doug748
Well-Known Member
I worked with Dick Wynne on the republication of the 'Tilman Edition', the sixteenth volume of which is JRL Anderson's original Tilman biography ('High Mountains & Cold Seas'). After my less than complimentary Amazon review of his own biography, Madge and I buried the hatchet at a talk I gave in Henley and I asked him if he'd consider contributing a new foreword to the reprinted Anderson. When the first draft came, it was shot through with 'Bill's; by the time it was published, my editorial blue pencil had restored the appropriate level of respect.
In 1970, we were fortunate in having Colin Putt aboard, already a known quantity to the Skipper from the Patanela 'Heard Island' expedition. Colin's use of the form of address 'Skipper' quickly rubbed off on the rest of us. In 1971, I stepped into Colin's shoes as 'the old hand' (aged 19!) and the rest of the crew fell in behind me. It was completely natural and HWT clearly appreciated being addressed in that way.
The only person I ever heard call him 'Bill' was his niece Pam, who at eighty was still flying gliders, smoking like a chimney and using the colourful language of a trooper to describe two* of the three* biographers. She had respect for the ailing Anderson, who unfortunately had lost his fight with cancer before High Mountains was published.
Even Sandy and Mary Lee, who were genuinely close friends of the Skipper, addressed him as 'Major' - a term which privately made him chuckle.
*Don't get me started on Perrin.
Thanks for taking the trouble to fill in those gaps and for the excellent photographs.
One story prompted my comments, you will correct me if I am wrong, it may be apocryphal.....
Bill Tilman and Eric Shipton (I think) were sitting at the summit of some previously unclimbed Himalayan mountain. In the euphoria of the moment, the talkative Shipton began to chat and remarked (I paraphrase):
' You know, we have know each other a long time, faced may difficulties together and a few dangers, do you think in the future we might progress to first name terms? '
Tilman reflected for a moment and replied:
No.
I think both men were amused by the exchange.
.
