Joyce Dunsheath
Joyce Dunsheath (1902-1976),[1] née Cissie Providence Houchen, was a mountaineer, traveller, explorer and writer.
Joyce Dunsheath | |
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Mrs. Joyce Dunsheath in 1956 | |
Born | 8 November 1902 |
Died | 30 July 1976 (aged 74) |
Nationality | British |
Other names | Cissie Providence Houchen |
Known for | mountaineering, exploration |
Parents |
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Family
Born in Heigham near Norwich, she was the daughter of Charles Houchen, insurance clerk, and Gertrude Providence, née Balls. She married in 1938 the renowned electrical engineer Percy Dunsheath (1886-1979) who was a widower. Joyce had met of his first wife during a skiing holiday in the Austrian Alps.[1] She and Percy shared a love for travel, mountaineering and exploration.[2] They made their home at St Paul, Abinger Hammer, Surrey.[1]
Education & awards
She obtained a Degree in Modern Languages at Bedford College, University of London, in 1924. She was a member of the Alpine Club from 1951. In 1956 she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, serving in its Council from 1965 to 1968. She also took a BSc degree when in her sixties, and an A' level Russian.[2]
Climbing and exploration
In 1956 she set off to explore the Himalayas in an expedition together with Eileen Gregory, biochemist, and Frances Delaney, geologist, and Hilda Reid, nurse. The target was the little known mountainous territory in the Kulu district of East Punjab. Driving all the way the 9000 miles from her home in Surrey, in a journey that was no less adventurous and perilous than the exploration itself, she managed to reach Manali, the "Darjeeling" of the Kulu district in seven weeks. Thanks to a grant of £500 from the Everest Foundation, she was able to survey thoroughly the Bara Shigri Glacier, by means of plane-table and panoramic camera, in order to compile subsequently a detailed map that took her detailed processing of her photographs and figures.[3] In July 1957 she climbed the highest mountain in Europe, the 18,000 feet high, snow-capped Mount Elbrus, in the Caucasus region, walking through its western, central regions, and in Svanetia, Georgia.[4] The whole area had been shut to the public since the Russian Revolution, and she was able to access it thanks to an invitation from the deputy Minister of Electric Power Stations, who had been in touch with her husband Percy about organizing an international electro-technical conference in Russia.[5] In 1961 she climbed Mount Damavand in Afghanistan. The account of her journey and her companion Eleanor Baillie in this expedition can be read on her published book "Afghan Quest", Harrap, 1961.[6] In 1964 she was invited to by Bharat Scouts and Guides' Association the led a team of six Indian women, aged between 18 and 31, to climb Mount Mrigthuni, 22,490 feet high, between the frontiers of Tibet and Nepal, in the Garhwal Himalayas. Following the successful ascent of Mount Everest by the Sherpa Tensing in the team lead by Sir John Hunt's in 1953, there was a very active interest in climbing in India, with climbing courses becoming very popular.[7] The expedition was successful, and "would make the path easier in all senses for future generations of Indian women". [8] She also climbed in the Japanese Alps, the Canadian Rockies,[2] visited the Peruvian Andes in 1965, and in 1973 she added Mount Kilimanjaro and Mount Kenya to her list of successful climbs.[1]
Publications
Her accounts and memories can be found in her three published books, "Mountains and Memsahibs" 1956,[9] with the other members of the expedition to the Bara-Shigri glacier, "Guest of the Soviets" 1959,[10] and "Afghan Quest" 1961, plus a number of articles in the Ladies Alpine Club Journal.
Legacy
She was a paladin of a conception of mountaineering in its purest sense, free from professionalism and competition, and she petitioned passionately to promote her views. According to her, the right approach to it was to regard it as "a sport to be enjoyed ... to harden the body and learn the skills which will make for success ... each one matching her own strength against the strength of the mountain ... involving the whole man, physical, mental and spiritual ... those gaining the summit know that the spirit of the hill is not of this world".[11]
References
- "Dunsheath [née Houchen], Cissie Providence [Joyce] (1902–1976), mountaineer and traveller". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/64718. Retrieved 2021-02-03.
- Lancaster-Jones, Joyce (1979). "In Memoriam, Joyce Dunsheath" (PDF). The Alpine Journal. 84 (328): 265–6.
- From a correspondent (August 20, 1956). "Four Women and a Car". The Times (London, England). p. 11.
- FROM OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT (October 29, 1957). "Return Of British Woman Climber". News. The Times (London, England). p. 7.
- "Multiple Display Advertisements". Advertising. The Times (London, England). May 28, 1959. p. 15.
- Dunsheath, Joyce (January 1, 1961). Afghan quest. Harrap. ASIN B0000CL8HE.
- "Indian Women Climb 22,000ft. Peak". News. The Times (London, England). October 19, 1964. p. 11.
- Dunsheath, Joyce (January 1, 1965). "New Heights for Indian Women". News. The Times (London, England). p. 11.
- Dunsheath, Joyce (1958). Mountains and Memsahibs. London: Constable. ASIN B000NX22YG.
- Dunsheath, Joyce (1959). Guest of the Soviets. London: Constable. ASIN B001J2408G.
- Dunsheath, Joyce (March 27, 1974). "Ethic of mountaineering". Opinion and Editorial. The Times (London, England). p. 17.
External links
Read the diary of the Mrigthuni climb and view a picture of the Indian team lead by Joyce Dunsheath :