Adrien Victor Joseph de Gerlache de Gomery had long dreamed of a seafaring career when he quit his engineering studies at Université libre de Bruxelles in 1885 to join the navy. After graduating from naval college in Ostende, he took various positions in the military and merchant navies and gained his master’s ticket in 1894. In the same year, he presented plans for an expedition to Antarctica to the Belgian Royal Geographical Society. In 1896, he bought the whaling ship Patria in Norway, refitted it, and renamed it Belgica📜.
Photo: Follo museum, MiA.
So, in 1896, it was de Gerlache, as leader of the Belgian Antarctic Expedition, who offered a 24-year-old Roald Amundsen his first taste of Antarctica as first officer on the Belgica. The expedition left Antwerp in August 1897 and returned in November 1899, having become the first to overwinter with a ship in Antarctica. After the expedition, Norwegian newspapers printed de Gerlache’s description of some times that were both literally and metaphorically dark:
“Gradually we fell into a kind of melancholic lethargy. We became anaemic and pale, and after the most insignificant effort we were seized by a deadly fatigue. The pulse became very strong. After a half-hour walk, the doctor observed 140 beats per minute. Several of us had bouts of dizziness. Reading and other mental work were completely impossible for us, so that our library did not give us the diversion from the polar night that we had expected. For a long time we also suffered from an insomnia that almost robbed us of our sanity. It was the effects of the perpetual night, the eternal darkness, that rested motionless over heaven and earth.” 📜
In fact, as the expedition’s doctor Frederick Cook came to realise, it was also the effects of the lack of fresh food — the expedition members were suffering from scurvy. Cook addressed this by introducing fresh seal and penguin meat, and it was Amundsen who led the hunting trips as their mood and physical condition improved. The relationship between Amundsen and de Gerlache deteriorated over the course of the expedition, and during a meeting in November 1898, Amundsen was told that it had been agreed in advance that no matter what happened, the expedition would remain under Belgian command. To Amundsen, this showed that his position as first officer meant little. His response was to declare himself “relieved of his position on the expedition”. “There is no longer any Belgian Antarctic Expedition for me,” wrote Amundsen in his diary 📜. In My life as an explorer, his 1927 autobiography, he refers to de Gerlache as simply a Belgian sailor.
De Gerlache’s own account of the expedition, Voyage of the Belgica: Fifteen months in the Antarctic, was published in 1902. De Gerlache led a zoological voyage to the Persian Gulf in 1901, and in 1903, his Antarctic experience led to his engagement as a pilot on Jean-Baptiste Charcot’s first Antarctic expedition in the Pourquoi-pas?. But there would be no return to Antarctica for de Gerlache, who left the expedition in Brazil for personal reasons.
De Gerlache also sailed several more times on Belgica as a hired captain for Phillipe duc D’Orléans’s voyages: to Greenland in 1905, to the Barents and Kara Seas in 1907, and to Greenland, Svalbard and Franz Josef Land in 1909.
Even though there would be no lasting friendship with Amundsen, de Gerlache was a popular person in Norway, learning Norwegian and visiting the country several times. During the First World War he travelled to both Norway and Sweden to raise awareness of the critical conditions in his Belgian homeland. In 1915, Norwegian and Swedish editions were published of his book, The country that does not want to die: Belgium and the Belgians during the war: a statement based on official documents and reliable testimonies. His efforts to improve conditions in Belgium made the front pages of the Norwegian press. 📜
In 1924, King Albert of Belgium granted him a barony, and in 1925 the French Société de géographie’s awarded him their Grande médaille d’or des explorations. In May 1934, he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Order of St. Olav by Norway’s King Haakon VII.
De Gerlache died in December of 1934 after several months of illness.
Sancton, Julian: Madhouse at the end of the earth (2021) Nasjonale Sjøfartsmuseet, Antwerpen: Belgica – den første overvintringen i Antarktis 1897-1899 📜
One of the Netsilik Inuit Amundsen met during the expedition through the Northwest Passage, 1903-06. A tinted photograph of him hangs in Amundsen’s home.
The girls Nita and Camilla Carpendale went to Norway and Svartskog together with Amundsen in 1922 where they lived until 1924. The girls called Amundsen “Grandpa”.
Betty was one of the key women in Amundsen’s life. She was the nanny when he grew up, and when Amundsen moved to Svartskog, she joined him and moved into the gatehouse, which became “Betty’s house”.
Eivind Astrup became one of the world’s most experienced polar explorers of his time and a great role model for Roald Amundsen. He chose to end his life when only 24 years old.
Roald Amundsen had strong feelings for Kristine Elisabeth “Kiss” Bennett. She visited Uranienborg several times, but even though Amundsen transferred ownership of it to her, she never moved in.
The girls Nita and Camilla Carpendale went to Norway and Svartskog with Amundsen in 1922 and lived there until 1924. The girls called Amundsen “Grandpa”.
Sigrid Flood Castberg, often called “Sigg”, was one of the women Amundsen had a relationship with. But when Amundsen proposed, she was already married and wanted to wait, and when she was ready he wanted…
Håkon Hammer met Roald Amundsen in Seattle in 1921. He quickly became a collaborator and supporter, but was later named by Amundsen as one of the reasons for his personal bankruptcy.
Participated in the Maud expedition, but left the expedition in 1919, together with Peter Tessem. Both perished. What really happened to them is still unknown.
The Alaska Inupiaq called Elizabeth Magids “Queen of the Arctic”, Amundsen’s crew referred to her as “the mysterious lady”. Amundsen called her “Bess”. She went to live with Amundsen in Norway in 1928….
Participated as a research assistant on the Maud expedition, and as a meteorologist on the Norge expedition. Died on Umberto Nobile’s airship expedition in 1928.
One of the Netsilik Inuit Amundsen met during the expedition through the Northwest Passage 1903-06. A coloured picture of him decorates a window in Amundsen’s home.
Nobile was the airship engineer whom Amundsen criticized after the expedition in 1926. During the search for his wrecked expedition in 1928, Roald Amundsen disappeared.
Joined the Maud expedition after visiting the ship in Khabarovsk. Also participated in the Norge expedition, but was left out from the actual voyage across the Arctic Ocean.
One of the Netsilik Inuit Amundsen met during the expedition through the Northwest Passage 1903-06. A coloured picture of her hangs in Amundsen’s home.
One of the Netsilik Inuit Amundsen met during the expedition through the Northwest Passage 1903-06. A coloured picture of him decorates a door in Amundsen’s home.