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Imperial Trans Antarctic Expedition

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Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition



 
 
The Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition (1914–17), also known as the Endurance Expedition, was the last major expedition of the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration
Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration

The Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration describes an era which extended from the end of the 19th century to the early 1920s. During this 25-year period the Antarctic continent became the focus of an international effort which resulted in intensive scientific and geographical exploration, sixteen major expeditions being launched from eight d...
. Conceived by Sir Ernest Shackleton
Ernest Shackleton

Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton Royal Victorian Order Order of British Empire, was an Anglo-Irish explorer who was one of the principal figures of the period known as the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration....
, the expedition sought to achieve the first land crossing of the Antarctic
Antarctica

Antarctica is Earth's southernmost continent, overlying the South Pole. It is situated in the Antarctica of the southern hemisphere, almost entirely south of the Antarctic Circle, and is surrounded by the Southern Ocean....
 continent. After the conquest
Amundsen's South Pole expedition

Roald Amundsen's South Pole expedition was a Norway expedition to Antarctica aiming to be the first to reach the South Pole. The expedition was a success, with five of the mission arriving at the pole on December 14, 1911, beating Robert Falcon Scott and his ill-fated party by thirty-four days....
 of the South Pole
South Pole

The South Pole, also known as the Geographic South Pole or Terrestrial South Pole, is one of the two points where the Earth's rotation intersects the surface....
 by Roald Amundsen
Roald Amundsen

Roald Engelbregt Gravning Amundsen , was a Norwegian people Exploration of polar regions. He led the first Antarctica expedition to reach the South Pole between 1910 and 1912....
 in 1911, the crossing remained, in Shackleton's words, the "one great main object of Antarctic journeyings". The expedition failed entirely to accomplish this aim, but it remains memorable as an epic of heroism and survival.

Shackleton had served in the Antarctic on Captain Scott
Robert Falcon Scott

Robert Falcon Scott Royal Victorian Order was a British Royal Naval officer and explorer who led two expeditions to the Antarctic regions: the Discovery Expedition, 1901–04, and the ill-fated Terra Nova Expedition, 1910–13....
's Discovery Expedition
Discovery Expedition

The British National Antarctic Expedition, 1901–04, generally known as the Discovery Expedition, was the first official British exploration of the Antarctica regions since James Clark Ross voyage sixty years earlier....
, 1901–04, and had led the British Antarctic Expedition
Nimrod Expedition

The British Antarctic Expedition 1907?09, otherwise known as the Nimrod Expedition, was the first of three expeditions to the Antarctic led by Ernest Shackleton....
, 1907–09.






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The Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition (1914–17), also known as the Endurance Expedition, was the last major expedition of the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration
Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration

The Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration describes an era which extended from the end of the 19th century to the early 1920s. During this 25-year period the Antarctic continent became the focus of an international effort which resulted in intensive scientific and geographical exploration, sixteen major expeditions being launched from eight d...
. Conceived by Sir Ernest Shackleton
Ernest Shackleton

Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton Royal Victorian Order Order of British Empire, was an Anglo-Irish explorer who was one of the principal figures of the period known as the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration....
, the expedition sought to achieve the first land crossing of the Antarctic
Antarctica

Antarctica is Earth's southernmost continent, overlying the South Pole. It is situated in the Antarctica of the southern hemisphere, almost entirely south of the Antarctic Circle, and is surrounded by the Southern Ocean....
 continent. After the conquest
Amundsen's South Pole expedition

Roald Amundsen's South Pole expedition was a Norway expedition to Antarctica aiming to be the first to reach the South Pole. The expedition was a success, with five of the mission arriving at the pole on December 14, 1911, beating Robert Falcon Scott and his ill-fated party by thirty-four days....
 of the South Pole
South Pole

The South Pole, also known as the Geographic South Pole or Terrestrial South Pole, is one of the two points where the Earth's rotation intersects the surface....
 by Roald Amundsen
Roald Amundsen

Roald Engelbregt Gravning Amundsen , was a Norwegian people Exploration of polar regions. He led the first Antarctica expedition to reach the South Pole between 1910 and 1912....
 in 1911, the crossing remained, in Shackleton's words, the "one great main object of Antarctic journeyings". The expedition failed entirely to accomplish this aim, but it remains memorable as an epic of heroism and survival.

Shackleton had served in the Antarctic on Captain Scott
Robert Falcon Scott

Robert Falcon Scott Royal Victorian Order was a British Royal Naval officer and explorer who led two expeditions to the Antarctic regions: the Discovery Expedition, 1901–04, and the ill-fated Terra Nova Expedition, 1910–13....
's Discovery Expedition
Discovery Expedition

The British National Antarctic Expedition, 1901–04, generally known as the Discovery Expedition, was the first official British exploration of the Antarctica regions since James Clark Ross voyage sixty years earlier....
, 1901–04, and had led the British Antarctic Expedition
Nimrod Expedition

The British Antarctic Expedition 1907?09, otherwise known as the Nimrod Expedition, was the first of three expeditions to the Antarctic led by Ernest Shackleton....
, 1907–09. The new expedition required a main party to sail to the Weddell Sea
Weddell Sea

The Weddell Sea is part of the Southern Ocean. Its land boundaries are defined by the bay formed from the coasts of Coats Land and the Antarctic Peninsula....
 and to land a shore party at around latitude
Latitude

Latitude, usually denoted symbolically by the Greek letter phi gives the location of a place on Earth north or south of the equator. Lines of Latitude are the horizontal lines shown running east-to-west on maps ....
 78°S, in the vicinity of Vahsel Bay
Vahsel Bay

Vahsel Bay is a bay about 7 miles wide in the western part of the Luitpold Coast, Antarctica.This bay receives the flow of the Schweitzer Glacier and Lerchenfeld Glacier....
, in preparation for a transcontinental march via the South Pole to the Ross Sea
Ross Sea

The Ross Sea is a deep Headlands and bays of the Southern Ocean in Antarctica between Victoria Land and Marie Byrd Land. It was discovered by James Clark Ross in 1841....
. A supporting group, the Ross Sea party
Ross Sea Party

The Ross Sea party was part of Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition 1914–17. Shackleton's plan was to land with a group on the Weddell Sea coast of Antarctica from his ship Endurance , and to march across the continent, via the South Pole, to McMurdo Sound, Ross Island....
, would meanwhile travel to the opposite side of the continent, establish camp in McMurdo Sound
McMurdo Sound

The ice-clogged waters of Antarctica's McMurdo Sound extend about 55 km long and wide. The sound encompasses 2,500 miles of shoreline which opens to the Ross Sea to the north....
, and from there lay a series of supply depots across the Ross Ice Shelf
Ross Ice Shelf

File:Map-antarctica-ross-ice-shelf-red-x.pngThe Ross Ice Shelf is the largest ice shelf of Antarctica . It is several hundred meters thick. The nearly vertical ice front to the open sea is more than 600 km long, and between 15 and 50 meters high above the water surface....
 to the foot of the Beardmore Glacier
Beardmore Glacier

The Beardmore Glacier in Antarctica is one of the largest glaciers in the world, with a length exceeding 160 km . The glacier is one of the main passages from the Ross Ice Shelf through the Queen Alexandra Range and Commonwealth Range ranges of the Transantarctic Mountains to the Antarctic Plateau, and was one of the early routes to the Sou...
. These depots would be essential for the transcontinental party's survival, as they would not carry enough provisions to make the crossing otherwise. The expedition required two ships; the Endurance
Endurance (1912 ship)

The Endurance was the three-masted barquentine in which Sir Ernest Shackleton sailed for the Antarctic on the 1914 Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition....
 would take Shackleton's party to the Weddell Sea, and the Aurora, under Captain Aeneas Mackintosh
Aeneas Mackintosh

Aeneas Lionel Acton Mackintosh was a British Merchant Navy officer and Antarctic explorer who was a member of two of Sir Ernest Shackleton's expeditions: the Nimrod Expedition and the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition ....
, would take the Ross Sea party to McMurdo Sound.

