Swiss Alpine Club

The Swiss Alpine Club (German: Schweizer Alpen-Club, French: Club Alpin Suisse, Italian: Club Alpino Svizzero, Romansh: Club Alpin Svizzer) is the largest mountaineering club in Switzerland. It was founded in 1863 in Olten and it is now composed of 111 sections with 110,000 members (2006). These include the Association of British Members of the Swiss Alpine Club.

Official logo of the Swiss Alpine Club.

History

Two mountain huts of different generations: the Trient Hut and the Monte Rosa Hut

The Swiss Alpine Club was the first Alpine club founded in continental Europe after the foundation of the Alpine Club (1857) in London. One of the founders and the first president of the Club was Dr. Melchior Ulrich; other members were Gottlieb Samuel Studer and Dr. Simler. The inaugural meeting was held in Olten.[1]

With the increasing number of climbers, steps had to be taken to make the approach to the mountains a little less complicated and exhausting. Until mountain huts were built, there had been no choice for the climbers other than sleeping in the highest chalets or in a Bivouac shelter under some overhanging rocks and, in both cases, firewood had to be carried up. The Swiss Alpine Club during the first twenty-five years of its existence contributed to build thirty-eight huts, of which the oldest was the Grünhorn hut on the Tödi (1863), followed by the Trift hut, near the Dammastock (1864). The Matterhorn hut was built in 1865, the Mountet in 1871, the Weisshorn Hut in 1876, the Concordia on the Aletsch glacier and the Boval hut in 1877.[2]

Timeline

  • 1863: Foundation of the club, after the Alpine Club (1857) and the Austrian Alpine Club (1862).
  • 1863: Construction of the first mountain hut: the Grünhornhütte
  • 1864: First publication a journal which will be named later, Die Alpen, Les Alpes
  • 1900: The SAC is composed of 43 sections and 6000 members
  • 1905: Opening of the Swiss Alpine Museum in Bern
  • 1907: Women are not allowed in the club
  • 1963: The club is constituted of 44'500 members (men only)
  • 1977: Foundation of the central office in Bern
  • 1980: Fusion with the Women Swiss Alpine Club (founded in 1918). The total effectives reach 75‘600 members.
  • 1992: The first cultural prize of the SAC is attributed
  • 1994: The SAC officially promotes competition climbing
  • 1996: Abolition of the central committee
  • 2006: The SAC receives the Milestone tourism prize
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gollark: I'm going to see if I can integrate ABR into my graphing system too now.
gollark: Or also disassembling them, I suppose.
gollark: Consider:- disassembling other humans into nutrients you need, as they're nearby and contain exactly the right nutrients to live- forcefeeding to the point of obesity or something- making plants/other animals unable to grow due to removing all their nutrients
gollark: Them going rogue isn't the problem. Them working exactly as designed is.

See also

References

  1. Claire Eliane Engel, A history of mountaineering in the Alps, 1950, p. 147
  2. Claire Eliane Engel, A history of mountaineering in the Alps, 1950, p. 175


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