A podcast about the US Army’s 10th Mountain Division
and the dawn of outdoor recreation in America
NEW EPISODE out now!
PARTNERS
CaMp Hale, Part 4: Episode 14
How David Brower and the 10th Mountain Division transformed climbing at Camp Hale—laying the foundation for America’s postwar mountaineering movement. Featuring all-original research, this...
Camp Hale, Part 3: Episode 13
Episode 13 continues our deep dive into America’s high-altitude military experiment as it unfolded at Camp Hale during the pivotal winter of 1942–43. The episode details the Mountain Training...
Camp Hale, Part 2: Episode 12
Patrons listened to this episode in advance. Click here to become a patron and get exclusive access. In Part 2 of our deep dive into Camp Hale, we explore the rocky beginnings of the mountain...
Camp Hale, Part 1: Episode 11
The Origins of Camp Hale: How the U.S. Army scouted, selected, and developed Colorado's high-altitude Pando Valley site to create a training ground for mountain warfare. Patrons listened to...
The Old And The New: Episode 10
How John McCown and his fellow citizen-soldiers overcame traditional military doctrine to prepare for mountain warfare—and in the process, reshaped the Old Army into one of the mightiest forces the...
Gear Heads, Part 2: Episode 09
Illuminating a pivotal moment in both military and outdoor recreation history, this groundbreaking episode reveals the collaborative efforts of America’s leading mountaineers to equip the 10th...
GEAR HEADS, PART 1: EPISODE 08
Episode 8: Gear Heads, Part 1 is the first segment of our two-part mini-series that examines the equipment, clothing and food developed, at great expense, for the 10th Mountain Division. Not only...
The 10th, Then & Now: Bonus Episode
With this special bonus episode, the 10th Mountain Division’s commanding officer, Major General Greg Anderson, and its Command Sergeant Major Nema Mobar identify some of the lessons learned from the...
Mountain Intelligence: Episode 07
Featuring original and previously unpublished research, Episode 7 reveals the untold story of H. Adams Carter, the Harvard Five, and their groundbreaking efforts to make the 10th Mountain Division...
Ninety Pounds of Rucksack: Episode 06
This Abridged version of Episode 6 follows the mountain troops to Mount Rainier National Park where, in the middle of February 1942, they began their ski training at one of the best places a soldier...
ABOUT NINETY-POUND RUCKSACK
For students of history, Russia’s recent invasion of Ukraine has an eerie parallel: the Soviet Union’s 1939 invasion of Finland, which played out before a global audience as small bands of Finnish soldiers in white camo lobbed molotov cocktails into tank cockpits, then melted back into the forest on skis. The Finns’ guerilla sorties disrupted Soviet advances for three and a half months before being overwhelmed by a 4-to-1 advantage—and sparked the creation of the 10th Mountain Division, a gritty unit of climbers and skiers who trained for more than two years in the Colorado Rockies (often wearing ninety-pound “rucksacks,” or backpacks) to fight the Axis powers in extreme cold and mountainous terrain.
The story of the 10th is famous for good reason. Not only did its insertion into the war help end Germany’s occupation of Italy; post-war, its veterans founded and developed ski areas across America, started companies like NOLS and Nike and launched the fields of avalanche science and wilderness rescue.
Ninety-Pound Rucksack is a podcast that examines the stories that made the unit famous as well as those history has forgotten. Equal parts real-time research, intimate conversation and revelatory journalism, Ninety-Pound Rucksack explores not only the conventional wisdom about the 10th, but the transformative power of the mountains to forge a collective identity among the mountain troops—and to ignite a passion for the outdoors that reshaped American society in the process.
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