03/20/2025
ORRA A. PHELPS, M.D. by Patricia Sullivan
(1895-1986)
If you are a 46er, hiker, lover of nature or a wilderness preservationist, you are probably already familiar with the contributions made by Orra Phelps in her lifetime. She was an author, mountaineer, and scientist at a time when women had to fight against prejudice to follow their professional aspirations in non-traditional roles.
Orra was born in Storrs, Connecticut. Her parents, Charles Sheperd Phelps and Orra A. Parker, were both well-educated and interested in Science and Agriculture. Orra’s love of nature, botany, and biology naturally developed from a childhood spent identifying plants and walking in the woods around their home in Wilton, New York. In 1918, she graduated from Mt. Holyoke College, with a degree in Zoology and Geology. Orra then taught science at New Hampshire College and in the summer worked as a camp counselor on Silver Bay in Lake George.
Meanwhile, her two brothers had climbed Mt. Marcy, and she became intrigued by the idea of doing it herself. In 1924, she made her ascent of Mt. Marcy accompanied by her mother, brother, and friend. They carried bedrolls slung across their shoulders and fished for their dinner. Orra loved the experience, hiking, and camping whenever she had free time. During the 1920s, she attended medical school at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. Financial constraints slowed her academic progress, but in 1927 she graduated with a degree in medicine. Her first employment as a physician was for the school district around Fort Plain and Utica.
During the 1930s, Orra struggled but managed to pay back all her student loans. She developed an interest in teaching others about the wilderness and was active with Girl Scouts and other youth groups. In 1934, she published the first trail guide to the High Peaks based on her knowledge of the areas and climbing experiences.
World War II began in 1941, and in 1944 Orra joined the Navy as a Doctor. Once the war ended, she returned to New York and started working for the Veteran’s Administration in Albany, but her spare time was spent in the mountains. In 1947 she became one of the few people to have climbed all 46 Adirondack peaks. She retired from the Veteran’s Administration in 1962 but started a new career as the first Ranger and Naturalist for the Adirondack Club. During her tenure she started a museum, wrote informational pamphlets, gave guided hikes, and generally shared her love of the park and the wilderness with the public. Orra retired in 1972 but continued hiking into her eighties.
Eventually she began to have medical difficulties which necessitated that she move to a nursing home. In 1986, she passed away at the age of 90, just days short of 91. She was the third born of seven children, but she lived the longest of them all. An historical plaque honoring her many accomplishments as physician, as well as “Botanist, ADK 46er, Author, Naturalist and Teacher” was dedicated to her memory by then Governor George Pataki. In 1996 a plot of eighteen acres in Wilton was donated by her niece, Mary Arakelian, for the Orra Phelps Preserve.
Resources Consulted
“Dr. Orra Almira Phelps (1885-1986).” Find a Grave Memorial.
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/88192300.
Fold3 by Ancestry.com. “Index Record for Orra Phelps (1895) from the U.S. Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010.” Updated October 17, 2013.
––– “Muster Roll of Officers and Enlisted Men of the U.S. Marine
Corps: Separation Company from Henderson Hall, Arlington,
Virginia.” July 1st to July 31, 1946. [Note: Four women from the
“U.S. Naval Reserve” were also listed at the bottom of this
page; one was Lieutenant Commander Orra A. Phelps.]
Gooley, Lawrence P.– “Orra Phelps: With Us on Every Trail.” Adirondack Explorer. September 26, 2018.
Lynn, Peggy and Sandra Weber. Breaking Trail: Remarkable Women
of the Adirondacks. Fleischmanns, New York: Purple Mountain
Press, 2004.
“Orra Phelps Nature Preserve.” n.d. Accessed March 13, 2025. https://saratogaplan.org/explore.
Post, Paul. The Saratogian. “Museum pays tribute to Orra Phelps.” August 25, 2006.
The Post Star. 1986. “Orra Phelps.” Obituary. August 27,1986, p.18.
Orra Phelps on Owlhead by Kathrine Flickinger