- Arthur Oliver Wheeler
Infobox Person
name = Arthur Oliver Wheeler
caption = A.O. Wheeler
birth_date =1860-05-01
birth_place =Kilkenny, Ireland
death_date =1945-03-20
death_place =Banff, Alberta
nationality =Irish Canadian
known_for = Co-founder and first president of theAlpine Club of Canada
education =
employer =Dominion ofCanada
occupation = Land Surveyor
spouse = Clara Macoun (1888-1923)Emmeline Savatard (1924-1945)
children =Edward Oliver Wheeler Arthur Oliver Wheeler (
May 1 ,1860 -May 20 ,1945 ) was born inIreland and immigrated toCanada in 1876 at the age of 16. He became a land surveyor and surveyed large areas of western Canada, including photo-topographical surveys of theSelkirk Mountains and theBritish Columbia -Alberta boundary along thecontinental divide through theCanadian Rockies . In 1906, he and journalist Elizabeth Parker were the principal founders of theAlpine Club of Canada (ACC). He was its first president, from 1906-1910, and editor of theCanadian Alpine Journal from 1907 to 1930. He remained Honorary President of the ACC from 1926 until his death in 1945. TheArthur O. Wheeler hut of the ACC is named after him.cite web
title = A.O. Wheeler
work = Past Presidents
publisher = Alpine Club of Canada
date = 2007
url = http://www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/whoweare/pastpresidents.html#wheeler
accessdate = 2008-01-29]Early life
Wheeler was born on
May 1 ,1860 at "The Rocks", the Wheeler family estate nearKilkenny ,Ireland . He was educated atBallinasloe College,County Galway , and atDulwich College , London. The family fell upon hard times in Ireland, and in 1876 they sold their estates and moved toCanada , where his father took up the post of harbour master inCollingwood, Ontario . In 1876, at the age of 16, Wheeler met noted land surveyor, Lauchlan Alexander Hamilton, and became his apprentice. In 1877, Wheeler was hired by surveyor Elihu Stewart to work north of theGreat Lakes in theAlgoma District of Ontario, where he spent the summer paddling abirch bark canoe . In 1878 he again worked for Stewart and traveled fromWinnipeg, Manitoba toBattleford, Saskatchewan usingRed River ox cart s to surveyIndian reserve s near Battleford andPrince Albert, Saskatchewan . In the following three years he returned to Ontario and studied to qualify as aDominion Land Survey or. cite book
last = Patillo
first = Roger
title = The Canadian Rockies - Pioneers, Legends and True Tales
publisher = Trafford Publishing
date = 2007
pages = pp. 283-318
isbn = 1-412056-27-6] cite book
last = Sandford
first = R.W.
title = Among the Great Hills - Three Generations of Wheelers and their Contribution to the Mapping of Mountains
publisher = The Alpine Club of Canada
date = 2006
pages = pp. 6-11
isbn = 0-920330-54-1] He qualified as Ontario Land Surveyor in 1881; as Manitoba and Dominion Land Surveyor in 1882. cite journal
title = In Memoriam. Arthur Oliver Wheeler.
journal = The Canadian Alpine Journal
volume = vol. 29
pages = pp. 140–146
publisher = The Alpine Club of Canada
location = Banff, Alberta
date = 1945
accessdate = ]Career
In 1883, Wheeler was employed by the Canadian Government on pioneer surveys in the
Northwest Territories , which then included the future provinces ofSaskatchewan andAlberta and parts of what are nowManitoba . In 1884 he sub-divided a number ofCanadian Pacific Railway townsites along the line of railway construction. In 1885 he was appointed a technical officer of the Topographical Surveys Branch of the Department of the Interior in 1885 under Dr.Edouard Deville , Surveyor General of Canada, where he was trained in the specialty of photo-topographical surveying then being applied by Dr. Deville to the mapping of the Canadian Rocky Mountains.In 1885 the
North-West Rebellion was begun byLouis Riel , which pitted theMétis people of theDistrict of Saskatchewan against the government ofCanada . Wheeler joined the Canadian militia as a lieutenant with the Dominion Land Surveyors Intelligence Corps under Captain J. S. Dennis and, with a group of other land surveyors, marched to help quell the rebellion. At theBattle of Batoche , one surveyor was killed and three others wounded. Wheeler was grazed in the shoulder by a sniper's bullet, but a few days later learned that his family in Ontario had been informed that he had been killed in action. After returning to Ottawa, Wheeler met Clara Macoun, daughter of famous Canadian botanistJohn Macoun who had made numerous trips to the northwest to survey the railway and evaluate the land for farming. Arthur married Clara in Ottawa in 1888.cite book
last = Sandford
first = R.W.
