In 'A Window to Heaven,' Monteagle author chronicles the first ascent of Denali by an Episcopal priest with a Tennessee past

Pegasus Books / "A Window to Heaven"
Pegasus Books / "A Window to Heaven"

"A WINDOW TO HEAVEN: THE DARING FIRST ASCENT OF DENALI, AMERICA'S WILDEST PEAK" by Patrick Dean (Pegasus Books, 336 pages, $28).

In "A Window to Heaven," Patrick Dean chronicles the adventurous life of Hudson Stuck, a Sewanee graduate and Episcopal priest. By turns a cowboy, telegraph lineman, literature professor, master of the Iditarod, best-selling writer and social activist, Stuck was above all an advocate for the rights and dignity of native Alaskans for much of his adult life.

As the book's title suggests, Stuck - nearly 50 by then and Archdeacon of Alaska and the Yukon - along with a weary, sometimes contentious team, was the first to successfully summit North America's highest peak, reaching the goal on June 7, 1913, after weeks of excruciating effort. The tale is thrilling in the tradition of climbing yarns, from Edward Wymper's "Scrambles Among the Alps in the Years 1860-69" to Jon Krakauer's "Into Thin Air," and yet the extraordinary mountain occupies slightly less than half of the book. Mostly, "A Window to Heaven" is the story of an extraordinary man.

A steep and winding trail descends the Cumberland Plateau from the campus of Sewanee, the University of the South, to a spring that tumbles from the mouth of an appropriately named cavern: Wet Cave. Now closed due to its endangered bat population, Wet Cave was a popular weekend destination for students from the Episcopal college, who for over a century burned their names onto its white walls and ceiling with candles and carbide lamps. One name that can still be read on the walls is that of Hudson Stuck, who attended the university from 1889-92, earning a degree in theology. Besides founding the university's literary magazine, precursor of The Sewanee Review, Stuck was a varsity football player on a team that was then a national powerhouse.

In 1885, Stuck, then 22, had left his native England, arriving in West Texas "full of romanticism, seeking his own mountain to climb, pole to reach or desert to traverse," Dean writes. "On the edge of the frontier, he had found that, and more besides. Texas taught the youth from London to ride a horse, shoot a Winchester rifle and navigate a rough and alien world by his wits." By the time he earned a scholarship to Sewanee's School of Theology, he had hiked the Grand Canyon and climbed Mount Rainier, among other outdoor pursuits.

photo Contributed Photo from Chapter16.org / Patrick Dean

Dean writes: "Stuck's three years of seminary training had instilled in him a deep love for Sewanee, and for the steep trails and intricate caves of the university's 10,000 acres, which would last the rest of his life, along with friendships and alliances forged at the university. In turn, Stuck would become one of Sewanee's favorite sons, and be offered several faculty positions there, though none could lure him away from Alaska."

Patrick Dean, a freelance writer, lives in Monteagle, Tennessee, and covers environmental issues, in addition to running a nonprofit called the Mountain Goat Trail Alliance. He also holds a master's in theology from Sewanee, where he first researched the university's famous graduate for his thesis. From Stuck's college days onward, he was a prolific writer of journals, letters and essays, eventually publishing five books and dozens of articles on his various wilderness exploits. Many of Stuck's letters and journals were left to the university archives, along with his extensive personal library. After Dean completed his thesis, he continued combing through this collection, which eventually became the seed of "A Window to Heaven," his first book.

Stuck traveled thousands of miles by dogsled in Alaska and the Yukon, not only ministering to remote groups but building schools and libraries. He subscribed to a 19th-century movement called Muscular Christianity, which, as Dean writes, was "a type of religion which valued physical strength, social action and, above all, grit." Unlike other missionaries of the day, Stuck sought to understand and celebrate native traditions. He learned to speak local dialects, hunted and fished with native parties and opposed efforts by other churches and governments to westernize people by shipping their children to government schools.

The book's title comes from a quote by the other Tennessean on Stuck's team, Robert Tatum, a young Sewanee graduate from Knoxville who had also "done some climbing and caving on the Mountain" before coming to Alaska to train as an Episcopal priest. "It was like looking out of a window of heaven," Tatum said of the experience of standing with Stuck and two others in the thin air above 20,000 feet.

Stuck's colleagues at Sewanee and elsewhere often found him difficult, with a "sometimes brusque manner" and a constant need for action. Yet he also excelled in education, even tutoring a 16-year-old who traveled with the team and managed their base camp in Shakespeare and other authors. "There is much truth in the old primitive animism," Stuck wrote of the people and land he celebrated. "It recognizes that the world and life are full of deep mysteries."

To read an uncut version of this review - and more local book coverage - visit Chapter16.org, an online publication of Humanities Tennessee.

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