Born:
1967, Bolton, Lancashire, England
Biggest achievement:
DMM athlete since:
1986
Paul Pritchard is one of the most significant and inspiring figures in the history of British climbing. Born in Bolton in 1967, he grew up near Wilton Quarry and started climbing at sixteen, quickly becoming one of Britain's leading rock climbers and mountaineers with a legacy of first ascents across the UK, Patagonia, Baffin Island, Yosemite, Kyrgyzstan and the Karakoram. His debut book Deep Play won the Boardman Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature in 1997, and his second book The Totem Pole won both the Boardman Tasker and the Banff Mountain Book Festival Grand Prize in 1999, making him the only author to win the Boardman Tasker twice. The Totem Pole tells the story of a near-fatal brain injury sustained in 1998 when a boulder struck him while climbing the iconic sea stack in Tasmania, leaving him with hemiplegia. Since his accident Paul has continued to lead an adventurous life, climbing mountains on multiple continents, returning to climb the Totem Pole in 2016, and dedicating himself to disability advocacy and the concept known as the dignity of risk. Now based in Hobart, Tasmania, Paul keeps returning to the crags and continues to explore new routes, one moment at a time.