Endurance became beset in the ice of the Weddell Sea before reaching Vahsel Bay, and despite efforts to free the ship, she drifted northward with the pack throughout the Antarctic winter of 1915. Eventually, the ice crushed and sank the ship, stranding her 28-man complement on the ice and subjecting them to a series of harrowing episodes—months spent in makeshift camps on the ice, a journey in lifeboats to Elephant Island, an 800-mile (1,300 km) open-boat journey in the James Caird
James Caird (boat)

The voyage of the James Caird was an open-boat journey which took place following the abandonment of Ernest Shackleton Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition, after the loss of its ship, Endurance , in October 1915....
, and the first crossing of South Georgia
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands

South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands is a British overseas territory in the southern Atlantic Ocean. It is a remote and inhospitable collection of islands, consisting of South Georgia ? which measures approximately by and is by far the largest island in the territory ? and a chain of smaller islands known as the South Sand...
—that led eventually to their rescue without a single fatality. Meanwhile, the Ross Sea party overcame great hardships to fulfill its mission, after Aurora was blown from her moorings during a gale and could not return. The depots were laid, but three lives were lost in the process.

Preparations


Origins

Shackleton lived restlessly and somewhat aimlessly after his return from the Nimrod Expedition
Nimrod Expedition

The British Antarctic Expedition 1907?09, otherwise known as the Nimrod Expedition, was the first of three expeditions to the Antarctic led by Ernest Shackleton....
 in 1909, despite the public acclaim that had greeted his achievement of a Furthest South
Farthest South

Farthest South describes the most southerly latitude reached by explorers before the conquest of the South Pole rendered the expression obsolete....
 record at 88°23'S. He became—in the words of British skiing pioneer Sir Harry Brittain
Harry Brittain

Sir Henry Ernest "Harry" Brittain, Order of the British Empire, Order of St Michael and St George who founded the Empire Press Union in 1909 was once described as the most versatile man in the Empire....
—"a bit of a floating gent". The nature of his further Antarctic work now depended on the achievements of Scott's Terra Nova Expedition
Terra Nova Expedition

The Terra Nova Expedition , officially the British Antarctic Expedition 1910, was led by Robert Falcon Scott who had previously commanded the Discovery Expedition to the Antarctic in 1901–04....
, which had left Cardiff
Cardiff

Cardiff is the Capital , largest city and most populous Unitary authority#Wales in Wales. The city is Wales' chief commercial centre, the base for many national cultural and sport institutions, the Welsh national media, and the seat of Welsh Assembly Government ....
 in July 1910. Shackleton's focus became clearer when the news of Amundsen's unexpected conquest of the South Pole reached him, on 11 March 1913. The Pole itself was no longer an objective, no matter what Scott's expedition achieved. Shackleton wrote: "The discovery of the South Pole will not be the end of Antarctic exploration". The next work, he said, would be "a transcontinental journey from sea to sea, crossing the pole". He could not be certain that this work would fall to him, because others were in the field. On 11 December 1911 a German expedition under Wilhelm Filchner
Wilhelm Filchner

Wilhelm Filchner was a Germany explorer.At the age of 21, he participated in his first expedition, which led him to Russia. Two years later, he travelled alone and on horseback through the Pamir Mountains, from Osh to Murgabh to the upper Wakhan to Tashkurgan and back....
 had sailed from South Georgia, with the purpose of penetrating deep into the Weddell Sea, establishing a southerly base, and from there attempting to cross the continent to the Ross Sea. In late 1912 Filchner withdrew to South Georgia, having failed to set up his base headquarters. However, his discovery of possible landing sites in Vahsel Bay
Vahsel Bay

Vahsel Bay is a bay about 7 miles wide in the western part of the Luitpold Coast, Antarctica.This bay receives the flow of the Schweitzer Glacier and Lerchenfeld Glacier....
, at around 78° latitude, was noted by Shackleton, and incorporated into his expedition plans.

In the wake of the sombre news of the fate of Captain Scott and his companions on their return journey from the South Pole, Shackleton initiated preparations for his own transcontinental expedition. He solicited financial and practical support from, among others, Tryggve Gran
Tryggve Gran

Jens Tryggve Herman Gran was a Norwegian aviator, explorer and author....
 of Scott’s expedition, and former Prime Minister
Prime minister

A prime minister is the most senior minister of Cabinet in the Executive branch of government in a parliamentary system. The position is usually held by, but need not always be held by, a politician....
 Lord Rosebery, but got little joy from either. Gran was evasive, and Rosebery blunt: "I have never been able to care one farthing about the Poles". He got more support from William Speirs Bruce
William Speirs Bruce

William Speirs Bruce was a London-born Scotland naturalist, polar region scientist and oceanographer who organized and led the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition ....
, leader of the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition
Scottish National Antarctic Expedition

The Scottish National Antarctic Expedition , 1902?04, was organised and led by William Speirs Bruce, a natural scientist and former medical student from the University of Edinburgh....
 of 1902–04, who had harboured plans for an Antarctic crossing since 1908, but had abandoned the project for lack of funds. Bruce gladly allowed Shackleton to adopt his plans, although the eventual plan announced by Shackleton owed little to Bruce. On 29 December 1913, having acquired certain promises of financial backing, he made his public announcement, in a letter to the The Times
The Times

The Times is a daily national newspaper published in the United Kingdom since 1785 when it was known as The Daily Universal Register.The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times are published by Times Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary of News International....
 newspaper.

Shackleton's plan

Shackleton gave his expedition the grand title of "Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition", and to arouse the interest of the general public issued a detailed programme in early 1914. The expedition was to consist of two parties and two ships. The Weddell Sea party would travel in the Endurance
Endurance (1912 ship)

The Endurance was the three-masted barquentine in which Sir Ernest Shackleton sailed for the Antarctic on the 1914 Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition....
 and proceed to the Vahsel Bay area, where fourteen men would land of whom six, under Shackleton, would form the Transcontinental Party. This group, with 100 dogs, two motor sledges, and equipment "embodying everything that the experience of the leader and his expert advisers can suggest", would undertake the 1,800-mile (2,900 km) journey to the Ross Sea. The remaining eight shore party members would carry out scientific work, three going to Graham Land
Graham Land

Graham Land is that portion of the Antarctic Peninsula which lies north of a line joining Cape Jeremy and Cape Agassiz. This description of Graham Land is consistent with the 1964 agreement between the United Kingdom UK-APC and the United States Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names, in which the name "Antarctic Peninsula" was approved for t...
, three to Enderby Land
Enderby Land

Enderby Land is a projecting land mass of Antarctica, extending from Shinnan Glacier at about 44? 38' E to William Scoresby Bay at 59? 34' E. It was discovered in February 1831 by John Biscoe in the Tula, and named after the Enderby Brothers of London, owners of the Tula, who encouraged their captains to combine exploration with sealing....
 and two remaining at base camp.

The Ross Sea party
Ross Sea Party

The Ross Sea party was part of Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition 1914–17. Shackleton's plan was to land with a group on the Weddell Sea coast of Antarctica from his ship Endurance , and to march across the continent, via the South Pole, to McMurdo Sound, Ross Island....
 would travel in the Aurora to the Ross Sea base in McMurdo Sound, on the opposite side of the continent. After landing there they would "lay down depots on the route of the transcontinental party, make a march south to assist that party, and make geological and other observations". The Ross Sea party’s role was vital; Shackleton's party would carry supplies sufficient to see them only to the foot of the Beardmore Glacier. Their survival during the final to the Ross Sea base would depend on depots having been laid at agreed coordinates across the Ross Ice Shelf
Ross Ice Shelf

File:Map-antarctica-ross-ice-shelf-red-x.pngThe Ross Ice Shelf is the largest ice shelf of Antarctica . It is several hundred meters thick. The nearly vertical ice front to the open sea is more than 600 km long, and between 15 and 50 meters high above the water surface....
.

In his programme Shackleton clearly expresses the intention that the crossing should take place in the first season, 1914–15. Later, he saw the improbability of this, and was to have informed Mackintosh, in charge of the Ross Sea party, of a change of plan. Unfortunately, according to Daily Chronicle
Daily Chronicle

The Daily Chronicle was a London newspaper company in the United Kingdom that was founded in 1872. It merged its publication with the Daily News to become the News Chronicle....
 correspondent Ernest Perris, this cable was never sent, an omission that unnecessarily complicated the Ross Sea party's first season of work.

