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Five of History’s Greatest Polar Explorers

by Robert C. Brears Blog

Regions: Antarctica, Arctic

Tracing the footsteps of polar explorers

Today’s visitors to the polar regions follow in the footsteps of some of the most famous explorers in history. Here is a list of five great explorers to brave the harsh lands of the Arctic and Antarctica.

James Clark Ross

Born in 1800, James entered the Royal Navy at a tender age of 11 years old. During his first few years of service he was watched over by his uncle Sir John Ross. His first taste of the polar regions came in 1819 when he joined his uncle for the voyage in search of the Northwest Passage. During this time, there was a search on for a navigable channel connecting the North Atlantic with the Pacific Oceans through the Arctic regions of North America.

By Wildman, John R. (1785) (Painting BHC2981) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

In just over a decade later James located the position of the north magnetic pole on Boothia Peninsula in northern Canada. In 1839, Ross took command of the Erebus while his friend Francis Crozier took command of Terror with both ships heading south to Antarctica. Sailing south Ross discovered what is known today as the Ross Sea, which is the best ocean access to the South Pole.

However, it was not all plain sailing to reach the Magnetic Pole as Ross discovered land instead of open water. He calculated that the Magnetic Pole was only 800 km away but there was no direct sea route. Nonetheless, on January 12th 1841 Ross and Crozier landed on an island they later named Possession and claimed and named it Victoria Land in honour of the young Queen Victoria.

They then set sail to discover a giant volcano, Mt. Erebus and its smaller neighbour Mt. Terror. However, access to these volcanos was blocked by a large ice sheet, which also blocked their path to the South Pole. This ice sheet is known today as the Ross Ice Shelf.

Robert Peary

Having explored the Greenland ice cap in 1886, Robert Peary, on leave from his duties in the United States Navy, came to the conclusion that the North Pole lay beyond Greenland, not part of it as previously thought. Peary then set out to become the first person to reach the North Pole.

See page for author [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

To prepare for his expedition north Peary observed Inuit ways to survive in the bitter environment. Peary and his associate Matthew Henson, learned all they could about dog sleds, furs and igloos. They then decided that the best platform to launch their expedition from was from Canada’s Ellesmere Island with the date planned for around late winter when the ice was firmer.

On March 1st 1909, Peary set forth with an entourage of 23 men, 133 dogs, 19 sleds. As they progressed north they lightened their loads and reduced their size of the party. By the time April came only six men were now pushing forwards, Perry and Henson and four Inuits.

However, his claim to have been the first to reach the North Pole was contested by another American, Frederick Cook. However, Congress deemed that Peary was in fact the first to reach the Pole and now could claim his place in history.

Sir Ernest Shackleton

In 1901, Ernest Shackleton was chosen to go on the Antarctic expedition led by British naval officer Robert Falcon Scott on the ship Discovery. The expedition spent two summers in Antarctic with Shackleton joining Scott and one other in an attempt to reach the South Pole in 1902.

[Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

In terrible conditions they trekked towards the South Pole, marching up to 40 kilometres a day. With food in short supply they reached further south than anyone before and was forced to turn around. In 1907, he made another attempt at reaching the South Pole but was forced to turn back again.

In 1911, Shackleton set forth again to be the first person to reach the Pole but was beaten by Norwegian Explorer Roald Amundsen. This forced Shackleton to set his sights on crossing Antarctica via the South Pole. Fate would have it that on August 1, 1914 Shackleton would set sail to Antarctica, not realising that his dreams again would be shattered when his ship Endurance becoming trapped in ice and his men having to make their way to Elephant Island, off the southern tip of Cape Horn.

From the island, Shackleton went out for help making his way towards South Georgia. Eventually Shackleton made his way back to Elephant Island to rescue the remaining men. In fact, all 28-crew stuck on Elephant Island for two years survived the ordeal.

Robert Falcon Scott

Scott led two major expeditions to Antarctica in 1901 and 1910. Scott was selected as the leader of the National Antarctic Expedition 1901-04, which was sponsored by the Royal Geographic Society, the British Government and a London businessman, Llewellyn Longstaff. After a round of fundraising the expedition had a healthy balance of £90,000, more than enough to pay for a new ship, provisions, wages and other costs.

By Archives New Zealand from New Zealand (Robert Falcon Scott, 1910) [CC BY-SA 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Scott, who had been in the navy since 13 years old, volunteered to command the expedition following a meeting with Sir Clements Markham, who had been familiar with Scott’s career up to this point. It was Markham who proposed the expedition be led by a brand new ship, Discovery, which had just been built in 1901. Because of the expedition’s large budget they even had two army balloons for reconnaissance as well as a windmill to generate electricity along with a number of dogs. After stopping off in New Zealand, Scott’s expedition made it to Antarctica reaching the continent on 9 January 1902 at Cape Adare.

In February a balloon was released resulting in the first ever aerial photographs of Antarctica. Rather than winter over in huts on the ice, Scott decided to have the Discovery frozen into the ice to become home for 47 officers and men, 30 of which came from the Royal Navy with the rest coming from a mix of backgrounds including the Merchant Navy, Royal Marine along with scientists and a handful of civilians.

Despite the failed attempts to reach the Pole, the expedition was a scientific success having made a number of comprehensive scientific observations and geographical discoveries as well as numerous observations and field work in the areas of meteorology, geology, glaciology, marine biology and cartography.

Edmund Hillary

Edmund Hillary led the New Zealand component of the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition in 1957-58, which was under the overall command of British explorer Vivian Fuchs. The New Zealand team first set up Scott Base on the edge of the Ross Ice Shelf before driving modified Ferguson farm tractors south to drop food and fuel depots for the British crossing party.

By Photographer unidentified. Retouched by TimofKingsland. [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Hillary could not hold himself back and instead of playing the support role to the crossing party decided to launch a full-on push for the Pole. On January 4th 1958, Hillary and his crossing party became the first to reach the South Pole overland since Robert Scott in 1912. It took them 14 days over soft snow and crevasses.

Despite the hardships faced and limited sleep, the expedition was greeted by a media party at the Pole who straight away began to question whether Hillary’s decision put the whole expedition at risk, Nonetheless, there appeared to be no animosity between Fuchs and Hillary when Fuchs finally arrived at the South Pole.

Well before this expedition to the Pole, Hillary was already a legend having conquered Mount Everest in 1953 along with Tenzing Norgay. When asked later in life about the two expeditions and how they compared, Hillary commented that the Antarctic expedition was not harder than Everest, instead it was different in different ways. For instance, unlike Antarctica there was the immediate threat of avalanche or falling off the mountain or going down a crevasse, while in Antarctica the temperatures on the whole were colder and the distances vaster.  

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