, coming very close to making the first ascent of the mountain.
In August, 1914, Mary Jobe and Margaret Springate visited the area with guides Curly Phillips and Bert Wilkins. They ascended the north glacier to an altitude of 7800 feet. Curly returned the following summer, again with Mary Jobe, coming to within 100 feet the summit with Frank Doucette and John C. Tyler before being stopped by an overhanging cornice.
In 1924 she became the wife of Carl Akeley, an explorer and natural scientist who worked in Africa. On their first visit to the continent Carl died of disease in the remote mountains of the Congo. Jobe remained to complete his work and when she returned to the United States in 1927 she became an advisor in the development of the African Hall at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. She never again returned to the Canadian Rockies where Mount Jobe has been named in her honour.
[Additional Information: Smith, Cyndi. "Off the Beaten Track". Lake Louise: Coyote Books, 1989]
[See Mount Jobe]