Robert M. Failing, MD

OCTOBER 20, 1928 – SEPTEMBER 1, 2018

Robert “Bob” Mayo Failing was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan, the son of Joseph Henry Failing, MD and Virginia Mayo Neely.  He attended Starr Commonwealth School in Albion, Michigan, graduating in 1946 at age seventeen.  He moved to Murphy, North Carolina and took a job with the Anglo-American Lumber Company.  He entered Western Carolina Teachers College (now Western Carolina University) in 1948, graduating in 1951.  He attended Duke University School of Medicine and received his MD degree in 1956.  He spent the next five years at the Los Angeles County General Hospital in a one year rotating internship and a four year anatomic and clinical pathology residency.  During that same time he moonlighted as an Emergency Room physician, St. Luke Hospital, Altadena, California, and as a Deputy Medical Examiner for the County of Los Angeles.


 
Bob joined Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital’s pathology department in 1961 and worked there until he retired in 1996.  During the same period he served as a principal forensic pathologist for the Santa Barbara County Sheriff/Coroner’s Office, Medical Director of Tri-Counties Blood Bank, Chief of Laboratory Services Santa Ynez Valley and Pinecrest Hospitals and was a founding director of Medical Group Pathology Laboratory, Inc.  Because of his forensic expertise and story-telling skills, he frequently consulted with author Sue Grafton for her “alphabet series” detective novels.  Ms. Grafton dedicated “Q is for Quarry” to Bob because one of his unsolved cases gave her the idea for the book.

Once settled in Santa Barbara, Bob’s dormant love of wilderness and mountains re-awoke.  Through a close friendship with William Hansen, then Supervisor of the Los Padres National Forest, he explored the vast San Raphael Wilderness, leading several youth student groups on week-long camping trips through its remote terrain.  In the late 1960’s and early 70’s, he became a “river rat” running the Stanislaus, Yampa, Green and Snake rivers.  In 1968 he ran the 230 mile section of the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon which at that time had been attempted by fewer than 2500 people.  Bob joined the Los Padres Search and Rescue Team as its team physician, serving terms as director and president. This turned his interest towards mountains. 

At age 49, and for the following 18 years, mountains were Bob’s love.  He was the ninth person of record to summit all fifty state high points—from Florida’s 345’ Britton Hill to Alaska’s formidable Denali at 20,237’.  He reached the top of six continents:  North America (Denali-20,237’), South America (Aconcagua-22,834’), Africa (Kilimanjaro-19,340’), Europe (Elbrus-18,510’), Australia (Kosciuszko-7,310’) and Antarctica (Vinson Massif-16,066’).  He scaled the high points of over 45 nations on the world’s six inhabited continents.  Ararat, Fuji, the Matterhorn, Olympus, Popocatepetl, Sinai, and many lesser known mountains of Central and South America, Europe’s Alps, Pyrenees, Tatars and Carpathians, Asia’s Caucasus, North America’s Sierra, Cascades, Rockies, Appalachians—all were explored, hiked and climbed.  One of his partners would often welcome his return from a mountain adventure with, “So, another suicide attempt failed”!  The low point of his travels, the Dead Sea.

His last major climb (1994) was the first assent of Antarctica’s Mt. Vaughan, (87 degrees south latitude) with eighty-nine year old Norman Vaughan, for whom the mountain was named by Admiral Byrd.  Vaughan was the chief dog “musher” on Byrd’s 1928-30 Antarctica expedition.  Bob was the master of the slide-show, sharing incredible photos of his adventures and supplementing them with his patented stories.

Bob was a long time director and past president of the Community Arts Music Association.  A lifetime Episcopalian, member of All Saints by the Sea, he served his church in various capacities:  vestryman, diocesan delegate and convocational member of the diocesan department of missions.  A loyal alumnus of Western Carolina University, he served on its Foundation Board for over a decade.

His proudest non-mountaineering feat began at age 62.  Each year on his birthday, for 12 consecutive years, he would walk, carry his clubs and play the number of holes as his age.  At age 72, he walked and played 72 holes (more than 15 miles), and carried his own bag with 14 clubs.  He completed the rounds in 9 hours, 25 minutes, monitored by one or more club members.  Nobody at his country club has come close to matching this achievement!

Bob was a member of the Valley Club of Montecito, the Santa Barbara Club, the Mount Vernon Country Club (Golden, CO), the American Alpine Club, The Explorers Club, California Mountaineering Club, and founding director and member of the High Pointers Club. 

He is survived by his wife of 41 years, Nancyann, and children Robert Mayo Failing, Jr., Lee Scheuermann, and Margaret Wrath-Esposito, step-daughter Carol Crego, step-son Stephen Raber, six grandchildren, and three step-grandchildren.  He was pre-deceased by his daughter, Sarah Gronna

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