Henry Haversham Godwin-Austen. —Photo from the book
If early Victorian map-makers and explorers in northern Indian and high Asia were mysterious, shadowy figures, Henry Haversham Godwin-Austen was rather unlike them. Not that his work was any less significant than that of, say, William Moorcroft or George Hayward (both died tragically in remote regions); indeed, the quality and quantum of Godwin-Austen’s work is phenomenal. But unlike others, Godwin-Austen was fortunate to brave all and come home to retirement — unfortunately not as glorious as one would wish for a man of his accomplishments.
This current biography, the first-ever of this great mountaineer explorer, by Catherine Moorehead, is a much belated but useful piece of work. It is useful because outside the circle of mountaineers and students of the history of exploration and mapping in the Himalaya-Karakoram-Hindu Kush region, Godwin-Austen is all but unknown. Now for the first time we know there is much more to this name than it being appended to the mountain K2.
Born in 1834, Godwin-Austen was commissioned from the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst as a subaltern in 1851 before moving out to India. At Sandhurst, Godwin-Austen, the artist of remarkable exactitude, had come into notice and it took only six years of service — most of it in Burma — before the young man was seconded to the Kashmir Survey at Srinagar. There began a quarter century of the most meritorious service to unravelling the geography and topography of the greatest knot of mountains on Earth.
His name is synonymous with the second highest peak in the world, but for decades there has been a dearth of research on Godwin-Austen
In those pre-camera days, a clean, clear artist’s hand was a bonus to the trained surveyor and map-maker, and Godwin-Austen used this skill to his and our advantage. Through Kashmir, up into the then-little known wilds of Zanskar and Baltistan, this weedy little man (he was no more than a little over five feet tall) blazed a trail on ground that he copied meticulously on paper as the first maps of the region.
In season after season of working in arctic conditions from high-altitude survey stations, Godwin-Austen yet found time for affairs of the heart. In 1858, having romanced her for some time, he married a Sudhan girl from Poonch. There are no physical descriptions of the curiously named Kudikji (or Kudji), but she comes across as a rather spirited young woman who followed her husband on his survey trip to Baltistan.