1] https://alpinist.com/features/birds-eye-view/

[2] http://www.edhartouni.net/nose-in-a-day.html

[3] https://www.rayjardine.com/Papers/Magazine-Articles/index.php?StoryPage=7

[4] https://www.rayjardine.com/Avocations/Rock-Climbing/index.php

[5] https://climbingzine.com/brooke-sandahl-beginnings-freeing-nose/

[6] https://publications.americanalpineclub.org/articles/12199404100/El-Capitans-Nose-Climbed-Free

© Unknown | Source

The first ascent of The Nose (A2) was mainly aided. Sections were freed by many different people, not always formally recorded, before Lynn Hill's landmark completely free ascent.

The Stoveleg Cracks were first freed by Jim Bridwell in June 1967 after attempts in 1965 partnering Frank Sacherer who originally conceived they might be climbable without aid.

In 1975 John Bachar, Dale Bard and Ron Kauk had climbed ~85% free, all bar 120m, at ~5.11+.

In Spring 1980 Ray Jardine spent 4 months working the route, fixing ropes, managing to climb as far as the Great Roof free but only after chipping four holds on the Jardine Traverse to avoid the King Swing pendulum. So far (2025) all subsequent free ascents have taken this traverse.

In Fall 1990, Brooke Sandahl and Scott Franklin climbed all but four pitches free, the remaining aided sections were the Great Roof, Pitch above Camp 5, Changing Corners and the final Harding bolt ladder. Working top-down, Sandhal freed the Harding bolt ladder in 1991 (5.12c/7b+) and, with Dave Schultz, freed the pitch above Camp 5 in 1992 (5.12d/7c). They prepared the route for a free ascent including bolting a variation just the left of the aid line on the Changing Corners pitch but were unable to climb this.

Lynn Hill partnered by Simon Nadin first free climbed the Great Roof on a ground-up attempt in 1993 (5.13b/8a) but they were unable to completely free the Changing Corners by either the original line or the Sandhal/Schultz variation. All bar 10 feet of the route had now been free-climbed.

Hill and Sandahl joined forces later in the summer of 1993 and began working the Changing Corners pitch top-down, Sandhal focusing on his left hand variation, Hill on the original aid line. Hill was able to climb all the moves on the latter with two falls. The completely free ascent was made from the ground with Hill leading all the hard pitches.

References

[1] https://alpinist.com/features/birds-eye-view/

[2] http://www.edhartouni.net/nose-in-a-day.html

[3] https://www.rayjardine.com/Papers/Magazine-Articles/index.php?StoryPage=7

[4] https://www.rayjardine.com/Avocations/Rock-Climbing/index.php

[5] https://climbingzine.com/brooke-sandahl-beginnings-freeing-nose/

[6] https://publications.americanalpineclub.org/articles/12199404100/El-Capitans-Nose-Climbed-Free

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Alex Megos on RED 9a

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Recent updates

Strong boulderer and Olympian. Hamish is most known for his quick ascents of hard boulders, including:

As of 2026 Hamish has fully retired from comps [1] and moved to Squamish to focus on outdoor climbing.

References

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/DWTrCCyCNy4/

Strong boulderer and Olympian, Hamish is most known for his quick ascents of hard boulders, notably:

As of 2026 Hamish has fully retired from comps [1] and moved to Squamish to focus on outdoor climbing.

References

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/DWTrCCyCNy4/

Strong boulderer and Olympian, Hamish is most known for his quick ascents of hard boulders, notably:

As of 2026 Hamish has fully retired from comps to focus on his outdoor climbing. [1]

References

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/DWTrCCyCNy4/

Strong boulderer and Olympian, Hamish is most known for his very quick ascents of cutting edge boulders, notably:

As of 2026 Hamish has fully retired from comps to focus on his outdoor climbing. [1]

References

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/DWTrCCyCNy4/

Strong boulderer and Olympian, Hamish is most known for his very quick ascents of cutting edge boulders, notably:

As of 2026 Hamish has fully retired from comps to focus on his outdoor climbing. [1]

References

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/DWTrCCyCNy4/

Strong boulderer and Olympian, Hamish is most known for his very quick ascents of cutting edge boulders, notably:

As of 2026 Hamish has fully retired from comps to focus on his outdoor climbing. [1]

References

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/DWTrCCyCNy4/

Strong boulderer and Olympian, Hamish is most known for his very quick ascents of cutting edge boulders, notably:

As of 2026 Hamish has fully retired from comps to focus on his outdoor climbing. [1]

References

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/DWTrCCyCNy4/

Strong boulderer and Olympian, Hamish is most known for his very quick ascents of cutting edge boulders, notably: - Megatron (9A) - climbed in 5 sessions - No One Mourns the Wicked (9A) - climbed in just a couple of hours!

As of 2026 Hamish has fully retired from comps to focus on his outdoor climbing. [1]

References

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/DWTrCCyCNy4/

Strong boulderer and Olympian, Hamish is most known for his very quick ascents of cutting edge boulders such as Megatron (9A) - climbed in 5 sessions, and No One Mourns the Wicked (9A) - climbed in just a couple of hours!

As of 2026 Hamish has fully retired from comps to focus on his outdoor climbing. [1]

References

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/DWTrCCyCNy4/

Media

Originally proposed at 8B+, the second and third ascentionists used new beta and suggested 8A+.

Originally proposed at 8B+, second and third ascents with newfound beta suggest 8A+.

Leo Wolfe's ascent of Jiagi
Leo Wolfe's ascent of Jiagi
Leo Wolfe's ascent of Jiagi
Media

Possible at 7a+ with a short aid section on the second pitch.