Further information: Exploration of the High Alps, History of the Alps, Golden age of alpinism, and Silver age of alpinism
A photochrom postcard of 1890, depicting the Zmutt Valley with Mischabelhörner group, Valais.
Tourism begins with British mountaineers climbing the main peaks of the Bernese Alps in the early 19th century (Jungfrau 1811, Finsteraarhorn 1812). The Alpine Club in London is founded in 1857. Reconvalescence in the Alpine climate, in particular from Tuberculosis, is another important branch of tourism in the 19th and early 20th centuries for example in Davos, Graubünden. Because of the prominence of the Bernese Alps in British mountaineering, the Bernese Oberland was long especially known as a tourist destination. Meiringen's Reichenbach Falls achieved literary fame as the site of the fictional death of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes (1893). The first organised tourist holidays to Switzerland were offered during the 19th century by the Thomas Cook and Lunn Travel companies.
Switzerland Tourism
Switzerland Tourism
Switzerland Tourism
Switzerland Tourism
Switzerland Tourism
Switzerland Tourism
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