20th November, 2024 in Natural World, Society & Culture
Author Anne Strathie is a writer and researcher, whose three biographies of members of Robert Scott’s 1910-13 Terra Nova Antarctic expedition are published by The History Press. Her new book, A History of Polar Exploration in 50 Objects: From Cook’s Circumnavigations to the Aviat…
13th April, 2022 in History, Maritime, Natural World
The ‘Heroic Age’ of Polar Exploration extended from the late 19th century until World War I, a period of about 20 years. In the North Polar region, as in the South, the ultimate goal was the pole itself. However, because the North Pole was a hypothetical location in the mids…
14th January, 2022 in History, Natural World
By mid-January 1912, Dr Edward Wilson, Captain Robert Scott, Henry ‘Birdie’ Bowers, Lawrence ‘Titus’ Oates and Edgar ‘Taff’ Evans were approaching their destination. On 16 January, as they lunched, they discussed the possibility of reaching the South Pole the following day – but…
16th December, 2020 in Biography & Memoir, History, Natural World
By late December, Captain Robert Scott’s expedition ship, the Terra Nova, had been on the Southern Ocean for almost a month. After a sea-sickness-inducing passage through the Roaring Forties and a ferocious storm in the Furious Fifties, photographer Herbert Ponting and his compan…
15th March, 2017 in Biography & Memoir, History
‘I am just going outside and may be some time.’ Most people will know that these simple words, so famous and so often repeated over the past decades, were uttered by Captain Lawrence Oates who, according to legend, gallantly gave his life to help save his comrades in an Antarctic…
14th December, 2016 in Biography & Memoir, History
On 14 December 1911, the Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen (who had already led the first expedition to traverse the North West Passage, and would go on to lead the first successful attempt to cross the Arctic by air) and his team became the first human beings to reach the South…
1st November, 2016 in Military
On 5 May 1916 four Royal Naval Division officers met up at London’s Charing Cross station, from where they were waved off on the cross-Channel train by a small group which included the Prime Minister’s wife, Margot Asquith. The four men, who had met in 1915, had shared difficult…
23rd May, 2016 in Maritime, Military
The Battle of Jutland was fought between the Royal Navy’s Grand Fleet and the Imperial German Navy’s High Seas Fleet, from 31 May to 1 June 1916, in the North Sea near Denmark’s Jutland Peninsula. Over 36 hours, one brutal day and night in 1916, around 100,000 British and German…
17th May, 2016 in Maritime, Military
On 31 May 2016 commemorations in Orkney marked the centenary of the Battle of Jutland, in which over 8,000 men died; the installation of Poppies: Weeping Window (part of the Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red installation at the Tower of London in 2014) had already taken plac…
16th December, 2015 in Biography & Memoir, History, Natural World
In early January 1912 Henry ‘Birdie’ Bowers – to his delighted surprise – was chosen by Captain Robert Scott as a member of the five-man party which would attempt to reach the South Pole. Birdie (born in Greenock, near Glasgow, in 1883) wrote home that he was proud to represent S…
15th December, 2015 in History, Maritime
On 18 April 2015 two apparently unrelated stands of history came together in an auction in Wiltshire. Amongst the lots in an auction of items related to Titanic is a lot consisting of fifty-two negatives taken by Henry ‘Birdie’ Bowers during the last months of Captain Scott’…