By Caroline Alexander ( is the author of The Endurance and
most recently The War That killed Archilles.), executive summary by darmansjah
September 12 –
Tuesday. Not much visibility. Nasty breeze from S. -52ᵒC.
The dogs clearly affected by the cold. The men, stiff in their frozen clothes,
more or less satisfied after a night in the frost… prospect of milder weather
doubtful.”
The writer of this terse diary entry was Roald Amundsen, a
Norwegian explorer who had won renown five years earlier for being the first to
sail the Arctic’s fabled Northwest Passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
Now he was at the opposite end of the world, in the Antartic, aiming for the most prestigious prize the world of
exploration still offered: the South Pole. Planned with characteristic
meticulousness, this bold venture was also the result of happenstance. Two
years earlier Amundsen had been immersed in plans to extend his exploration of
the Artic Ocean and to drift over the North Pole, when he received news (later
contested) that Robert Peary had already claimed the Pole. At that instant,
Amundsen recalled later, “ I decided on my change of front – to turn to the
right-about, and face to the south.” As Amundsen reckoned, if he won the South
Pole, fame as well as financing of future exploration would be secure.
Ostensibly preparing for the north, he secretly planned for the South.
In a wolfskin anorak of Netsilik Eskimo design, Amundsen
strikes a heroic pose in the snows near his Norwegian home. Used in his memoir
and lecture, this was a favorite publicity photo. The well-advertised British
Antartic Expedition, under the command of Captain Robert Falcon Scott. Amundsen
was keenly conscious of his rival, as his September 12 diary entry shows.
Tormented by the prospect that Scott might beat him, Amundsen had jumped the
gun, starting before the arrival of polar springtime and manageable weather.
The result was the death of valuable dogs and frostbite on the feet of his men
that would require a month to heal. Racing back to his base, Framheim (named
after his ship, the famous polar-going Fram,
meaning ‘forward’), Amundsen abandoned two companions, who struggled into camp
a day after his return. “I don’t call it an expedition. It’s panic,’ Hjalmar
Johansen, the most experienced polar explorer of the team, told Amundsen.
Bitterly resented, Johansen’s damning words cost him a place on the eventual Pole-seeking
party.
These glaring erros are woth dwelling on not to find fault
with Amundsen but to dispel a myth that has long claimed him: His attainment of
the Pole was just a passionless application of expertise and cold ambition, and
Amundsen himself, therefore, was a colorless professional. This
characterization contrasts starkly with the perception of Scott, who, with his
gallant British party, showed grit and courage, fighting for every mile, and
who died tragically on the ice.
The false start of September 1911 is a reminder that there
is no such thing as an inevitable outcome in the risky enterprise of polar
exploration. Methodical and careful, Amundsen was also a man of towering
ambition, prey to the same dangerous dreams and impulse that drive all
explorers to risk their lives in wild places. Amundsen’s greateness is not that
he lacked such driving forces but that he mastered them – as his diary entries
go on to show. Four days after his premature start Amundsen assessed his
party’s situation dispassionately and made the decision to “hurry back to wait
for the spring. To risk men and animals by continuing stubbornly once we have
set off, is something I couldn’t consider. If we are to win the game, the
pieces must be moved properly; a false move and everything could be lost.” The
ability to regain and maintain perspective in the pursuit of something as heady
as a personal dream is a rare asset. Like other great explorers, Amundsen kne’w when to turn back.
A DAZZLING Resume
lay behind Roald Engerbregt Gravning Amundsen’s South Pole venture. Born in
1872 into a well-to-do ship owning, seafaring family, he sailed at the age of
25 as second officer on the Belgica,
as part of a scientific expedition to the Antarctic. When the Belgica became stuck in pack ice, her
crew achieved the unintended distinction of being the first humans to
overwinter in the Antarctic. Demoralized and suffering ill health, the company
was held together by the ship’s surgeon, Frederick Cook (later infamous for
unsubstantiated “first” at the North Pole and the summit of Mount McKinley),
and by Amundsen, whose diary show him to be wholly engaged in his surroundings.
“As for the tent, with regard to shape and size it is comfortable but it is too
susceptible to the wind,” he observed in February 1898. Over the years he would
make many resourceful improvements to polar equipment.
Since reading about it as a boy, Amundsen had been
fascinated by Englishman John Franklin’s disastrous search for the Northwest
Passage. Although Amundsen continued his sea career, he also began planning for
an Arctic venture. In 1903 he headed north in the ship Gjoa with a remarkably
small crew of only six men (Franklin had taken 129) to seek the Northwest
Passage and, possibly calculated to bestow scientific respectability, the
current position of the north magnetic pole. Over three winters Amundsen lived
and worked in the Arctic, eventually navigating a passage that threaded through
the islands, shoals, and ice of Canada’s Arctic archipelago to the Beaufort and
then the Bering Sea – a historic first. “The North-West Passage was done,”
Amundsen wrote in his diary on August 26, 1905. “My boyhood dream-at that
moment it was accomplished. A strange feeling welled up in my throat; I was
somewhat overstrained and worn-it was a weakness in me – but I felt tears in my
eyes.”
The Gjoa expedition gave Amundsen more than his first
geographic prize. Through it he became closely acquainted with the Netsilik
Eskimos and their superb adaptation to the rigors of the Arctic world. Amundsen
was north the first European explorer to learn from indigenous people. The
great polar explorer Fridtjof Nansen and others had learned how to dress and
travel and eat from Norway’s northern Sami people. Now Amudsen supplemented
that wisdom with survival tools he had studied and experienced firsthand:
looser reindeer skin clothing that provided warmth and ventilation, fur boots,
dogsleds, snowshoes, ice caves, igloos.
