US Marine veteran becomes first combat amputee to scale Everest
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The first combat amputee ever to conquer Everest reached the mountain鈥檚 peak Thursday, his third attempt to do so since losing his leg in 2013.
Thomas Linville, a 30-year-old former US Marine from Idaho, undertook the expedition in partnership with , an organization dedicated to working with veterans, soldiers, marines, and military communities.
Marine Staff Sgt. Linville joins a venerable list of people with disabilities who have overcome their physical challenges to peak this legendary mountain.
"I was looking for something to completely change myself... and really that were created from war," Linville told CBS in April, as he headed to Tibet for this latest effort to climb the Earth's highest peak.
Linville, an explosive-ordnance disposal technician who was caught in an explosion in Afghanistan in 2011, made the climb as part of Operation Everest: 2016, a team brought together by The Heroes Project.
His first attempt, in 2014, was thwarted by an avalanche. An earthquake that ripped through the region and cancelled the following year鈥檚 climbing season put paid to his second effort.
鈥,鈥 reads a Facebook post on the non-profit鈥檚 page, announcing the successful culmination of the group鈥檚 efforts on this third occasion.
The select group of which Linville is now a member comprises , with people from around the globe overcoming conditions and catastrophes, mastering limitations and undertaking adventures that only the most courageous could ever contemplate.
Everest was first bested by a disabled person in 1998. Tom Whittaker, a climber from York, England, who lost his foot after a car accident, also took three attempts to make the ascent. He was awarded an MBE, 鈥淢ember of the Order of the British Empire,鈥 for his efforts.
A New Zealander, Mark Inglis, was the first double amputee to scale the mountain, back in 2006. Arunima Sinha, an Indian who lost her leg after robbers threw her from a train, in 2011 became the first female amputee, and the first Indian amputee, to reach the top of Everest.
The list goes on, with each story as inspiring as the last, people displaying determination and resilience, mastering a mountain whose name few do not recognize.
鈥,鈥 Linville told the Idaho Statesman in January. 鈥淚t might not be a physical mountain, but it still has the same challenges.
鈥淎nd if I can affect one person鈥 If it just changes one person鈥檚 life, then all the misery, everything that has come with it, will be worth it.鈥