Annie Smith Peck (born Oct. 19, 1850, Providence, R.I., U.S.—died July 18, 1935, New York, N.Y.) was an American mountain climber whose numerous ascents—often record-setting and some at an advanced age—made her a remarkable figure in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Peck early developed remarkable physical strength, endurance, and courage through determined competition with her three older brothers. She attended the Rhode Island State Normal School (1870–72; now Rhode Island College) and the University of Michigan (1874–78), where she graduated with honours. She received a master’s degree from Michigan in 1881 and then taught Latin at Purdue University (1881–83). From 1883 to 1885 she pursued advanced studies in Germany, and in the latter year she became the first woman admitted to the American School of Classical Studies in Athens. From 1886 to 1887 she taught Latin at Smith College.
On Peck’s journey from Germany to Greece in 1885, the sight of the Matterhorn aroused in her an interest in climbing. After a few practice climbs she tackled Mount Shasta, California, in 1888. Her ascent of the Matterhorn in 1895 brought her wide celebrity and, in Victorian society, a touch of notoriety. In 1897 she climbed Popocatépetl and Citlaltépetl (Pico de Orizaba) volcanoes in Mexico. Her ascent of the latter, at 18,406 feet (5,610 metres), was the highest point in the Western Hemisphere that had been attained by a woman.
Peck supported herself by giving parlour lectures and subsequently by lecturing on the Chautauqua and other circuits, but little money was left over for proper equipment and preparation for more ambitious climbs. While in Europe in 1900, Peck climbed the Fünffingerspitze in the Austrian Tyrol, Monte Cristallo in the Dolomites, and the Jungfrau in Switzerland. In 1902 she helped found the American Alpine Club. She then began exploring South America for a peak on which she could make a first ascent. In 1904 she climbed the 21,066-foot (6,421-metre) Illampu peak in Bolivia’s Cordillera Real. Several lesser climbs followed, and in September 1908 she conquered Mount Huascarán in the Peruvian Andes. Estimating the summit to be about 24,000 feet (7,300 metres), Peck claimed to have climbed higher than any other woman. A subsequent measurement showed the peak to be somewhat lower, but Peck still held the American record in the Western Hemisphere. In 1911, at the age of 61, she climbed Peru’s Mount Coropuna, at the summit of which she raised a “Votes for Women” pennant.
In addition to lecturing, Peck wrote occasional articles for magazines and published A Search for the Apex of South America (1911), The South American Tour (1913), Industrial and Commercial South America (1922), and Flying over South America—20,000 Miles by Air (1932), on the feasibility of commercial aviation on that continent. In 1927 the Lima Geographical Society named the north peak of Huascarán in her honour—Cumbre Aña Peck. Her last climb was of Mount Madison, New Hampshire, when she was 82.