Finance

Shackleton thought that he would need £50,000 (2008 approximation £2.2 million) to carry out the simplest version of his plan. He did not believe in appeals to the public: "(they) cause endless book-keeping worries". His chosen method of fund-raising was to solicit contributions from wealthy backers, and he had begun this process early in 1913, with little initial success. His first significant break came in December 1913 when the Government offered him £10,000, a useful sum, but only half what they had subscribed to enable Shackleton to pay off the Nimrod Expedition's debts. The Royal Geographical Society
Royal Geographical Society

The Royal Geographical Society is a United Kingdom learned society founded in 1830 with the name Geographical Society of London for the advancement of geographical sciences, under the patronage of William IV of the United Kingdom....
, from which he had expected nothing, gave him £1,000—according to Huntford, Shackleton, in a grand gesture, advised them that he would only need to take up half of this sum. With time running out, contributions were eventually secured during the spring and early summer of 1914. Dudley Docker of the Birmingham Small Arms Company
Birmingham Small Arms Company

The Birmingham Small Arms Company was a United Kingdom manufacturer of vehicles, firearms, and military equipment, and still exists as an airgun sport manufacturer and distributor....
 (BSA) gave £10,000, wealthy tobacco heiress Janet Stancomb-Wills
Janet Stancomb-Wills

Dame Janet Stancomb Graham Stancomb-Wills, Order of the British Empire was the eldest daughter of George Perkins Stancomb and Catherine Janet Lobb, at Aldersgate, London, and niece of the first Baron Winterstoke ....
 gave a "generous" sum (the amount was not revealed), and, in June, Scottish industrialist Sir James Caird
James Key Caird

Sir James Key Caird, 1st Baronet was a Jutes baron and mathematician. Born in Dundee, he was one of the city's most successful entrepreneurs, who used the latest technology in his Ashton and Craigie Mills....
 donated £24,000. "This magnificent gift relieves me of all anxiety", Shackleton informed the Morning Post
Morning Post

The Morning Post, as the paper was named on its masthead, was a conservative daily newspaper published in London from 1772 to 1937, when it was acquired by The Daily Telegraph....
.

Shackleton now had the money to proceed. For £14,000 he acquired a 300-ton barquentine
Barquentine

Description A barquentine is a sailing ship with three or more mast ; with a square rigged foremast and fore-and-aft rigged main, mizzen and any other masts....
 called Polaris, which had been built for the Belgian explorer Adrien de Gerlache
Adrien de Gerlache

Adrien Victor Joseph de Gerlache de Gomery was an officer in the Belgian Navy who led the Belgian Antarctic Expedition of 1897 to 1899....
 for an expedition to Spitsbergen
Spitsbergen

Spitsbergen is a Norway island, the largest island of the Svalbard archipelago in the Arctic Ocean. The island of Spitsbergen covers approximately 39,044 km? ....
. This scheme had collapsed and the ship became available. Shackleton changed her name to Endurance
Endurance (1912 ship)

The Endurance was the three-masted barquentine in which Sir Ernest Shackleton sailed for the Antarctic on the 1914 Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition....
, reflecting his family motto "By endurance we conquer". He also acquired, for £3,200, Douglas Mawson
Douglas Mawson

Sir Douglas Mawson, Order of the British Empire, Australian Academy of Science, Fellow of the Royal Society was an Australian Antarctic List of explorers and geologist....
’s expedition ship Aurora
Aurora (ship)

The Aurora was a steam yacht built by Alexander Stephen & Sons Ltd. shipbuilders in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1876, for the Dundee Seal and Whale Fishing Company....
, which was lying in Hobart
Hobart

Hobart is the List of Australian capital cities and most populous city of the Australian island state of Tasmania. Founded in 1803 as a penal colony, Hobart is Australia's second oldest capital city after Sydney....
, Tasmania
Tasmania

Tasmania is an Australian island and States and territories of Australia of the same name. It is located south of the eastern side of the continent, being separated from it by Bass Strait....
, as the Ross Sea party's vessel.

The total amount raised by Shackleton is uncertain, since the size of the Stancomb-Wills donation is not known. However money, or rather the lack of it, haunted the expedition. As an economy measure the proportion of funding allocated to the Ross Sea party was summarily halved, as the party’s commander Aeneas Mackintosh discovered only when he arrived in Australia to take up his command. Mackintosh was forced to haggle and plead for money and supplies to make his part of the expedition viable. Lack of money would also hamper the operation to rescue the Ross Sea party when this need arose in 1916. Shackleton did have an eye on recouping costs after his return, though: he sold the exclusive rights to the expedition's story to the Daily Chronicle
Daily Chronicle

The Daily Chronicle was a London newspaper company in the United Kingdom that was founded in 1872. It merged its publication with the Daily News to become the News Chronicle....
, and formed the Imperial Trans Antarctic Film Syndicate to take advantage of the film rights.

Personnel


Frank Worsley
There was no shortage of volunteers to join Shackleton. More than 5,000 applications reached him, including one from "three sporty girls". Eventually the crew was reduced to 56 men, 28 for each arm of the expedition.

As second-in-command Shackleton chose Frank Wild
Frank Wild

John Robert Francis Wild , known as Frank Wild, was an explorer on several expeditions to Antarctica including:* In 1901 he was a member of Robert Falcon Scott?s crew as a seaman on the ?Discovery?, along with Ernest Shackleton who was then a sub-Lieutenant....
, who had been with him on both the Discovery
Discovery Expedition

The British National Antarctic Expedition, 1901–04, generally known as the Discovery Expedition, was the first official British exploration of the Antarctica regions since James Clark Ross voyage sixty years earlier....
 and Nimrod
Nimrod Expedition

The British Antarctic Expedition 1907?09, otherwise known as the Nimrod Expedition, was the first of three expeditions to the Antarctic led by Ernest Shackleton....
 expeditions, and had been in the Furthest South
Farthest South

Farthest South describes the most southerly latitude reached by explorers before the conquest of the South Pole rendered the expression obsolete....
 party in 1909. Wild had just returned from Mawson’s Australian Antarctic Expedition. RN Chief Petty Officer Tom Crean, a hero from the Terra Nova, was appointed Second Officer, with another seasoned Antarctic hand, Alfred Cheetham
Alfred Cheetham

Alfred Cheetham was a member of several Antarctic expeditions. He served as third officer for both the Nimrod Expedition and Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition expeditions....
, as third officer. Two other Nimrod veterans were assigned to the Ross Sea party, Aeneas Mackintosh
Aeneas Mackintosh

Aeneas Lionel Acton Mackintosh was a British Merchant Navy officer and Antarctic explorer who was a member of two of Sir Ernest Shackleton's expeditions: the Nimrod Expedition and the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition ....
 who commanded it, and Ernest Joyce
Ernest Joyce

Ernest Edward Mills Joyce was a Royal Naval seaman and explorer who participated in three Antarctic expeditions during the early 20th century....
.

Shackleton had wanted John King Davis
John King Davis

John King Davis was an England Australian exploration and navigator notable for his work captaining exploration ships in Antarctica waters as well as for establishing weather stations on Macquarie Island in the subantarctic and on Willis Island in the Coral Sea....
, who had captained Aurora during the Australian Antarctic Expedition, to captain Endurance. Davis refused, thinking the enterprise was "doomed", so Shackleton appointed Frank Worsley
Frank Worsley

Frank Arthur Worsley Distinguished Service Order and Bar, Order of the British Empire, Decoration for Officers of the Royal Naval Reserve was a New Zealand sailor and explorer....
, who reportedly had applied to the expedition after learning of it in a dream. The scientific staff of six accompanying Endurance comprised the two surgeons, Alexander Macklin
Alexander Macklin

Alexander Hepburne Macklin OBE Military Cross Territorial Decoration was a United Kingdom Physician who served as one of the two surgery on Sir Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1914–1917....
 and James McIlroy
James Mcilroy

'James Mcilroy' was born in King's Lynn on the 7th of December 1977, growing up in Belgium before returning to England in 1996.Guitarist in the United Kingdom extreme metal band Cradle of Filth from 2003 until 2005, playing on the Nymphetamine album and special edition as well as appearing on the "Mannequin " and Peace Through Superior...
; geologist James Wordie
James Wordie

Sir James Mann Wordie, Order of the British Empire was a Scottish polar explorer and geologist.Wordie was born at Partick, Glasgow, in the former county of Lanarkshire in Scotland....
; biologist Robert S. Clark; physicist Reginald James; and meteorologist Leonard Hussey, who would eventually edit Shackleton’s expedition account South. Photographer Frank Hurley
Frank Hurley

James Francis "Frank" Hurley, Order of the British Empire was an Australian photographer, film maker and adventurer. He participated in a number of expeditions to Antarctica and served as an official photographer with Australian forces during both world wars....
 and artist George Marston would ensure that the expedition was visually recorded.

