Mazamas

The Mazamas (pronounced mah zah maz) is a mountaineering organization based in Portland, Oregon, United States, founded in 1894.

Mazamas
A group of Mazamas climbers scales Mount Hood summer 1963
FormationJuly 19, 1894 (1894-07-19)
FounderW. G. Steel and others
Founded atMount Hood, Oregon, US
TypeNon-profit mountaineering club
93-0408077
Legal status501(c)(3), NTEE Code C60
HeadquartersPortland, Oregon
Region
Oregon, Cascade Range
ProductsMazamas Bulliten
Websitemazamas.org

Promotion of mountaineering

The climb of Mount Hood on July 19, 1894 when Mazamas was founded by 105 climbers including W. G. Steel (inset) [1]

The Mazamas has been an important part of the climbing community in the Pacific Northwest of the United States since its founding. The Mazamas is similar in its aims and activities to The Mountaineers of Seattle, Washington, which began in 1906 as an auxiliary of the Mazamas.[2]

The Mazamas offers more than 900 hikes and 350 climbs annually for more than 13,000 participants. A variety of classes and activities are offered for every skill and fitness level and are open to both members and nonmembers. The group also promotes mountaineering through education, climbing, hiking, fellowship, safety, and the protection of mountain environments.

Foundation

Mazamas was officially founded July 19, 1894 on the summit of Mount Hood by a group of 105 climbers. Members of the former Oregon Alpine Club, J. Francis Drake, Martin W. Gorman, Francis C. Little, William G. Steel, Charles H. Sholes, and Oliver C. Yocum, had planned the climb to found the new club and chosen the name on March 19.[3][4] The climbers had responded to an advertisement in the Morning Oregonian of June 12, 1894 announcing a meeting at the summit.[5] Soon after, members made pioneering climbs throughout Oregon and Washington.[6]

Name

The name Mazamas means mountain goat, from Nahuatl mazatl, deer.[7] Mount Mazama, the collapsed volcano that formed Crater Lake, is located in Oregon and was named after the organization on August 21, 1896, while on their annual outing.[8][9][10] They also named the Mazama Glacier on Mount Adams and the Mazama Glacier on Mount Baker after themselves in 1895 and 1907 respectively.[11][12]

gollark: My pack's got NuclearCraft, which is probably the coolest way, and requires actual thought, but you can still make lots of RF easily.
gollark: I mean, RF is very easy to make.
gollark: Turtles for mining are, frankly, awful.
gollark: It'll use FTB Utilities so I can skip meddling with Sponge.
gollark: Provisional "modlist": https://pastebin.com/zZ30Qbbv

See also

References

  1. Bell, Jon (March 17, 2018), "Mount Hood", Oregon Encyclopedia
  2. E. S. Meany. "Mountaineering". University of Washington Libraries Digital Collections, Accesssion 106-70-12, Box 107/8. Edmond S. Meany Papers. Retrieved 2007-01-23.
  3. Grauer, John Jack (March 17, 2018), "Mazamas", Oregon Encyclopedia
  4. "History; Significant Mazama events", Mazamas.org, archived from the original on August 18, 2014
  5. "Mazamas—Your Adventure Starts Here". The Mazamas. Retrieved 2007-01-23.
  6. Fred Beckey (1987). Cascade Alpine Guide, Volume I. The Mountaineers. ISBN 0-89886-127-6.
  7. See mazatl (Wiktionary)
  8. Fuller, Fay (September 6, 1896). "Christened Mount Mazama". Tacoma Ledger. Tacoma, WA.
  9. Gorman, M. W. (1897). "The Discovery and Early History of Crater Lake". Mazama. Portland, OR: Mazamas. 1 (2): 150–161. Retrieved February 24, 2016.
  10. "Mount Mazama". Geographic Names Information System. USGS. Retrieved April 29, 2018.
  11. Rusk, Claude Ewing (1978) [1924]. Tales of a Western Mountaineer (1st ed.). Seattle, Washington: The Mountaineers. ISBN 0916890627.
  12. "Mazama Glacier". Geographic Names Information System. USGS. Retrieved February 25, 2016.


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