Works
  • Bradford Washburn, Twilight, Tokositna Glacier, Alaska, 1978
    Twilight, Tokositna Glacier, Alaska, 1978
  • Bradford Washburn, After the Storm, Climbers on the Doldenhorn, Switzerland, 1960
    After the Storm, Climbers on the Doldenhorn, Switzerland, 1960
  • Bradford Washburn, Aiguille de Blaitière, Chamonix. Bradford Washburn in ctr. Photo was conceived and composed by Bradford Washburn, 1958
    Aiguille de Blaitière, Chamonix. Bradford Washburn in ctr. Photo was conceived and composed by Bradford Washburn, 1958
  • Bradford Washburn, Aiguille de la République, Chamonix, 1958
    Aiguille de la République, Chamonix, 1958
  • Bradford Washburn, Summit of Matterhorn from Southwest, 1958
    Summit of Matterhorn from Southwest, 1958
  • Bradford Washburn, Mount McKinley Looms Over Wonder Lake, Alaska, 1953
    Mount McKinley Looms Over Wonder Lake, Alaska, 1953
  • Bradford Washburn, Ice Blocks, Mount Silverthorne, Alaska, 1945
    Ice Blocks, Mount Silverthorne, Alaska, 1945
  • Bradford Washburn, Barnard Glacier and Mount Natazhat from the South, Alaska, 1938
    Barnard Glacier and Mount Natazhat from the South, Alaska, 1938
  • Bradford Washburn, South Crillon Glacier and Canoe, Alaska , 1934
    South Crillon Glacier and Canoe, Alaska , 1934
Biography
Bradford Washburn was an American, internationally renowned photographer, cartographer, and expert on Alaska's mountains and glaciers. He was Director of Boston's Museum of Science for over forty years and served as Honoury Director until his death in January 2007. A pioneer of arial photography, his images of mountains are majestic, serene and sublime and his photographic work spans over six decades. Working primarily with his Fairchild K-6 large format aerial camera using 8" roll film, the technical and aesthetic quality of his images are exquisite. Washburn concentrated particularly on the mountains of the Yukon region of North America, producing on of his best-known maps of Mount McKinley in 1960.

Washburn was a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, London's Royal Geographical Society and a leading authority on Alaska's mountains and glaciers. In 1988, Washburn and his wife Barbara were honoured with the Centennial Medal of the National Geographic Society.  Washburn is responsible for the creation of definitive maps of Mount McKinley, the Grand Canyon, Mount Everest and New Hampshire's Presidential Range. He was a member of the 1992 survey team that made the first laser measurement on top of Mount Everest.
 
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