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Henry Fairbanks Montagnier


Henry Fairbanks Montagnier
File:Montagnier, Henry Fairbanks.jpg
Born 1877
Died 1933
Residence Chalet Beau Reveil, Champéry, Valais, Switzerland
Occupation private means
Society Membership
membership ordinary fellow
left 1929 last listed
elected_AI 1926.07.13
clubs American Alpine Club
Alpine Club



Contents

Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

1926.07.13 nominated and elected forthwith; proposed by J.H. Driberg, seconded by E.N. Falliaze

Notes From Elsewhere

Henry F. Montagnier, an American living in Geneva, assisted Freshfield with his research [Saussure by John E. Joseph]

Henry, the son of Frank Montagnier and Crawford Fairbanks sister Pauline, spent much time abroad and developed a great interest in rare books and maps. He purchased many of them as gifts for the Emeline Fairbanks Memorial Library, often having them shipped directly from European bookshops

According the Librarian's annual report covering 1932-33, "the gift of Henry F. Montagnier '99 is a collection on Swiss history, particularly related to the Cantons of Geneva, Baud and Valais, Bern, and Neuchâtel. Many of the books, particularly those related to the Reformation and the municipal history of Geneva are rare and difficult to secure." Particularly notable is the series of bound volumes of pamphlets, many from the eighteenth century, under the call number RCPXR 1567.384.999. For example, v. 16 in this series, contains both printed pamphlets as well as transcriptions of letters, and completed forms for elections , all relating to the politics of 1767. A number of the transcribed documents in manuscript are comparable to those found in the holdings of the Société-de-lecture, Geneva. An article about the Montagnier gift appears in Biblia, vol 5, no. 1 [Princeton Univ. Library rare books]

Montagnier, although born in Cincinnati, passed his childhood in Terre Haute, Indiana, which his ancestors, a Lyonnais family, founded. He was educated at Armor Military School and at Princeton University, leaving the class of 1899—among whose members he was affectionately known as “Count”—in the spring of his junior year.

With his grandmother, a woman keenly interested in literature, he always spoke French, and to this association may be traced an inclination toward research which culminated in his devoting himself to the history of Alpine exploration. Montagnier’s parents died when he was young, and independent means permitted him to travel as his fancy dictated. When but seventeen, a bicycle trip with a friend through the Western Alps, and the reading of Whymper’s Scrambles, further directed his affection toward mountain ranges.

In 1897, at the age of twenty, he made several ascents in the Oberland, and thereafter climbed in nearly every season until the year of his death. In addition to visiting all districts of the Alps, he accomplished notable work in the Himalaya and on the volcanoes of the Canary Islands, his record being fully chronicled in the lists of the American Alpine Club.

A chance meeting with Wicks at the Schwarzegg hut in 1902 led to a friendship through which Montagnier eventually became acquainted with all the prominent mountaineers of his day. He joined the Alpine Club in 1903 and became a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society three years later. His climbing companions included such notable men as General Bruce, E. R. Blanchet and the Chevalier de Cessole.

For a number of years Montagnier lived in Italy, afterward residing in Berne (1915-20), and finally removing to Chalet Beau Revéil, Champery. There he built up his library, part of which has been presented to the American Alpine Club.

Montagnier’s name will endure largely as a commentator and investigator on the literature of Mont Blanc. He assisted Dübi in Paccard under Mont Blanc (1903), collaborated with Freshfield in the Life of H. B. de Saussure (1920), and with Commandant Gaillard in the monographs, Journal d’un Voyage à Chamouni (1926) and Le Mont Blanc et Le Col du Géant (1927). The Alpine Journal contains his papers: “A Bibliography of the Ascents of Mont Blanc (1786-1853).” “Dr. Paccard’s Lost Narrative,” “Early Extracts from the Travellers’ Book at Eggishorn,” “The Early History of the Col du Géant and the Legend of the Col Major,” “Early Records of Théodule, Weissthor, etc.,” “Records of Early Expeditions in the Zermatt District,” and “Thomas Blaikie and Michel-Gabriel Paccard.”

Several years ago Montagnier transferred his place of residence to Paris. Complications followed an operation at Montreux in May, 1933, and he died on July 16th, being fifty-five years of age.

Although he represented the American Alpine Club (which he joined in 1903) at the International Congress at Chamonix in 1932, it cannot be said that Montagnier was well known to the membership save through a brief visit to the United States some months earlier in the same year, when he attended the annual meeting of the Club. It is, therefore, not inappropriate to quote his lifelong friend, Dr. Claude Wilson, who describes him as “a good companion of pleasantly bon-vivant disposition, the rancon- teur with a tendency to impart ingenuous confidences on which one looks back with the smile of congenial reminiscence, the perfect host, the equally appreciative guest.”

Now Montagnier has gone; to that bourne of which Farrar once happily remarked: “But what a Valhalla! Upon my word we shall have some tales to tell them all.” [AAC]

Publications

External Publications

Dr. Paccard's lost narrative: a note. With a facsimile of the prospectus of Dr. Paccard's book. Reprinted from 'The Alpine journal', February 1912 by Henry F Montagnier

A bibliography of the ascents of Mont Blanc from 1786-1853. Reprinted from the Alpine journal August 1911 by Henry F Montagnier

The life of Horace Benedict de Saussure, W. Freshfield, with the collaboration of Henry F. Montagnier. By Freshfield, Douglas William, 1845-1934 Montagnier, Henry F

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

Other Material

Princeton Library - see notes