The final composition of the Ross Sea party was hurried. Some who left Britain for Australia to join Aurora resigned before it departed for the Ross Sea, and a full complement of crew was in doubt until the last minute. Only Mackintosh and Joyce had any previous Antarctic experience, and in the case of the former this was extremely limited.

Expedition


Weddell Sea party


Voyage through the ice
Endurance left Plymouth
Plymouth

Plymouth is a City status in the United Kingdom and unitary authority on the coast of Devon, England, about south west of London. It is built between the mouths of the rivers River Plym to the east and River Tamar to the west, where they join Plymouth Sound....
 on 8 August 1914, stopping briefly in Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires

Buenos Aires is the Capital and largest city of Argentina. It is located on the southern shore of the R?o de la Plata, on the southeastern coast of the South American continent....
 where Hurley came on board, and William Bakewell and stowaway Perce Blackborow were added to the crew. After a final month-long halt in Grytviken
Grytviken

Grytviken is the principal Hamlet in the United Kingdom territory of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands in the South Atlantic. It was so named by a 1902 Swedish surveyor who found old English try pots used to render Pinniped oil at the site....
, South Georgia, Endurance departed for the Antarctic on 5 December. Two days later Shackleton was disconcerted to encounter pack ice as far north as 57°26’S, forcing the ship to manoeuvre. During the following days there were more tussles with the pack, which on 14 December was thick enough to halt the ship for 24 hours. Three days later the ship was stopped again. Shackleton commented: "I had been prepared for evil conditions in the Weddell Sea, but had hoped that the pack would be loose. What we were encountering was fairly dense pack of a very obstinate character".

Progress was delayed by frequent halts until leads opened up and Endurance was able to proceed steadily southward on 22 December. This remained the case for the next two weeks, taking the ship deep into the Weddell Sea. Further delays slowed progress during the early days of 1915, although from 7–10 January a lengthy run south brought them close to the 100-foot (30 m) tall ice walls which masked the Antarctic coastal region of Coats Land
Coats Land

Coats Land is a region in Antarctica which lies westward of Queen Maud Land and forms the eastern shore of the Weddell Sea, extending in a general northeast-southwest direction between 20?00?W and 36?00?W....
, discovered and named by William Speirs Bruce in 1904. On 15 December Endurance came abreast of a great glacier, the edge of which formed a bay which looked like an excellent landing place. However there was no question of landing so far north of Vahsel Bay, "except under pressure of necessity"—a decision that Shackleton would later regret. On 17 January, after a long run of , the ship reached 76°27’S, where land was observed which Shackleton named Caird Coast, after his principal sponsor. Bad weather forced them to shelter in the lee of a stranded berg.

They were now close to Luitpold Land, at the southern end of which lay their destination, Vahsel Bay. Next day, the ship was forced westward for 14 miles (23 km), resuming in a southerly and then briefly north-westerly direction, before being stopped altogether. The position was 76°34’S, 31°30’W. It soon became clear that Endurance was now trapped in the ice, and after ten days of inactivity the ship’s fires were banked, to save fuel. Efforts continued to release her; on 14 February Shackleton ordered men on to the ice with ice-chisels, prickers, saws and picks, to try and force a passage, but the effort proved futile. Shackleton did not abandon all hope of breaking free, but now contemplated the "possibility of having to spend a winter in the inhospitable arms of the pack".

Drift of the Endurance

On 21 February, Endurance, held fast, drifted to her most southerly latitude, 76°58’S, and thereafter began moving steadily northwards with the pack. On 24 February, Shackleton, realizing that they would be beset throughout the winter, ordered ship’s routine abandoned. The dogs were taken off board and housed in ice-kennels or "dogloos", while the ship’s interior was converted to suitable winter quarters for the various groups of men—officers, scientists, engineers, and seamen. A wireless apparatus was rigged, but the location was too remote to receive or transmit signals.

As to the possibility of release, Shackleton was aware of the recent example of Wilhelm Filchner's ship, the Deutschland, which had become icebound in the same vicinity three years earlier. After Filchner's attempts to establish a land base at Vahsel Bay failed, his ship Deutschland was trapped on 6 March 1912, about off the coast of Coats Land. Six months later, at latitude 63°37’, the ship broke free, then sailed to South Georgia apparently none the worse for its ordeal. A similar experience might allow Endurance to make a second attempt to reach Vahsel Bay in the following Antarctic spring.

During February and March the rate of drift was very slow. At the end of March Shackleton calculated that the ship had travelled a mere 95 miles (155 km) since 19 January. However, as winter set in the speed of the drift increased, and the condition of the surrounding ice changed. On 14 April Shackleton recorded the nearby pack "piling and rafting against the masses of ice"—if the ship was caught in this disturbance "she would be crushed like an eggshell". In May, as the sun set for the winter months, the ship was at 75°23’S, 42°14’W, still drifting in a generally northerly direction. It would be at least four months before spring brought the chance of an opening of the ice and it was possible that Endurance would not break free in time to make a repeat trip to the Vahsel Bay area. Shackleton now pondered the possibility of finding an alternative landing ground on the west shores of the Weddell Sea, if such a spot could be reached. "In the meantime", he wrote, "we must wait".
Endurance Final Sinking
The dark winter months of May, June and July were relatively uneventful, Shackleton’s greatest task being to maintain fitness, training and morale, a task he reportedly accomplished with great skill; football matches and dog racing took place on the ice, and skits were performed in the evenings. The first signs of the ice breaking up occurred on 22 July, and on 1 August, during a south-westerly gale with heavy snow, with Endurance at 72°26’S, 48°10’W, the ice floe began to break up all around the ship, the pressure forcing masses of ice beneath the keel and causing a heavy list to port. The position was perilous; Shackleton wrote: "The effects of the pressure around us was awe-inspiring. Mighty blocks of ice […] rose slowly till they jumped like cherry-stones gripped between thumb and finger [...] if the ship was once gripped firmly her fate would be sealed". This danger passed, and the succeeding weeks were quiet. During this relative lull the ship drifted into the area where, in 1823, Captain Benjamin Morrell of the sealer Wasp reported seeing a coastline which he identified as "New South Greenland"
New South Greenland

New South Greenland, sometimes known as Morrell's Land, was an phantom island recorded by the American captain Benjamin Morrell of the schooner Wasp in March 1823, during a seal hunting and exploration voyage in the Weddell Sea area of Antarctica....
. There was no sign of any such land; Shackleton concluded that Morrell had been deceived by the presence of large icebergs.

Heavy buffeting returned, however, early in September, and continued intermittently thereafter. On 30 September the ship sustained "the worst squeeze we had experienced", and withstood what her captain, Worsley, described as fearful pressure, as she was "thrown to and fro like a shuttlecock a dozen times". Shackleton had previously informed Worsley that he believed Endurance would as likely be destroyed as it would escape the ice.

Although the Endurance had proved capable of withstanding huge stresses, the ship's predicament was now dire, and when, on 24 October, its starboard side was forced against a large floe, the pressure of the ice on the side of the ship mounted until the hull began to bend and splinter; then water from below the ice began to pour into the ship. When the timbers broke they made terrific noises which sailors later described as being similar to the sound of "heavy fireworks and the blasting of guns". The supplies and three lifeboats were transferred to the ice, while the crew attempted to shore up the boat's hull and pump out the incoming sea, but after a few days, on 27 October 1915, and in freezing temperatures below -15°F (-25°C), Shackleton was forced to give the order to abandon ship. The position at abandonment was recorded as 69°05’S, 51°30’W. The wreckage remained afloat, and over the following weeks the crew salvaged further supplies and materials, including Hurley's photographs and cameras that had initially been left behind. From around 550 plates Hurley chose the best 150, the maximum that could be carried, and smashed the rest.

