The Scottish Mountain Heritage Collection
1585.2021.1
Simond Ice Axe
24/01/2021
Hermione Cooper
24/01/2021
Simond & Fres ice axe with serrated pick and long pointed ferrule.
Wood, metal
Head 28.5(L) cms. Shaft 94(L) cms
1
“A SIMOND & FRES. CHAMONIX” and a chamois on some leaves.
Silver, brown
Simond & Fres
France
The Simond brothers were blacksmiths in the town of Chamonix in the French Alps and they made tools for crystal hunters, cowbells and also agricultural tools in the early 1800’s.
They diversified a little when the Golden Age of mountaineering arrived in the 1860’s by adapting their skills of amalgamating metal and wood into the production of ice axes.
It seems that there were several brothers involved in the business and the ice axe we have here in the collection has the initial ‘A’Simond which we think stands for ‘Adolphus’ who we think was one of the first brothers to make axes in the 1860’s.
Claudius and Francois produced later versions, examples of which we have elsewhere in the collection.
Simond axes were very popular in the mid 1900’s; Edmund Hilary took one to the top of Mount Everest in 1953 and far more importantly, Scotland’s greatest ever ice climber, Jimmy Marshall, used a Simond throughout his illustrious career, finally using it to weed his garden when he retired!
Charlet were the other great ice axe manufacturers in Chamonix back then and it seems they were fierce rivals; an apocryphal Chamonix story suggests that they had a Simond pavement on one side of the street in Chamonix and a Charlet on the other so the two never met!
Donated by Chris Robinson
24/01/2021
24/01/2021
Spectrum : UK Museum documentation standard, V.3.1 2007
24/01/2021
Claudius Simond Crampons
Simond Barracouda Ice Axe
Simond Chacal Ice Hammers
Simond Cubik belay plate
Simond ice axe
Simond ice axe
Simond Le Grepon Crampons
Simond Special - Split Ice Axe
Simond Wedges (coins) on wire