title = Among the Great Hills - Three Generations of Wheelers and their Contribution to the [Meridian (geography)Mapping of Mountains
publisher = The Alpine Club of Canada
date = 2006
pages = pp. 6-11
isbn = 0-920330-54-1]In 1891, Arthur, Clara, and their new son
Edward Oliver Wheeler headed west toNew Westminster, British Columbia where Wheeler went into private practice as a surveyor. His private surveying work was supplemented by work for the Department of the Interior, and he was joined in his surveying business by his younger brothers Hector and Willie. A real estate crash nearly wiped them out, and in 1894 he rejoined the Topographical Survey Branch of the Department of the Interior. Wheeler spent six years surveying the area south ofCalgary, Alberta and in 1898 moved his wife and son to Calgary. During this period he surveyed the watersheds of the Elbow, Sheep, Highwood, Oldman, Belly, Waterton, Little Bow, St. Mary and Milk Rivers. In 1900, the Department of the Interior announced it was going to close its office in Calgary, so Wheeler spent the summer surveying theCrowsnest Pass area inAlberta , and in 1901 the Wheelers returned to Ottawa.In 1901, the Surveyor-General of Canada, Dr.
Edouard Deville , assigned Wheeler the task of surveying theRogers Pass area of theSelkirk Range inBritish Columbia . On the train to Rogers Pass, Wheeler metEdward Whymper , who had made the first ascent of theMatterhorn in 1865 and who was in Canada as a guest of theCanadian Pacific Railway . At Rogers Pass, Wheeler met a group of professionalSwiss mountainguide s in the employ of the railway, and it was with six of them that he made his first ascent of a major peak. He continued to climb mountains in the area, and in 1902 took his son Oliver on a first ascent of a previously unnamed peak, which he named Mount Oliver after his son. Wheeler also made a first ascent of a major peak, which he named Mount Wheeler after himself. In 1903, Wheeler was assigned the survey of the railway belt through theCanadian Rockies east of Rogers Pass. During the following two years, he met numerous American and British climbers who were making first ascents among the vast ranges of unclimbed peaks in the Canadian west.In 1904, Wheeler attended the International Geographic Congress, convened at Washington, as delegate from the Department of the Interior, and, while it was in session, visited Washington, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago and the St. Louis World’s Fair. In 1905 he was invited to speak at a meeting of the
Appalachian Mountain Club inBoston . Later that year, he published a book called "The Selkirk Range", the first book written by a Canadian to celebrate a mountain range.cite book
last = Sandford
first = R.W.