Camping on the ice
With the loss of the ship, all thoughts of a transcontinental journey had to be abandoned, and the focus of the expedition shifted to one of straightforward survival. To this end Shackleton intended to march the crew towards either Snow Hill Island
Snow Hill Island

Snow Hill Island is an almost completely snowcapped island, 20 Miles long and 6 Miles wide, lying off the east coast of the Antarctic Peninsula....
, the base of Otto Nordenskiöld’s Swedish
Sweden

Sweden , officially the Kingdom of Sweden , is a Nordic countries on the Scandinavian Peninsula in Northern Europe. Sweden has land borders with Norway to the west and Finland to the northeast, and it is connected to Denmark by the ?resund Bridge in the south....
 expedition in 1902–04, where emergency stores were to be found; Paulet Island
Paulet Island

Paulet Island is a Circle island about in diameter, lying southeast of Dundee Island, off the northeastern end of the Antarctic Peninsula. It is composed of lava flows capped by a cinder cone with a small summit crater....
, where Shackleton knew there was a substantial food depot; or Robertson Island
Robertson Island

Robertson Island is an ice-covered island, 13 miles long in a northwest-southeast direction and 6 miles wide, lying at the east end of the Seal Nunataks off the east coast of the Antarctic Peninsula....
. Shackleton believed they would be able to cross Graham Land
Graham Land

Graham Land is that portion of the Antarctic Peninsula which lies north of a line joining Cape Jeremy and Cape Agassiz. This description of Graham Land is consistent with the 1964 agreement between the United Kingdom UK-APC and the United States Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names, in which the name "Antarctic Peninsula" was approved for t...
 from any of these islands and reach the whaling outposts in Wilhelmina Bay
Wilhelmina Bay

Wilhelmina Bay is a bay 15 miles wide between Reclus Peninsula and Cape Anna along the west coast of Graham Land. Discovered by the Belgian Antarctic Expedition, 1897-99, under Adrien de Gerlache, and named for Wilhelmina, Monarchy of the Netherlands....
. The distance to Snow Hill Island from their initial stranded position was calculated by Worsley to be , with a further to Wilhelmina Bay. They would have to take with them food, fuel, survival gear and three heavy lifeboats.

The march started on 30 October, but problems quickly arose. The condition of the sea ice around them made travel almost impossible. As the horizontal pressure had increased, the sea ice buckled and rose up on itself, forming large pressure ridges often high. Over this surface, in two days the party managed to travel barely two miles (3.2 km). On 1 November Shackleton abandoned the march and decided, in conjunction with Wild and Worsley, that they would make camp and await the break-up of the ice. They gave the name "Ocean Camp" to the flat and solid-looking floe on which their aborted march had ended, and settled down to wait. Parties continued to revisit the Endurance wreck, which was still drifting with the ice a short distance from the camp. More of the abandoned supplies were retrieved until, on 21 November 1915, the ship finally slipped beneath the ice.

The speed of drift had started to increase after 1 November, and by the 7th was a steady three miles a day. By 5 December they had passed 68°S, but the direction was turning slightly east of north. This was taking them to a position from which it would be difficult or impossible to reach Snow Hill Island. However, to its north-east lay Paulet Island, which now became the target destination. It was about away, and Shackleton was anxious to reduce the length of the lifeboat journey that would be necessary to reach it. Therefore, on 21 December he announced a second march, to begin on 23 December.

Conditions, however, had not improved since the earlier attempt. Temperatures had risen and it was uncomfortably warm, with men sinking to their knees in soft snow as they struggled to haul the boats through the pressure ridges. On 27 December ship’s carpenter Harry McNish
Harry McNish

Harry McNish was the carpenter on Sir Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1914–1917. He was responsible for much of the work that ensured the crew's survival after their ship, the Endurance , was destroyed when it became trapped in pack ice in the Weddell Sea....
 (or McNeish—there is no consensus as to spelling among chroniclers) rebelled and refused to work. He argued that Ship’s Articles
Admiralty law

Admiralty law is a distinct body of law which governs maritime questions and offenses. It is a body of both domestic law governing maritime activities, and Conflict of laws governing the relationships between private entities which operate vessels on the oceans....
 had lapsed since Endurance’s sinking, and that he was no longer under orders. Shackleton’s firm remonstrance finally brought the carpenter to heel, but the incident was never forgotten. In due course McNish would make his own contribution to the salvation of the party, but he was nonetheless one of only four of the crew denied the Polar Medal
Polar Medal

The Polar Medal is a medal awarded by the Sovereign of the United Kingdom, which was originally instituted in 1857 as the Arctic Medal to reward earlier explorers attempting to discover the Northwest Passage....
 on Shackleton’s recommendation. Two days later, with only seven and a half miles’ (12 km) progress achieved in seven back-breaking days, Shackleton called a halt, observing: "It would take us over three hundred days to reach the land". The crew put up their tents and settled into what Shackleton called "Patience Camp", which would be their home for more than three months.

Supplies were now running low. Hurley and Macklin were sent back to Ocean Camp to recover food that had been left there in order to lighten the sledging teams’ burden. On 2 February 1916 Shackleton sent a larger party back, to recover the third lifeboat that had also been left. Food shortages became acute as the weeks passed, and seal meat, which had simply added variety to their diet before, became a staple as Shackleton attempted to conserve the remaining packaged rations. In January, all but two teams of the dogs (whose overall numbers had been depleted by mishaps and illness in the preceding months) were shot on Shackleton’s orders, because the dogs' requirements for seal meat were excessive. The final two teams were shot on 2 April, by which time their meat was a welcome addition to the rations. Meanwhile, the rate of drift became erratic; after being held at around 67° for several weeks, at the end of January there was a series of rapid north-eastward movements which, by 17 March, brought Patience Camp to the latitude of Paulet Island, but to its east. "It might have been six hundred for all the chance we had of reaching it across the broken sea-ice", Shackleton recorded.

Frustratingly, land was continuously in sight. The peak of Mount Haddington
Mount Haddington

Mount Haddington is a massive 1,630 metre high Miocene-recent volcanic complex located on James Ross Island, Antarctica. It is 60 kilometers wide and has had numerous subglacial eruptions throughout its history, forming many tuyas....
 on James Ross Island
James Ross Island

James Ross Island is a large island off the southeast side and near the northeastern extremity of Antarctic Peninsula, from which it is separated by Prince Gustav Channel....
 remained in view as the party drifted slowly by. With Snow Hill and Paulet Island now inaccessible, Shackleton wrote that all hopes were fixed on two remaining small islands at the northern extremity of Graham Land: Clarence Island
Clarence Island (South Shetland Islands)

Clarence Island is 12 miles long and the easternmost of the South Shetland Islands of the British Antarctic Territory. The name dates back to at least 1821 and is now established in international usage....
 and Elephant Island, about due north of their position on 25 March. He then had further thoughts and decided that Deception Island might be a better target destination. This lay far to the west, towards the end of a chain which formed the South Shetland Islands
South Shetland Islands

The South Shetland Islands are a group of List of antarctic and sub-antarctic islands, lying about 120 kilometres north of the Antarctic Peninsula....
, but Shackleton thought it might be attainable by island-hopping. Its advantage was that it was sometimes visited by whalers and might contain provisions. All of these destinations would require a perilous journey in the lifeboats, once the pack upon which they were drifting finally broke up. Prior to this journey the lifeboats were each named after the expedition’s chief financial sponsors: James Caird, Dudley Docker and Stancomb Wills.

