Over the weekend I attended a Celebration of a Life in Tennessee for a good 
caver friend of mine, Lee White. Lee made Texas caving history in May of this 
year when he successfully climbed the 100’ sheer wall of the remote Dome Pit 
way off trail in Natural Bridge Caverns, which has led to the best discovery of 
virgin cave in the state of Texas this year. The Dome Pit was first reached in 
1960 and for 59 years was considered to be perhaps unclimbable due to soft 
limestone. Lee climbed it in 1 1/2 hours. 

Here is Lee’s obituary followed by some links to newspaper articles about the 
discoveries in Natural Bridge Caverns:

Lee Harrison White, 31, of Evans, GA, and Chattanooga, TN, died September 15, 
2019, when he was struck and killed in an automobile accident on I-40 in 
Alamance County, NC. He was a 2007 graduate of Lakeside High School in Evans 
where he was president of the senior class and a member of the school system’s 
wrestling teams since seventh grade. He learned survival skills and became a 
ranger at Camp Deep Woods in Brevard, NC.

Lee studied physics at the United States Military Academy at West Point and the 
University of Colorado at Boulder and enjoyed a lifelong passion for science 
and technology. He was an accomplished cave explorer who supported his calling 
by working as a rope access specialist with Industrial Access, Inc., of 
Cumming, GA, on jobs all over the South requiring work in high places.

Lee’s innovative approach, unique techniques, and well-developed climbing 
skills along with his creative use of available equipment combined to change 
cave dome climbing forever. His impact on the caving community will be felt for 
decades to come.
Lee became an active project caver in 2013, as part of the TAG caving 
community, explorers who support science and survey new caves in the unique 
geological region where the states of Tennessee, Alabama, and Georgia meet. The 
region is where many of the techniques and traditions of modern caving 
developed. Lee became a respected practitioner of vertical caving, an expert in 
both American and Alpine styles of rigging. In 2014, he rappelled and climbed 
the deepest pit in the United States, 586 feet, Fantastic Pit in Ellison’s 
Cave, Georgia. In 2016 and 2017, he was involved in three cave rescues.

Among his most recent achievements was setting a rope at the top of the 
120-foot Dome Pit, in Natural Bridge Cavern near San Antonio, TX, the state’s 
largest and most spectacular show cavern. The rope allowed explorers to reach a 
tantalizing passageway that was once considered inaccessible because of its 
height, giving the first access in 60 years to a new part of the cave. Lee 
climbed the wall, setting bolts and ropes, in an hour and a half.

Lee successfully ascended dozens of previously unclimbed domes in TAG. He made 
the first ascent of the second tallest dome, 267 feet, which he named the Very 
Hungry Caterpillar Dome after his favorite book, in a cave named Savor It Well 
in Madison County, AL. He rigged at least 20 domes permanently in the TAG 
region and worked with the Southeastern Cave Conservancy to assure safe rigging 
at caves managed by the conservancy.
In the past three years, Lee’s skills led him to join international caving 
teams bringing experts in geology, paleontology, archeology, biology, and cave 
surveying to study and map extensive cave systems in Mexico.

In 2017, he joined the Proyecto Espeleológico Sistema Huautla (PESH), an 
official project of the National Speleological Society and the United States 
Deep Caving Team. This is a ten-year expedition conducted annually in April 
since 2013 into the deepest cave system in the Western Hemisphere, Sistema 
Huautla in the State of Oaxaca, Mexico. He continued as a member of the team in 
2018 and 2019, in 2018 leading the small team of cave riggers that enabled 
confirmation of a major connection from Sistema Huautla to another well-known 
cave, Sotano de Agua de Carrizo. This connection added a confirmed length of 
9.2 kilometers to the system, as well as five new entrances, “making one of the 
longest, deepest caves in the world even longer and more complex,” stated the 
National Geographic Society in its report on the new connection, 
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2018/06/sistema-huautla-cave-mexico-culture/.

In 2018, Lee also joined the US Deep Caving Team to support a scientific 
expedition of 40 team members from six countries in Cueva Chevé in Oaxaca’s 
Sierra de Juárez region. Currently documented at 1,484 meters, Chevé is thought 
possibly to rival the world’s deepest, Veryovkina Cave in the Republic of 
Georgia, which has a maximum explored depth of 2,204 meters. Lee himself has 
caved to a depth of 1,200 meters in Mexico.
The expedition leader of PESH, Bill Steele, recalls, “In late April of 2019 Lee 
White led another small team to go 600 meters deep in the La Grieta section of 
Sistema Huautla to look for a lead Lee had a hunch they would find. And they 
did. It was a major trunk passage they named after Lee – Blowhard Boulevard. 
They ended their exploration at the bottom of a waterfall to be climbed next 
year. Once it is climbed and mapped, we plan to name it Lee White Falls.”
Lee is survived by his father, Marco White, his mother, Rebecca Watson White, 
and his brother, Graham White, and a loving family of aunts, uncles, cousins, 
and cavers. A memorial service celebrating Lee’s life will be held on October 
5, 4 pm Central, by the TAG community at Caver’s Paradise, 482 Wild Heart Lane, 
Sewanee, TN.
In lieu of flowers, the family asks that friends donate to the organizations 
Lee’s work supported: PESH, http://www.peshcaving.org/donate; Southeastern Cave 
Conservancy, Inc., https://saveyourcaves.org/give.html, PO Box 250, Signal 
Mountain, TN 37377, [email protected] (indicate “Lee White Fund”); and the National 
Speleological Society, https://caves.org/donate/index.shtml, 6001 Pulaski Pike, 
Huntsville, AL 35810-1122, [email protected].

https://www.statesman.com/news/20190515/cave-explorers-discover-new-600-foot-passage-in-natural-bridge-caverns

https://www.statesman.com/news/20190812/cave-expeditions-yield-new-discoveries-at-natural-bridge-caverns

https://www.statesman.com/photogallery/TX/20190813/NEWS/812009996/PH/1

https://www.statesman.com/photogallery/TX/20190813/NEWS/812009996/PH/1

See all y’all at TCR,

Bill Steele 
[email protected]

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