The
North Face founder, Douglas Tompkins, dies in Chile
kayak accident
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[December 10, 2015]
By Anthony Esposito
SANTIAGO (Reuters) - U.S. environmentalist
and businessman Douglas Tompkins, the founder of outdoor clothing and
equipment company The North Face, died on Tuesday during a kayaking trip
in Chile, local health officials said. He was 72.
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Tompkins was on General Carrera Lake in Patagonia in southern Chile
with a group of five others when his kayak flipped and he fell into
the icy waters, the Aysen regional health service said in a
statement. Local media reported that he was knocked over by a strong
wave.
The service said he was admitted around 1:30 p.m. to the regional
hospital in Coyhaique, some 1,140 miles (1,832 km) south of
Santiago, but was pronounced dead of severe hypothermia hours later.
Tompkins' body temperature was 66 degrees Fahrenheit (19 degrees
Celsius) after being taken out of the water, the statement said. All
five of his companions were unharmed.
Tompkins founded The North Face, now part of VF Corporation <VFC.N>,
in the 1960s as a small ski and backpacking retailer in San
Francisco. The company markets clothing and gear to hikers, mountain
climbers and other outdoor enthusiasts.
"We are all deeply saddened at the news of Doug's passing. Doug was
a passionate advocate for the environment, and his legacy of
conservation will help ensure that there are outdoor spaces to be
explored for generations to come," the company said in a statement.
Tompkins also co-founded clothing company Esprit, which started with
he and his then-wife selling clothes out of the back of their car
before becoming an internationally recognized brand, according to
his conservation website.
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Tompkins later grew into an active environmentalist. He began
acquiring vast tracts of land in the Patagonia region of Chile and
Argentina in the 1990s, which he converted into protected nature
parks.
Among the most well known are Pumalín, Corcovado and Yendegaia,
which are visited by thousands of tourists each year.
He was also part of environmental advocacy group "Patagonia Without
Dams," which opposed the construction of huge dams for power
generation company HidroAysén.
(Reporting by Anthony Esposito and Felipe Iturrieta in Santiago,
Chile; Writing and additional reporting by Curtis Skinner in San
Francisco; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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