Lifeboat journey to Elephant Island
Elephant Map
The end of Patience Camp was signalled on the evening of 8 April, when the floe suddenly split. The camp now found itself on a small triangular raft of ice; a break-up of this would mean disaster, so Shackleton readied the lifeboats for the party’s enforced departure. He had now decided they would try, if possible, to reach the distant Deception Island because a small wooden church had been reportedly erected for the benefit of whalers. This could provide a source of timber that might enable them to construct a seaworthy boat. At 1 pm on 9 April the Dudley Docker was launched, and an hour later all three boats were away. Shackleton himself commanded the James Caird, Worsley the Dudley Docker, and navigating officer Hubert Hudson was nominally in charge of the Stancomb Wills, though because of his precarious mental state the effective commander was Tom Crean
Tom Crean

Tom Crean was an Ireland seaman and Antarctic explorer from County Kerry. He left the family farm near Annascaul to enlist in the British Royal Navy at the age of 15....
.

The next few days were very difficult. The boats were still in the pack, dependent upon leads of water opening up, and progress was perilous and erratic. Frequently the boats were tied to floes, or dragged up on to them, while the men camped and waited for conditions to improve. Shackleton was wavering again between several potential destinations, and on 12 April rejected the various island options and decided on Hope Bay
Hope Bay

Hope Bay on Trinity Peninsula, is 5 km long and 3 km wide, indenting the tip of Antarctic Peninsula and opening on Antarctic Sound.The Bay was discovered on January 15, 1902 by the Swedish Antarctic Expedition under Otto Nordenski?ld, who named it in commemoration of the winter spent there by Johan Gunnar Andersson, S.A....
, at the very tip of Graham Land. However, conditions in the boats, in temperatures sometimes as low as -20°F (-30°C), with little food and regular soakings in icy seawater, were wearing the men down, physically and mentally. Shackleton therefore decided that Elephant Island, the nearest of the possible refuges, was now the only practical option.

On 14 April the boats lay off the south-east coast of this island, but there was no question of a landing, since this shore was one of perpendicular cliffs and glaciers. The following day, the James Caird rounded the eastern point of the island to reach the northern lee shore, and eventually discovered a narrow shingle beach at which Shackleton decided to land. Soon after, all three boats, which had been separated during the previous night, were reunited at the landing place. It was soon clear from high tide marks, however, that this beach would not serve as a long-term camp. The next day Wild and a crew set off in the Stancomb Wills to explore the coast for somewhere better. They returned with news of a long spit of land, seven miles (11 km) to the west, which seemed possible as a camping-ground. With minimum delay the men returned to the boats and transferred to this new location, which they later christened Point Wild.

Voyage of the James Caird

Elephant Island was remote, uninhabited, and rarely visited by whalers or any other ships. If the party was to return to civilization it would be necessary to summon help. The only realistic way that this could be done was to adapt one of the boats for the 800-mile (1,300 km) voyage across the Southern Ocean, to South Georgia. Shackleton had abandoned thoughts of taking the party on to Deception Island (an "infinitely less dangerous journey"), presumably because the physical condition of his party precluded further extended exposure to the rough winter seas. Tierra del Fuego
Tierra del Fuego

Tierra del Fuego is an archipelago separated from the southernmost tip of the South American mainland by the Strait of Magellan. The southern point of the archipelago forms Cape Horn....
 and the Falkland Islands
Falkland Islands

The Falkland Islands are an archipelago in the South Atlantic Ocean, located from the coast of Argentina, west of the Shag Rocks , and north of the British Antarctic Territory ....
 were closer than South Georgia, but would require sailing against the prevailing winds.

Shackleton selected his boat party: himself, Worsley as navigator, Crean, McNish, John Vincent
John Vincent (sailor)

John Vincent was an England seaman and member of Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition. He was one of the five men who accompanied Shackleton on his epic crossing from Elephant Island to South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands and was one of only four of the crew of Endurance not to receive the Polar Medal....
 and Timothy McCarthy. On instructions from Shackleton, McNish immediately set about adapting the James Caird, cleverly improvising tools and materials. Frank Wild was to be left in charge of the Elephant Island party, with instructions to make for Deception Island the following spring, should Shackleton not return. Shackleton took supplies for only four weeks, knowing that if land had not been reached within that time the boat would be lost.

The 22.5-foot (6.85 m) James Caird was launched on 24 April 1916. "Astonishing" and "incredible" are words typically used to describe the open-boat journey which followed. Everything depended on the pin-point accuracy of Worsley's navigation, based on observations that would have to be made in the most unfavourable of conditions. The prevailing wind was helpfully north-west, but the heavy sea conditions quickly soaked everything in icy water. Soon ice settled thickly on the boat, making her ride sluggishly. On 5 May a north-westerly gale almost brought about the boat's destruction as it faced what Shackleton described as the largest waves he had seen in twenty-six years at sea. On 8 May, thanks to Worsley’s navigation, South Georgia was sighted, after a 14-day battle with the elements that had driven the boat party to their physical limits. Two days later, after a prolonged struggle with heavy seas and hurricane-force winds to the south of the island, the exhausted party struggled ashore at King Haakon Bay
King Haakon Bay

King Haakon Bay, or King Haakon Sound, is an inlet on the southern coast of the island of South Georgia. The inlet is approximately long and wide....
.

South Georgia crossing

The arrival of the James Caird at King Haakon Bay was followed by a period of much-needed rest and recuperation, while Shackleton pondered the next move. The populated whaling stations of South Georgia lay on the northern coast. To reach them would mean either another boat journey around the island, or a land crossing through its unexplored interior. The condition of the James Caird, and the physical state of the party, particularly Vincent and McNish, meant that only the second of these options was viable.

After five days the party took the boat a short distance eastwards, to the head of a deep bay which would be the starting point for the crossing. Shackleton, Worsley and Crean would undertake the land journey, the others remaining at what they christened "Peggotty Camp
Peggotty Bluff

Peggotty Bluff is a bluff on the north side and near the head of King Haakon Bay, South Georgia....
", to be picked up later by boat. A storm on 18 May delayed their start, but by two o'clock the following morning the weather was clear and calm, and an hour later the crossing party set out.

Without a map, the route they chose was largely conjectural. By dawn they had ascended to and could see the northern coast. They were above Possession Bay
Possession Bay

Possession Bay is a bay 2 miles wide which recedes southwest for 5 miles , entered southeast of Black Head on the north coast of South Georgia, an island in the southern Atlantic Ocean....
, which meant that they were too far to the west and would need to move eastward to reach Stromness, their target whaling station. This meant the first of several backtrackings that would extend the journey and frustrate the men. At the close of that first day, needing to descend to the valley below them before nightfall, they risked everything by sliding down a mountainside on a makeshift rope sledge. There was no question of rest—they travelled on by moonlight, moving upwards towards a gap in the next mountainous ridge. Early next morning, seeing Husvik Harbour below them, they knew that they were on the right path. At seven o'clock in the morning they heard the steam whistle sound from the whaling station, "the first sound created by an outside human agency that had come to our ears since we left Stromness Bay in December 1914". After a difficult descent, which involved passage down through a freezing waterfall, they at last reached safety.

Shackleton, not a religious man, wrote afterwards: "I have no doubt that Providence
Divine Providence

In theology, Divine Providence, or simply Providence, is the sovereignty, superintendence, or agency of God over events in people's lives and throughout history....
 guided us…I know that during that long and racking march of thirty-six hours over the unnamed mountains and glaciers it seemed to me often that we were four, not three". This image of a fourth traveller—echoed by Worsley and Crean—was taken up by T. S. Eliot
T. S. Eliot

'Thomas Stearns Eliot', Order of Merit , was a poet, dramatist, and literary critic. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1948. Among his most famous writings are the poems The Love Song of J....
 in his poem The Waste Land
The Waste Land

The Waste Land is a revolutionary, highly influential 434-line Modernist poetry in English by T. S. Eliot. Despite the alleged obscurity of the poem ? its shifts between satire and prophecy, its abrupt and unannounced changes of Narrator, Setting , its elegiac but intimidating summoning up of a vast and dissonant range of cultures and li...
.

Rescue
Shackleton's first task, on arriving at the Stromness station, was to arrange for his three companions at Peggoty Camp to be picked up. A whaler was sent round the coast, with Worsley aboard to show the way, and by the evening of 21 May all six of the James Caird party were safe.