title = Among the Great Hills - Three Generations of Wheelers and their Contribution to the Mapping of Mountains
publisher = The Alpine Club of Canada
date = 2006
pages = pp. 6-11
isbn = 0-920330-54-1]Wheeler returned to private practice from 1910 to 1913, and then was appointed Commissioner of the
Alberta /British Columbia boundary survey. From 1913 to 1925 he was responsible for surveying the portion of the boundary which follows theContinental Divide from the United States Boundary at the 49th parallel to its intersection with the 120th meridian, a distance of convert|600|mi|km. During this assignment Wheeler named many of the peaks in theKananaskis area ofAlberta afterWorld War I British and French generals, admirals and battleships. At its close, Wheeler retired from active professional work.Alpine Club of Canada
After the
American Alpine Club was founded in 1902, its first presidentCharles Fay whom Wheeler had met atGlacier House inRogers Pass suggested that a Canadian chapter of the club be formed. Wheeler took up the task of promoting the idea, but Elizabeth Parker, a journalist at theWinnipeg Free Press , objected strenuously to Canada becoming a subsidiary to the United States in this matter. Wheeler took her objections to heart, and as a result, when theAlpine Club of Canada (ACC) was founded in 1906, Arthur Oliver Wheeler became its first President and Elizabeth Parker became its first Secretary.The Alpine Club of Canada was his most important contribution. He was involved in every phase of the club's activities for the last thirty-eight years of his life. He served as President of the ACC from 1906 to 1910, and then Managing Director for 16 years from 1907 to 1930. The year following the founding of the Club, he prepared the first issue of the
Canadian Alpine Journal and was its editor for 20 years until 1927. In 1907, as President of the Alpine Club of Canada, he attended the 50th anniversary celebration dinner of theAlpine Club (UK) in London.In 1923 his beloved wife, Clara, died, and in 1924 he married Emmeline Savatard who had been the "Girl Friday" for the ACC for the previous 20 years and who remained with him until his death in 1945.
On his retirement he was named Honorary President of the ACC, and held the position from 1926 until his death in early 1945. He continued to be active in the club and was the driving force behind two of its most successful expeditions: the
Mount Robson camp which in 1913 made the first confirmed ascent of the highest mountain in theCanadian Rockies ; and the 1925 first ascent ofMount Logan , the highest mountain in Canada.cite web
title = A.O. Wheeler
work = Past Presidents
publisher = Alpine Club of Canada
date = 2008
url = http://www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/whoweare/pastpresidents.html#wheeler
accessdate = 2008-01-08]Honors
Wheeler was elected an honorary member of the
Dominion Land Survey ors Association, and served for many years as the Canadian representative on the "International Commission on Glaciers". In 1908, proposed by the famous mountaineerEdward Whymper , Wheeler was elected to honorary membership in theAlpine Club (UK) . He also became an honorary member of the French Alpine Club, theAppalachian Mountain Club and theAmerican Alpine Club . In 1920, at the Allied Congress of Alpinism, the Prince ofMonoco recognized Wheeler's good work by making him an Officer of theOrder of St. Charles and conferring upon him the Cross of the Order.Wheeler was Honorary President of the
Alpine Club of Canada from 1926 to 1945 and the club'sArthur O. Wheeler hut nearRogers Pass was named after him. Although the ACC approved the project in 1938, construction did not begin until after the end ofWorld War II in 1945. The hut built in his honor was not completed until 1947, two years after A.O. Wheeler died. It has been expanded and renovated many times since and remains one of the ACC's most popular huts.cite book
last = Haberl
first = Keith
title = Alpine Huts: A guide to the facilities of the Alpine Club of Canada
publisher = Alpine Club of Canada
date = 1997
pages = p. 151
isbn = 0-920330-32-0]Lineage
Wheeler was the great grandson of Jonas Wheeler, who was
Lord Bishop of St. Canice's Cathedral inKilkenny, Ireland . His grandfather was William Oliver Wheeler, who fought with the12th Royal Lancers against Napoleon in Portugal and Spain, and later became mayor of Kilkenny. Wheeler's father, Edward Oliver Wheeler, was a captain in the Kilkenny Fusiliers.He is the father of Sir
Edward Oliver Wheeler , who participated in the firsttopographical survey ofMount Everest in 1921, and as Brigadier in the British Army was appointed Surveyor General of India in 1941. He is the grandfather ofJohn Oliver Wheeler , an award-winning Canadian geologist. [ [http://www.gac.ca/PUBLICAT/GEOLOG/Geolog31-4.pdf Winter 2002, "Geolog Magazine"- G.G. Awards J.O. Massey Medal] ]References
External links
* [http://members.shaw.ca/beyondnootka/biographies/awheeler.html Biography]
* [http://www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/whoweare/pastpresidents.html#wheeler Alpine Club Past Presidents]
* [http://www.landsurveyinghistory.ab.ca/Characters/Wheeler_AO.htm Land Surveying History]
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