The first woman to scale Mount Kinabalu
February 8th, 2008
Lilian Suzette Gibbs (10th September 1870 - 30th January 1925), an English botanist was the one. She’s definitely one of the most adventurous women of her time.
She organised botanical expeditions to far-flung places. These days it might be easy, but during the early days of the 20th century, they are no mean feats.
Graduating from the Royal College of Science, her trips included:
- 1905: Southern Rhodesia (now known as Zimbabwe);
- 1907: Fiji and New Zealand, Queensland and Tasmania
In February 1910, she became the first woman to reach the top of Mount Kinabalu. She was 40 years old at that time. Supremely fit, hence, I think it’s safe to say that she’s not the kind of woman who needs a Houston tummy tuck.
She took more than 1,000 botanical specimens, many new to science, from that trip and donated them to the British Museum.
A bamboo species, bambusa gibbsiae (Miss Gibbs’s bamboo) was named for her.
After Borneo, she made a botanical trip to Iceland in 1912. The next year, she was off to the East Indies and Dutch New Guinea.
In 1921, she had to abandon an expedition to South America due to her sudden health problems. Apparently, she spent the remainder of her life as an invalid. She died in Santa Cruz, Tenerife, in January 1925.
From the National History Museum:
Various obituary-writers praised Miss Gibbs’ considerable personality, her ability to organise journeys of exploration, her ability to play the role of a delightful hostess, her dogged determination and good physique, and her role as “a keen upholder of the rights of her sex.” She was a serious and dedicated scientist, but one suspects that a major attraction of her chosen field was that it enabled her to escape from the confines within which respectable Englishwomen were expected to live.
Source
Natural History Museum, UK




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Wow… i never knew this before.. thx for sharing..