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Definition of Mount Hubbard
1. Noun. A mountain peak in southeastern Alaska that is part of the Coast Range (14,950 feet high).
Group relationships: Ak, Alaska, Last Frontier, Coast Mountains, Coast Range
Generic synonyms: Mountain Peak
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mount Hubbard
Literary usage of Mount Hubbard
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Alaskan Glacier Studies of the National Geographic Society in the Yakutat by Ralph Stockman Tarr, Lawrence Martin, National Geographic Society (U.S.) (1914)
"broad valley filled with crevassed ice, and bordered by lofty, snow-clad mountain
peaks, one of which, Mount Hubbard, rises to an elevation of 16400 feet at ..."
2. The Lure of the Labrador Wild: The Story of the Exploring Expedition by Dillon Wallace, Leonidas Hubbard (1905)
"We camped at dusk on one of these islands, and on Wednesday, September 9th,
launched our canoe at daybreak, to resume our journey to Mount Hubbard. ..."
3. The Conquest of Mount McKinley: The Story of Three Expeditions Through the by Belmore Browne (1913)
"This peak we named Mount Hubbard after General Thomas H. Hubbard, president of
the Peary Arctic Club, whose lifelong interest in exploration has been of ..."
4. Alaskan Glacier Studies of the National Geographic Society in the Yakutat by Ralph Stockman Tarr, Lawrence Martin, National Geographic Society (U.S.) (1914)
"broad valley filled with crevassed ice, and bordered by lofty, snow-clad mountain
peaks, one of which, Mount Hubbard, rises to an elevation of 16400 feet at ..."
5. The Lure of the Labrador Wild: The Story of the Exploring Expedition by Dillon Wallace, Leonidas Hubbard (1905)
"We camped at dusk on one of these islands, and on Wednesday, September 9th,
launched our canoe at daybreak, to resume our journey to Mount Hubbard. ..."
6. The Conquest of Mount McKinley: The Story of Three Expeditions Through the by Belmore Browne (1913)
"This peak we named Mount Hubbard after General Thomas H. Hubbard, president of
the Peary Arctic Club, whose lifelong interest in exploration has been of ..."