It took four attempts before Shackleton was able to return to Elephant Island to rescue the party stranded there. He first left South Georgia a mere three days after he had arrived in Stromness
Stromness (South Georgia)

Stromness is a former whaling station on the northern coast of South Georgia Island in the South Atlantic. Its historical significance is that it represents the destination of Ernest Shackleton's epic rescue journey in 1916....
, after securing the use of a large whaler, The Southern Sky, which was laid up in Husvik Harbour. Shackleton assembled a volunteer crew, which had it ready to sail by the morning of 22 May. As the vessel drew close to Elephant Island they saw that an impenetrable barrier of pack ice had formed, some from the island. The Southern Sky was not built for ice breaking, and retreated to Port Stanley in the Falkland Islands
Falkland Islands

The Falkland Islands are an archipelago in the South Atlantic Ocean, located from the coast of Argentina, west of the Shag Rocks , and north of the British Antarctic Territory ....
.

On reaching Port Stanley, Shackleton informed London
London

London is the capital of both England and the United Kingdom, and the most populous municipality in the European Union. An important settlement for two millennia, History of London goes back to its founding by the Roman Empire....
 by cable of his whereabouts, and requested that a suitable vessel be sent south for the rescue operation. He was informed by the Admiralty
Admiralty

The Admiralty was formerly the authority in the United Kingdom responsible for the command of the Royal Navy. Originally exercised by a single person, the office of Lord High Admiral was from the 18th century onward almost invariably put "in commission", and was exercised by a Board of Admiralty....
 that nothing was available before October, which in his view was too late. Then, with the help of the British Minister in Montevideo
Montevideo

Montevideo is the largest city, the capital and chief port of Uruguay. Montevideo is the only city in the country with a population over 1,000,000....
, Shackleton secured from the Uruguay
Uruguay

Uruguay is a country located in the southeastern part of South America. It is home to 3.46 million people, of whom 1.7 million live in the capital Montevideo and its metropolitan area....
an government the loan of a tough trawler, Instituto de Pesca No. 1, which started south on 10 June. Again the pack thwarted them. In search of another ship, Shackleton, Worsley and Crean travelled to Punta Arenas, in Chile
Chile

Chile, officially the Republic of Chile , is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow coastal strip wedged between the Andes mountains and the Pacific Ocean....
, where they encountered Allan MacDonald, the British owner of the schooner Emma. McDonald equipped this vessel for a further rescue attempt, which left on 12 July, but with the same negative result—the pack defeated them yet again.

It was now mid-August. Shackleton begged the Chilean Government to lend him Yelcho, a small, tough steamer that had assisted Emma during the previous attempt. The Government agreed, and on 25 August Yelcho, captained by Luis Pardo
Luis Pardo

Luis Pardo Villal?n was the captain of the Chilean steam tug Yelcho which rescued the 22 stranded crewmen of Sir Ernest Shackleton's ship Endurance from Elephant Island, Antarctica, in August 1916....
, set out for Elephant Island. This time, as Shackleton records, Providence favoured them. The seas were open, and the ship was able to approach close to the island, in thick fog. At 11:40 am on 30 August the fog lifted, the camp was spotted and, within an hour, all the Elephant Island party were safely aboard, bound for Punta Arenas.

On Elephant Island

After Shackleton left with the James Caird, Frank Wild took command of the Elephant Island party, some of whom were in a low state, physically or mentally. The first need for the party was a permanent shelter against the rapidly approaching southern winter. On the suggestion of Marston and Lionel Greenstreet, a hut (nicknamed the "Snuggery") was improvised by upturning the two boats and placing them on low stone walls, to provide around five feet of headroom. By means of canvas and other materials the structure was made more or less weatherproof. It was a crude shelter, but effective.

No one knew how long they would have to wait for rescue. Wild, over-optimistically, initially estimated one month, and refused to allow long-term stockpiling of seal and penguin meat because this, in his view, was defeatist. This policy led to sharp disagreements with Thomas Orde-Lees
Thomas Orde-Lees

Thomas Orde-Lees was a member of Sir Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1914–1917 and a pioneer in the field of parachuting....
. Orde-Lees was not a popular man, and his presence apparently did little to improve the morale of his companions, unless it was by way of being the butt of their jokes.

Wild did what he could to establish and maintain routines and activities that would relieve the tedium, as the weeks spread out well beyond his initial optimistic forecast. A lookout was kept for the supposedly imminent arrival of the rescue ship, cooking and housekeeping rotas were established, and there were hunting trips for seal and penguin. Concerts were held on Saturdays, and anniversaries celebrated, but nothing could altogether stem the growing feelings of despondency as months passed with no sign of the ship. The toes on Blackborow's left foot became gangrenous from frostbite, and, on 15 June, had to be amputated by the surgeons Macklin and James McIlroy in the candle-lit hut. Using the very last of the chloroform that had survived in the medical supplies, the whole procedure took 55 minutes, and was a total success. By 23 August, it appeared that Wild’s no-stockpiling policy was in ruins. The surrounding sea was dense with pack ice that would halt any rescue ship, food supplies were running out and no penguins were coming ashore. Orde-Lees wrote: "We shall have to eat the one who dies first […] there’s many a true word said in jest". Wild’s thoughts were turning seriously to the possibility of a boat trip to Deception Island (he planned to set out on 5 October in the hoping of crossing with a whaling ship) when, on 30 August 1916, the ordeal ended suddenly with the appearance of the relief ship.

Ross Sea Party

Aurora left Hobart
Hobart

Hobart is the List of Australian capital cities and most populous city of the Australian island state of Tasmania. Founded in 1803 as a penal colony, Hobart is Australia's second oldest capital city after Sydney....
 on 24 December 1914, having been delayed in Australia by financial and organizational problems. Her arrival in McMurdo Sound on 15 January 1915 was later in the season than planned, but the party’s commander Aeneas Mackintosh made immediate plans for a depot-laying journey on the Ross Ice Shelf, believing that Shackleton might attempt a crossing from the Weddell Sea during that first season. Neither the men nor the dogs were acclimatized, and the party was, as a whole, very inexperienced in ice conditions. This first, hurried journey on the ice resulted in the loss of ten of the party’s 18 dogs, a single incomplete depot, and a frost-bitten and generally demoralized shore party.

Worse was to follow in May, when Aurora, anchored at the Cape Evans
Cape Evans

Cape Evans is a rocky cape on the west side of Ross Island, forming the north side of the entrance to Erebus Bay. It was discovered by the Discovery expedition under Robert Falcon Scott, who named it the Skuary....
 headquarters, was blown out to sea during a gale, and was not able to return, being trapped in a floe. She drifted in the ice until 12 February 1916, a distance of around before releasing herself and limping to New Zealand. She carried with her the greater part of the shore party’s fuel, food rations, clothing and equipment, although fortunately the sledging rations for the depots had been landed ashore. However, in order to continue with its mission, the stranded shore party had to re-supply and re-equip itself from the leftovers from earlier expeditions, notably Captain Scott’s Terra Nova Expedition
Terra Nova Expedition

The Terra Nova Expedition , officially the British Antarctic Expedition 1910, was led by Robert Falcon Scott who had previously commanded the Discovery Expedition to the Antarctic in 1901–04....
. Due to the party's ingenious improvisations the second season’s depot-laying began on schedule, in September 1915.

During the following months, by a supreme effort, the required depots were laid, at whole degree intervals right across the Ross Ice Shelf to the Beardmore Glacier. On the return journey the entire depot-laying party was attacked by scurvy. During the struggle to return to base Arnold Spencer-Smith
Arnold Spencer-Smith

Arnold Patrick Spencer-Smith was a British clergyman and amateur photographer who joined Sir Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition, 1914–17, as Chaplain and photographer on the Ross Sea party....
, the expedition’s chaplain and photographer, collapsed and died on the ice. The remainder reached the temporary shelter of Hut Point and recovered there. On 8 May 1916 Mackintosh and Hayward decided to walk across the unstable sea ice to Cape Evans
Cape Evans

Cape Evans is a rocky cape on the west side of Ross Island, forming the north side of the entrance to Erebus Bay. It was discovered by the Discovery expedition under Robert Falcon Scott, who named it the Skuary....
, were caught in a blizzard, and were not seen again. The seven survivors then endured eight more months of hardship until on 10 January 1917 the Aurora, which had been refitted in New Zealand, arrived to transport them back to civilization.

