Johannesburg Mountain is one of the most famous peaks in the North Cascades of Washington state. Though not one of the top 100 peaks in the state by elevation, nor one of the top peaks as ranked by topographic prominence, Johannesburg is notable for its large, steep local relief, and particularly its immense, dramatic Northeast Face, which drops 5,000 feet (1,525 m) in only 0.9 miles (1.4 km).
The name "Johannesburg Mountain" comes, through an error, from "Johnsberg," the name of three mining claims on the north face of the peak. It has also been called "Elsbeth."
Johannesburg Mountain was first climbed on July 26, 1938, by Calder Bressler, Bill Cox, Ray W. Clough, and Tom Myers, via a version of the most popular route today, the East Ridge/Cascade-Johannesburg Couloir Route. This route, and others which also finish on the south side of the mountain, are mostly scrambling routes. However, there are many routes on the north and northeast faces which are highly technical and involve considerable objective danger from falling rock and ice.
By elevation Johannesburg Mountain is
# 29 out of 137 in Skagit County # 22 out of 463 in Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest # 39 out of 123 in North Cascades National Park # 33 out of 128 in Glacier Peak Wilderness
By prominence Johannesburg Mountain is
# 27 out of 137 in Skagit County # 46 out of 463 in Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest # 25 out of 123 in North Cascades National Park # 18 out of 128 in Glacier Peak Wilderness
We use GPS information embedded into the photo when it is available.
3D mountains overlay
Adjust mountain panorama to perfectly match your photos because recorded by camera photo position might be imprecise.
Move tool
Rotate tool
Zoom
More customization
Choose which peak labels should make into the final photo and what photo title should be.
Next
Photo Location
Satellitte
Flat map
Relief map
Latitude
Longitude
Altitude
OR
Latitude
°'''
Longitude
°'''
Apply
Register Peak
Peak Name
Latitude
Longitude
Altitude
Register
Teleport
PeakVisor
This 3D model of Sagarmatha National Park in Nepal was made using the PeakVisor app topographic data. The mobile app features higher precision models worldwide, more topographic details, and works offline. Download PeakVisor maps today.
Download OBJ model
PeakVisor
The download should start shortly. If you find it useful please consider supporting the PeakVisor app.
PeakVisor for iOS and Android
Be a superhero of outdoor navigation with state-of-the-art 3D maps and mountain identification in the palm of your hand!