The History of Welsh Hill Lists – Part 5
The Early Years
1911-1940
1929 – John Rooke Corbett
With the completion throughout England
and Wales of the Popular Edition of the One-Inch Ordnance map, John Rooke
Corbett updated his original 1911 list, and thus in 1929 the
Rucksack Club Journal published an eight page article, again entitled Twenty-Fives. This revised Corbett’s first list and
included 148 English and Welsh 2500 foot tops, fifty eight of which are in Wales. Similar in format to his 1911 publication:
The first page comprises
an introduction with the last three pages relating to Wales. The Welsh list is split into six groups with
a brief description of each followed by the mountain’s name and height, in all
three mountains are deleted from the 1911 list, whilst ten mountains are
added.
Front cover of the 1929 Rucksack Club Journal |
Of particular interest is the addition of
Cader Berwyn, S. Top which was mapped at 2650 + feet, it would be almost sixty
years before this particular mountain was recognised by published list
compilers and the Ordnance Survey alike as being the highest point of the
Berwyn, eventually receiving the designated map height of an 830 metre ring
contour (2723 feet), and eighty five years since this hills first appearance in
a list before its accurate height of 832.0m was obtained by using a Trimble
GeoXH 6000. Corbett’s criterion for
inclusion depended upon each top being indicated by a separate contour ring,
but also retained were a few others, whose summits Corbett remembered as
distinct tops. By using this criterion
Corbett is open to including certain tops that have less re-ascent, than other
tops, which are omitted. But by
compiling this list from map details with contour intervals of 50 feet, Corbett
had taken the first step toward this prescribed height being used as the
designated minimum re-ascent criterion for many a future list compiler.
Next installment due on
the 30th November 2014
For the Preface please
click {here}
For Part 1 please click
{here}
For Part 2 please click
{here}
For Part 4 please click
{here}
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