Shackleton accompanied the Aurora as a supernumerary officer, having been denied command by the governments of New Zealand, Australia and Great Britain, who had jointly organized the relief. He thus participated in the rescues of both parts of his expedition, but his wayward attitude to the original organizational arrangements for the Ross Sea party was held against him. Despite its chaotic beginnings, its muddles, the disastrous loss of Aurora, and the three deaths, the Ross Sea party was the only part of the entire expedition that fulfilled its original mission, even though the failures of the Weddell Sea party meant that it did so in vain.

Return to civilization

The rescued party, having had its last contact with civilization in 1914, was unaware of the course of the World War
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
. News of Shackleton's safe arrival in the Falklands briefly eclipsed war news in the British newspapers on 2 June 1916. The expedition returned home in piecemeal fashion, at a critical stage in the war, without the normal honours and civic receptions. When Shackleton himself finally arrived in England on 29 May 1917, after a short American lecture tour, his return was barely noticed.

Most of the members of the expedition returned to take up immediate active military or naval service. Before the war ended two—Tim McCarthy of the open boat journey and the veteran Antarctic sailor Alfred Cheetham—had been killed in action, and Ernest Wild
Ernest Wild

Henry Ernest Wild , known as Ernest Wild, was a British Royal Navy seaman and Antarctic explorer, a younger brother of Frank Wild. Unlike his more renowned brother, who went south on five occasions, Ernest Wild made only a single trip to the Antarctic, as a member of the Ross Sea party in support of Sir Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Tr...
 of the Ross Sea party had died of typhoid while serving in the Mediterranean. Several others were severely wounded, and many received decorations for gallantry. Following a propaganda mission in Buenos Aires, Shackleton was employed during the last weeks of the war on special service in Murmansk
Murmansk

Murmansk is a types of inhabited localities in Russia and seaport in the extreme northwest part of Russia, on the Kola Bay, 12 km from the Barents Sea on the northern shore of the Kola Peninsula, not far from Russia's borders with Norway and Finland....
, with the Army rank of Major
Major

In many European languages, the term Major refers to a military rank, denoting seniority at one of usually various levels of rank, for example: "Sergeant-Major" denoting the most senior ranking sergeant of a large military unit; "Captain-Major", denoting a mid-level command status Officer ...
. This occupied him until March 1919. He thereafter organized one final Antarctic expedition, the Shackleton–Rowett Expedition on Quest, which left London on 17 September 1921. Shackleton died of a heart attack on 5 January 1922, while Quest was anchored at South Georgia.

Wild, Worsley, Macklin, McIlroy, Hussey, Alexander Kerr, Thomas McLeod and cook Charles Green, from Endurance, all sailed with Quest. After Shackleton’s death the original programme, which had included an exploration of Enderby Land, was abandoned. Wild led a brief cruise which brought them into sight of Elephant Island. They anchored off Cape Wild, and were able to see the old landmarks, but sea conditions made it impossible for them to land.

It would be more than 40 years before the first crossing of Antarctica was achieved, by the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition
Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition

The 1955–58 Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition was a Commonwealth of Nations-sponsored expedition that successfully completed the first overland crossing of Antarctica, via the South Pole....
, 1955–58. This expedition set out from Vahsel Bay, following a route which avoided the Beardmore Glacier altogether, and bypassed much of the Ross Ice Shelf, reaching McMurdo Sound via a descent of the Skelton Glacier
Skelton Glacier

The Skelton Glacier is a large glacier flowing from the polar plateau into the Ross Ice Shelf at Skelton Inlet in Antarctica. Named after the Skelton Inlet by the New Zealand party of the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition, 1956-58....
. The entire journey took 98 days.

See also

  • List of Antarctic expeditions
  • Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration
    Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration

    The Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration describes an era which extended from the end of the 19th century to the early 1920s. During this 25-year period the Antarctic continent became the focus of an international effort which resulted in intensive scientific and geographical exploration, sixteen major expeditions being launched from eight d...


Sources

  • Alexander, Caroline: The Endurance: Shackleton's Legendary Antarctic Expedition Bloomsbury, 1998 ISBN 0 7475 4123 X
  • Fisher, M & J: Shackleton James Barrie Books, 1957
  • Fuchs, Sir V
    Vivian Fuchs

    Sir Vivian Ernest Fuchs Royal Society was an England List of explorers whose expeditionary team completed the first overland crossing of Antarctica in 1958....
     & Hillary, Sir E
    Edmund Hillary

    Sir Edmund Percival Hillary Order of the Garter, Order of New Zealand, Order of the British Empire was a New Zealand mountaineering and explorer....
    : The Crossing of Antarctica Cassell, 1958
  • Huntford, Roland
    Roland Huntford

    Roland Huntford is an author, principally of biographies of Polar explorers.He has written biographies of Captain Scott, Ernest Shackleton and Nobel Peace Prize winner Fridtjof Nansen....
    : Shackleton Hodder & Stoughton, 1985 ISBN 0 340 25007 0
  • Mills, Lief: Frank Wild Caedmon of Whitby, 1999 ISBN 0 905355 48 2
  • Murphy, David Thomas: German Exploration of the Polar World: a History, 1870-1940 University of Nebraska Press, 2002 ISBN 0 8032 3205 5
  • "" Southpole.com retrieved on 5 April 2008
  • Shackleton, Sir Ernest
    Ernest Shackleton

    Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton Royal Victorian Order Order of British Empire, was an Anglo-Irish explorer who was one of the principal figures of the period known as the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration....
    : South Century Travellers edition, Century Publishing, 1983 ISBN 0 7126 0111 2
  • Tyler-Lewis, Kelly: The Lost Men Bloomsbury paperback, 2007 ISBN 978 0 7475 7972 4
  • "" Southpole.com retrieved on 5 April 2008
  • Worsley, Frank A.
    Frank Worsley

    Frank Arthur Worsley Distinguished Service Order and Bar, Order of the British Empire, Decoration for Officers of the Royal Naval Reserve was a New Zealand sailor and explorer....
    : Endurance: An Epic of Polar Adventure W.W. Norton & Company, 1999 ISBN 0 393 31994 6


Further reading

  • Lansing, Alfred
    Alfred Lansing

    Alfred Lansing was an United States journalist and writer, best known for his book Endurance , an account of Ernest Shackleton's Antarctic explorations....
    : Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage
    Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage

    Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage is a bestselling book written by Alfred Lansing, and was first published in 1959.The book recounts the failure of the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition led by Sir Ernest Shackleton in its attempt to cross the Antarctic continent in 1914 and the subsequent struggle for survival endured by the t...
     Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London 2001 ISBN 0 297 82919 X
  • McKernan, Victoria: Shackleton's Stowaway Laurel Leaf, London 2006 ISBN 0-440-41984-0
  • Tamiko, Rex (ed.): South with Endurance: Shackleton's Antarctic Expedition 1914-17 (photographs of Frank Hurley
    Frank Hurley

    James Francis "Frank" Hurley, Order of the British Empire was an Australian photographer, film maker and adventurer. He participated in a number of expeditions to Antarctica and served as an official photographer with Australian forces during both world wars....
    ) BCL Press, New York 2001 ISBN 1 9323 2042
  • Worsley, Frank A.
    Frank Worsley

    Frank Arthur Worsley Distinguished Service Order and Bar, Order of the British Empire, Decoration for Officers of the Royal Naval Reserve was a New Zealand sailor and explorer....
    : Shackleton's Boat Journey W.W. Norton & Company, London 1998 ISBN 0 7126 6574 9


Films

  • The Endurance: Shackleton's Legendary Antarctic Expedition. (2000).
  • Shackelton's Antarctic Adventure. NOVA
  • Great Adventurers: Ernest Shackleton - To The End Of The Earth. (2006).
  • Shackleton. (2001).


External links

      • – Audiobook from LibriVox
        LibriVox

        LibriVox is an online digital library of free public domain audiobooks, read by volunteers. In January 2009, it had a catalog of 2,014 unabridged books and shorter works available to download....
  • , including sizable entries on some of the least well-known, at Coolantarctica.com.