High on Denali, John Mitchler took out a pencil to write a list. It was the summer of 2003, and as wind tore into the fabric of his cramped tent, he knew the end was near.

“I decided to write a list of all the people I’d climbed with over the years,” he said. “McKinley [Denali] was to be my final mountain.”
Mitchler didn’t perish on that high Alaskan peak. Indeed, his party soon made the mountain’s 20,320-foot summit.
But for Mitchler, a geologist from the Denver area, Mount McKinley (now called Denali) signified the end of a personal era: For more than 20 years he had traveled the country climbing peaks and hiking hills in order to stand at the highest natural point of elevation in each of the 50 U.S. States.
Highpointing: Climbing 50 States

High Peaks To Moderate Hikes

Road Trips Required

Highpointing: 50 U.S. Highest Points Of Elevation
–See Highpointers.org for more info on climbing peaks around the U.S.