“We are used to saying, Well, the Norwegians grow up on
skis,” polar historian herald Jolle says, ‘but we forget the other skills.”
When Roald Amundsen set up his base camp in Antarctica’s Bay of Whales in
January 1911, he was 38 years old and a seasoned polar veteran. He was in
wholly unknown territory, but he was also in familiar landscape of snow and
ice.
Amundsen and his men used the months preceding the polar
journey to lay down depots of supplies and to subject every article of food,
clothing, and equipment to ruthless scrutiny and refinement to ruthless
scrutiny and refinement. Every detail was considered with focused seriousness
grounded in Amundsen’s profound respect for the environment he now confronted.
THE MORE THAN 800-MILE JOURNEY began at last on October 20,
with Amundsen and his four companions on skis behind four loaded sledges, each
weighing 880 pounds and pulled by 13 dogs. Ahead, across unknown terrain, lay
an arduous slog over (and occasionally into) crevasses, around the abysses and
ice of the Queen Maud range, and onto the Polar Plateau, through perilously
unpredictable weather. Yet without any major mishap, the Norwegians reached
their goal on schedule. “And so at last we reached our destination,” Amundsen
wrote in his diary on December 14, 1911, “and planted our flag on the
geographical South Pole, King Haakon VII’s Plateau. Thank God!”
Before leaving Polheim, as the men had dubbed their polar
camp, Amundsen left a letter for Norway’s King Haakon VII on special note-paper
he had brought,” and a few words to Scott, who I presume will be the first to
come here after us.” The Letter ensured a report of his success in the event of
some disaster and was an elegant way of telling Scott, I won. Scott’s honorable
safeguarding of this letter would be the proof of Amundsen’s success.
On the return leg the men abandoned surplus stores (some of
which would be gratefully collected by Scott’s party). As throughout the
journey, dogs were shot and, along with dogs that had died, consumed as food by
both surviving dogs and the men. Early on January 26, 1912, the polar victors
arrived back in Framheim. “Good morning, my dear Lindstrom,” Amundsen greeted
startled cook. “Have you any coffee for us?”
THE CONTRAST BETWEEN
what Apsley Cherry Garrad, the legendary chronicler of the British expedition,
called Amundsen’s “business-like’” operation and Scott’s “first-rate tragedy”
is painful to draw, but it highlights issues that still concern adventures and
explores today. Amundsen used dogs; Scott ponies and motor sledges. Amundsen
traveled by ski, a skill at which he and his men were brilliantly adept; Scott
never learned to ski proficiently, so he and his men trudged, pulling their own
sledges. Amundsen depoted three times the supplies Scott did; Scott starved and
suffered scurvy. Some of Scott’s fatal errors can be defended in terms of the
precedents of his own times – after all, his compatriot and rival, Ernest
Shackleton, had used ponies and almost reached the Pole. And some of Amundsen’s
tactics are troubling, such as his calculated slaughter of dogs that had been
affectionately named and treated as companions.
At root, though, the contrast between Amundsen and Scott is
not about details of management but broad outlooks-those of the professional
and of the amateur. “In Norway there is
very little tolerance for failure in expeditions,” one historian says. “You
go and you come back whole.” The British, in contrast, emphasized the struggle,
believing that character, not skill, would win out and that death was heroic-a
view that would be judged irresponsible today. “I am inspired by how Amundsen
prepared his expeditions,” Borge Ousland, a Norwegian explorer who made the
first solo crossing of the Antarctic, says. “He always tried to learn from
others. He identified the problem, then looked to solve the problem.”
Amundsen enjoyed celebrity until the end of his life, but
unlike his compatriot and mentor-the multifaceted, charismatic Nansen-he never
achieved the financial security he had hoped his books and lectures would
bring. In July 1918 he returned to the Arctic to undertake the scientific work
he had promised Nansen: following the ice drift in his ship Maud. In the 1920s, searching for new
prizes, Amundsen turned to aviation, making several unsuccessful attempts to
fly over the North Pole. In 1926 he commanded the airship Norge, flown by Italian pilot Umberto Nobile, for the first
successful crossing of the Arctic by air.
Daring as these later adventures were, Amundsen participated
more as passenger than leader, surrendering control to others. Financially
strapped, he had become embittered, lashing out at old allies. Yet in May 1928,
when Nobile’s airship went missing over the Arctic, Amundsen hastened to join
the multinational rescue effort, pushing friends to finance a rescue plane. He
was poised to get married, and his determination to be involved suggests that,
as an essentially solitary man, he was running from this commitment. It’s clear
that he also missed the limelight his heroic feats had earlier won him. Like
the confused start of his South Pole success, Amundsen’s last quest belies the
workmanlike image imposed upon him , revealing instead a very human man.
In Tromso, above the Arctic Circle, he boarded his plane, a
Latham 47 fitted with floats, which had come from France. By then the pilots
had been flying for three days and sere operating on very little sleep. With
difficulty the lumbering, heavily laden plane struggled to become airborne. The
air was still, which often presaged banks of summer fog and dangerous
visibility to the north. Under modern scrutiny, the accumulation of errors is
foreboding.
The plane left Tromso
on June 18, and 4 pm. It was seen for the last time passing over Sommaroy,
where the mountainous land abuts the sea. It was summer, and the land was
green, but Amundsen was heading north, toward the ice.
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