Sophia Danenberg (1972- )

December 31, 2008 
/ Contributed By: Felix Brenton

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Sophia Danenberg

Courtesy Sophia Danenberg

In 2006 Sophia Danenberg became the first African American and first Black woman from anywhere in the world to climb the highest mountain in the world, Mount Everest in the Himalayas (Nepal). Sophia Marie Scott was born in 1972 in Homewood, Illinois (a southern suburb of Chicago) to a Japanese mother and a Black father. She attended Homewood-Flossmoor High School, graduating in 1990.ย  Danenberg then studied environmental sciences and public policy at Harvard University, graduating in 1994, before going on to Keio University in Tokyo as a Fulbright Fellow. Danenberg then began her professional career with United Technologies in Japan and China, managing energy and indoor air quality projects, before moving to Hartford, Connecticut, where she worked in green technology research programs at United Technologies.

Danenberg became involved in mountaineering in 1999 after a childhood friend encouraged her to try rock climbing.ย  During this two year period, while doing technical climbs through her local Appalachian Mountain Club Chapter, she met her future husband David Danenberg.

Danenberg’s first major climb was at Mount Rainier in Washington State in 2002.ย  Over the next two years she and David scaled Kilimanjaro (Kenya) 2002, Mount Baker, Washington, 2003, and Mount Kenya, 2003.ย  In 2005 she scaled five peaks: Grand Teton (Wyoming), Mount Katahdin (Maine), Mount Denali, previously named McKinley (Alaska), Mount Tasman (New Zealand), and Ama Dablam (Nepal).

In the spring of 2006, at age 34, with one week of planning, Sophia Danenberg began the climb of Mount Everest in Nepal, the highest mountain in the world at 29,000 feet. Danenberg, along with eight people, signed up for an โ€œunguidedโ€ climb which gave her the help of two Sherpas, weather reports, food, and oxygen.ย  Danenberg carried her own gear and pitched her own tent.ย  She had no guide on the climb to make decisions for her. On May 19, 2006, after two months climbing, she and her party reached the summit of Mount Everest.

Danenberg, who had as of 2008 climbed 19 peaks, was responsible for legislative and regulatory affairs for Global Environmental, Health, and Safety (EH&S) at United Technologiesโ€™ Pratt & Whitney division. She pursued a masterโ€™s in economics at the University of Connecticut, as well as working with Hartford, Connecticut inner city programs. Danenberg campaigned for Democratic Party Candidate Barack Obama in the 2008 Presidential Election and became a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado.

In 2009, Danenberg joined the Boeing Company, becoming an International Policy Leader.

About the Author

Author Profile

Felix Brenton is an undergraduate student of American Studies at the University of Sussex, England, with a particular interest in American society in the Twentieth century. He is currently attending the University of Washington, Seattle as an undergraduate exchange student for one year, further developing his interest in American history, culture and society. On completion of his degree in 2010 he is considering going into teaching.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Brenton, F. (2008, December 31). Sophia Danenberg (1972- ). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/danenberg-sophia-1972/

Source of the Author's Information:

Carly A. Mullady, “Never Underestimate Yourself, and Never Let Others
Underestimate You,” Southtown Star Newspaper, Chicago (Sunday, February
3, 2008), p. 3; Teresa Pelham, “Glastonbury Woman Makes History With
Everest Climb,” The Hartford Courantย  (Monday, November 13, 2006); http://www.danenberg.org/; Jeffrey Felshman, “Up Everest, Quietly” Our
Town
(2006), www.ChicagoReader.com: http://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/up-everest-quietly/Content?oid=922604.

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