Junction Peak

Junction Peak
"Junction Peak" by Ansel Adams, circa 1930s.
Highest point
Elevation13,894 ft (4,235 m) NAVD 88
Prominence765 ft (233 m)
Parent peakMount Stanford
Listing
Coordinates36°41′24″N 118°21′56″W / 36.689935°N 118.3656507°W / 36.689935; -118.3656507
Geography
Junction Peak
Junction Peak
Location
Parent rangeSierra Nevada
Topo mapUSGS Mount Williamson
Climbing
First ascentAugust 8, 1899 by Edwin Bingham Copeland, Ernest Norton Henderson and Maxwell Adams
Easiest routeSouth Face, South Ridge or West Ridge (all class 3 scrambles)

Junction Peak is a thirteener in the Sierra Nevada. Joseph Nisbet LeConte chose this name in 1896, noting that it marks the point where the Sierra Crest crosses the water divide of the Kern and Kings rivers. Today it also is the boundary between Inyo and Tulare counties, and of Kings Canyon National Park, Sequoia National Park and the John Muir Wilderness.

Botanist Edwin Bingham Copeland and Chico Normal School colleagues Ernest Norton Henderson and Maxwell Adams made the first recorded ascent of Junction Peak on August 8, 1899. They are credited with pioneering the class 3 South Ridge route from Diamond Mesa to the summit. Over the course of nearly a century, several more class 3 and 4 routes were established. The first winter climb was made by the West Ridge, culminating on March 21, 1973. The first technical climb recorded on Junction was the grade III 5.7 North Buttress route.