Sir
H T Munro 1856 – 1919
Hugh
Thomas Munro was born in 1856
and educated at Crieff,
and a stint as a cavalryman
in the Basuto War, he
settled down to manage the family estate of Lindertis near Kirriemuir.
From
here he undertook long expeditions into the hills, often in winter when
estate
business was less demanding; his first recorded 3000ft peak was Ben
Lawers in
May 1879. Ten years later he was among the founders of the Scottish
Mountaineering Club, eventually becoming President.
In
1891 Sir Hugh Munro was asked
by the editor of the Scottish Mountaineering Club’s Journal
to list all the
hills in
Although
lists of ‘principal
mountains’ had been made before these were mainly for the
benefit of tourists
or shooting tenants. Munro’s Tables were specifically aimed
at the mountaineer.
They are systematic, thorough, and they have two unique features: the
seventeen
Sections, which are based on the natural divisions of the landscape,
with
mountain groupings, and points of access, very much in mind; and the
distinction between ‘separate mountains’
– the Munros - and the ‘Tops’. These
are the satellites or outliers, elevations subsidiary to the main
summits yet
felt by Munro to be worthy of inclusion.
Munro’s
main tools for his task
were the Ordnance Survey’s one-inch and six inch to the mile
maps of
The
‘Table giving all the Scottish
mountains exceeding 3000 feet in height, compiled by Munro’
appeared in the
S.M.C. Journal, Vol. I no. 6 in September 1891. The list comprised 283
separate
mountains (Munros) and a total of 538 tops. These totals are
impressively close
to today’s figures (283 Munros out of 510), even after a
century of improved mapping,
several revisions and continuous refinements.
If
the notion of revising the original
Tables seems a bit like tampering with Holy Writ, there is no doubt
that
Sir Hugh
regarded his 1891 list merely as a first attempt. Over the next two and
a half
decades he constantly checked and modified his data. In 1921, two years
after
his death, a second version of the Tables appeared largely
incorporating his refinements.
This listed 276 Munros and a total of 543 Tops. A 1974 version gave 279
Munros
and a total of 541 tops. Other versions with modifications appeared in
1981,
1984, 1990 and 1997.
Munro
himself was not to climb all
the mountains in his list. He died aged 63 in 1919 of pneumonia
contracted
while running a troop canteen in
Acknowledgement: Thanks to
Gillian
Zealand for permission to extract much of this information from her
article in The Munro Society Newsletter Number 13 July 2008. This
original
article can be
viewed here.(420 KB PDF)
