Mount Everest Climber Was Declared Dead By Fellow Climbers, He Somehow Survived Even After Being Stripped Down
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First American to Climb Mount Everest Dies at 97

Jim Whittaker, the first American to climb Mount Everest, has died at age 97. The Seattle native made history by summitting the mountain in 1963.

According to CNN, Whittaker passed away at his Washington home on April 7. His family confirmed his death. Whittaker first scaled Mount Everest on May 1, 1963. He was 34 at the time.

"I didn't realize what impact [the climb] would have," Whittaker previously said.  "I didn't think it would catch the imagination of the public as much as it did."

JFK presented Whittaker with a medal for his achievement. Later, when the president was assassinated, Whittaker hiked with JFK's brother Robert to a mountain named after the late president. "I was so delighted because I wanted him to get up there and show you the first human being to stand on the peak named after his brother," Whittaker said. "That's where the tears freeze up on the parka. We were bawling, it was really emotional."

Mount Everest Adventurer Dies

Previously, he also reflected on the moment that he climbed Mount Everest.

He also released A Life on the Edge: Memoirs of Everest and Beyond in 2000 to tell his life story.

"I was sitting at the South Summit at about 300 vertical feet from the top and looking at the Hillary Step, I had this vision of my dad and Nawang Gombu Sherpa climbing up there," he said. "It's 50 years earlier and I imagined what that was like without the fixed ropes, without the crowds. Just those two with a single rope connecting them and ascending this incredibly challenging terrain through a storm no less. He didn't let his age and fear of getting hurt stop him from doing what he loved."

Whittaker is survived by his wife, sons, and grandchildren.