Oregon Experience: William Gladstone Steel

The Mazamas

William Steel was one of the original founders of the West Coast's oldest continual mountaineering club, the Mazamas.

The Mazamas was founded in 1894 on the summit of Mount Hood after an advertisement was placed in local papers inviting interested, serious mountaineers to join the charter climb. More than 300 people encamped on the flanks of Mount Hood on July 18. By 8 a.m. the next day, the first climbing party reached the 11,239-foot summit, followed by the rest of the 193 men and women who were to reach the summit. One hundred and five climbers became charter members that day. Today, the nonprofit mountaineering education organization is located in Portland, Oregon, and offers over 700 hikes and 350 climbs annually.

Early Mazamas, known as Billy Goats and Nanny Goats. Photo courtesy of the Mazamas.
Facts About the Mazamas
Club Motto: "Nesika Klatawa Sahale" – Chinook Indian jargon for "We Climb High"
The word "Mazama" means "mountain goat."
Members are called "Billy Goats" and "Nanny Goats."
1894 - Founded July 19 on Mount Hood
1895 - Lobbied for preservation of Cascade Range Forest Reserve
1896 - First outing to Crater Lake, where members named Mount Mazama

Click the play button to see some historical footage of Mazama climbers on Mount Hood, 1912. Video courtesy of Oregon Historical Society.


About Steel
Read more about the "Father of Crater Lake National Park"
Steel the Collector
View pages from some of Steel's many scrapbooks
The Klamath Tribes
Read an Indian legend about the origins of Crater Lake
The Mazamas
Learn more about this unique climbing club
Further Reading
Explore related resources

© 2008 Oregon Public Broadcasting.