A NEW exhibition is set to open in the Lake District next month exploring the hidden histories of 1924 Mount Everest expedition.

The Other Everests: One Mountain, Many Worlds will be located in the castle at the National Trust’s Wray, on the shores of Windermere.

The free exhibition marks the centenary of the expedition.

Wray Castle has been described as the 'perfect setting' for the show as mountains in the Lake District are the birthplace of modern mountaineering.

National Trust Cultural Heritage Curator, Harvey Wilkinson, has worked with historian, Dr Jonathan Westaway from UCLAN, to tell the almost forgotten story of the Sherpas who worked on the mountain, highlighting their contribution to the 1920s expeditions to Everest.

Using stunning photographs presented in large-format vivid lightboxes, combined with displays of artefacts, including the now famous recreation of George Mallory’s climbing outfit found when his body was finally discovered on Everest in 1999, the exhibition shares fascinating archives from the Royal Geographical Society and the Mountain Heritage Trust.

The Mail: Members in camp 1924 Mount Everest ExpeditionDr Westaway said: "This summer marks the centenary of the deaths of George Mallory and Sandy Irvine on Everest.  Whilst many people know this story, very few people know about the lives of the Sherpa porters who accompanied Mallory and Irvine high on the mountain.

"With funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council we have been researching the hidden histories of Indigenous high-altitude workers on Everest.  These expeditions relied on a huge army of indigenous labourers working in a range of roles like interpreters, porters, high-altitude climbers, cooks, mail runners, photographic and collection assistants.

"It is so fantastic to be able to share these photographs with visitors to Wray, and to be able to begin to tell the story of these early Sherpa mountaineers and workers for the first time.”

The Mail: Mount Everest from Base CampCo-curator, Harvey Wilkinson, added: "This exhibition takes a step back from the usual narratives around the 1924 expedition, setting them in a wider context of the people and places that surrounded the mountain, and the transforming effects of mountain tourism.

"It includes some historic climbing ephemera and apparel, with early versions of fibre pile and plastic boots, in contrast to Mallory’s sporting Burberry outfit, based on shooting attire of the period.

"The display includes abandoned and mangled modern tents recovered from above 7,000 meters by Tibetan climbers, a stark reminder of how the material culture of mountaineering is permanently changing mountains here and around the world, in a way that Mallory could not have imagined."

The exhibition offers interactive family activities too along with a small traversing climbing wall.

Other Everests: One Mountain, Many Worlds, will run in the castle from 8 June to 24 November at the National Trust’s Wray, Low Wray, Ambleside, Cumbria, LA22 0JA and is free to enter.