Passings: Jim Whittaker, first American to summit Everest and first president of REI

 

By THE ALASKA STORY

April 8, 2026 – Jim Whittaker, the legendary American mountaineer who became the first American to summit Mount Everest and helped build REI, the iconic outdoor gear company, has died at age 97.

Whittaker died April 7 at his home in Port Townsend, Wash., according to reports and biographical summaries of his life and career.

Born Feb. 10, 1929, in Seattle, Whittaker grew up in the Pacific Northwest alongside his identical twin brother, Lou Whittaker, who also became a prominent climber. Their early years in the Boy Scouts and climbing in the Cascade Mountains helped launch a lifelong passion for mountaineering and exploration.

He climbed Denali and summited on May 17, 1961, as part of the Pacific Northwest Mount McKinley Expedition. His climbing partners on that ascent included his twin brother, climber Pete Schoening, and businessman John Day. The team successfully summited via the West Buttress route but the descent involved a serious accident, when the team slid and tumbled about 400 feet on a steep, crevassed section. John Day suffered a broken leg, while Whittaker and Schoening were briefly knocked unconscious. The group was stranded above 17,000 feet for several days in harsh conditions before a helicopter evacuation and rescue support from Anchorage. Jim and Lou eventually walked out under their own power.

Whittaker etched his name into history two years later, when on May 1, 1963 he became the first American to reach the summit of Mount Everest, climbing alongside Sherpa Nawang Gombu during the historic American Mount Everest Expedition. The expedition battled fierce winds, extreme cold, and dwindling oxygen, but eventually reached the top and spent roughly 20 minutes on the summit before descending. The achievement came at a time when fewer than 10 people in the world had ever stood atop the world’s tallest mountain.

Whittaker turned his love of nature and appetite for adventure into a series of groundbreaking accomplishments, including leading the first US expedition to successfully climb K2 and organizing an international peace climb on Everest at age 60. He also spent four years sailing nearly 20,000 miles around th world with his family later in life.

Beyond mountaineering, Whittaker played a pivotal role in the outdoor industry. In 1955, still in his 20s, he became the first full-time employee of the new company Recreational Equipment, Inc. — better known as REI — and eventually rose to president and CEO. Under his leadership, the small Seattle-based cooperative grew into a nationwide outdoor retailer with hundreds of employees and millions in sales. He retired in 1979, just as the company was preparing to open its Anchorage location.

His Everest success made him a national celebrity. He received the National Geographic Society’s Hubbard Medal from President John F. Kennedy, appeared on magazine covers, and helped inspire a generation of climbers and outdoor enthusiasts.

Friends and colleagues remembered Whittaker as a pioneering figure who bridged mountaineering, environmental advocacy, and the outdoor business world. His career helped popularize climbing in the United States and elevate the Pacific Northwest as a center of outdoor culture.

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5 thoughts on “Passings: Jim Whittaker, first American to summit Everest and first president of REI”
  1. “He climbed DENALI and summited on May 17, 1961.”
    Actually known as McKinley at that time, as it is again now.

  2. Again. Another community leader who loved God’s creation but did he love the creator so much to see how much the creator loved him by accepting His son Jesus Christ???
    All the nature enthusiasts I meet they never take interest in Jesus just like people with money they don’t see Jesus having any value when they still can enjoy the nature or have the money to sustain their happiness. Witnessing the Gospel of Jesus Christ is difficult to nature enthusiasts and people with a lot of money.
    He is also part of Alaska’s most recent past leadership who put the state and Anchorage in the situation it is living and why we are government dependent people. After he made his money here just like his colleagues who led this community and planted the seeds for the Democrat control over Anchorage then he leaves Alaska and lives on another state or another country or globetrotter.

    Just being honest. To be honest I hate being honest.

  3. Is this the guy who gave the intro to Barrack Obama at the Drmoctsic National Convention while he was mayor of Fairbanks?

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