- Part Of
- John Amatt fonds
- Scope & Content
- V788/A contains photographs pertaining to landscape photos of Mount Everest, Everest '82 Team photos at airport including some autographed by Laurie Skreslet and Pat Morrow, photos of John Amatt climbing, head shots of Bill March, and Roland Mitchener on a mountain, Laurie Skreslet accepting an awa…
- Date Range
- 1981 - 1986
- Reference Code
- V788 / A
- Description Level
- 3 / Series
- GMD
- Photograph, print
- Part Of
- John Amatt fonds
- Description Level
- 3 / Series
- Fonds Number
- M563 / V788 / S57
- Series
- V788 / A
- Sous-Fonds
- V788
- Accession Number
- 2017.8659
- Reference Code
- V788 / A
- Date Range
- 1981 - 1986
- Physical Description
- 46 photographs : 38 prints ; b&w, 8 prints ; colour
- History / Biographical
- John Amatt (May 19, 1945 - ) was an educator, expedition leader, public speaker, and founder of One Step Beyond WorldWide. He was a climber, business manager, spokesman and press liason for the 1982 Canadian Mount Everest Expedition.
- Scope & Content
- V788/A contains photographs pertaining to landscape photos of Mount Everest, Everest '82 Team photos at airport including some autographed by Laurie Skreslet and Pat Morrow, photos of John Amatt climbing, head shots of Bill March, and Roland Mitchener on a mountain, Laurie Skreslet accepting an award, John Amatt accepting an "Everest '82" branded car, group photo of Teleglobe staff.
- Name Access
- Amatt, John
- Everest '82
- Subject Access
- Alpine Club of Canada
- Calgary
- Camps
- Canada
- Climbing
- Communications
- Winter Sports
- India
- Mountaineering
- Mountaineers
- Organizations
- Sports
- Transportation
- Travel
- Geographic Access
- Alberta
- England
- Thailand
- Nepal
- Bangkok
- Kathmandu
- Language
- English
- Related Material
- Peter Spear fonds
- Creator
- John Amatt
- Biographical Source Notes
- http://www.adventureattitude.com/bio.htm
- Title Source
- Title based on contents
- Processing Status
- Processed
This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and
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