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THE PYRAMIDS OF THE CANADIAN ROCKIES
There are at least seven
mountains in the Canadian Rockies that have been known
as "Pyramid." Only two officially carry the
name, a third having had the name removed in order to
avoid confusion with the other "Pyramids.”
Peter Fidler was the first European to enter the
Canadian Rockies and the first to name a peak. He
noted in his journal on December 7, 1792 that he saw
a, “remarkable high cliff…very much resembling a
pyramid –from which very near resemblance I shall
call it by that name.” He measured bearings to the
feature and used it to calculate his position. It is
likely that he was referring to what we now know as Mount
Glasgow in the headwaters of the Elbow River.
While travelling in the Bow River Headwaters near White
Man Pass in 1845, Catholic priest/explorer Pierre-Jean
De Smet wrote, "The valley is bounded on
either side by a succession of picturesque rocks,
whose lofty summits, rising in the form of pyramids,
lose themselves in the clouds." On his map he
noted only one of these, naming it "The
Pyramid." This must have been the peak now known
as Mount
Assiniboine.
The best known of the "Pyramids" is located
nine kilometres north of Jasper. Its near-perfect
triangular shaped profile when viewed from the east
must have impressed James
Hector of the Palliser Expedition who named the
mountain in 1859. Although the mountain's slopes from
this angle are similar to those of the Egyptian
pyramids, the peak lacks the three-dimensional aspect
that a true pyramid requires.
Mount Chephren was originally named Pyramid
Mountain by Norman
Collie in 1897. At the same time he named its
neighbour, which was covered in snow, White
Pyramid. Pyramid
Mountain, in contrast, had very little snow. In
1918 the Interprovincial Boundary Commission decided
that Pyramid Mountain's name must be changed in order
to avoid confusion with the Pyramid Mountain near
Jasper. J.
Monroe Thorington, a prominent mountaineer and
author of the era, liked the association of the peak
with the pyramids of Egypt and recommended the name
Mount Chephren. Chephren, or Khafre, was the fourth
pharaoh of the Fourth Dynasty of Egypt and built the
second of the three Great Pyramids. White Pyramid's
name was thought to be different enough from the
Pyramid Mountain near Jasper and that name was
retained.
In 1892, Arthur
Coleman named the fourth highest peak in the
Rockies “Pyramid.” It was subsequently renamed Mount
Clemenceau by the
Interprovincial Boundary Commission in 1919 after
Georges Clemenceau, the President of France during the
final years of the First World War.
Mount McPhail, in the upper Highwood Valley, was known
locally as "The Pyramid" until it was
officially named by the Boundary Commission in 1918.
The surveyors at that time were influenced by the
number of Canadian casualties during the First World
War and named the peak to honour N.R. McPhail, a
member of the Surveyor General's staff, who was killed
in action in 1917.
Of the seven mountains that have carried the name
"Pyramid," Mount Glasgow, Mount McPhail, and
Mount Assiniboine are the closest to the correct
three-dimensional shape when viewed from the
appropriate angles, but they are among those that
never, officially at least, have carried the name.
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