Dobrowolski grew up in Russian-ruled Poland in turbulent times. In 1891, he was sentenced by the tsarist authorities to three years in prison for promoting Polish independence and then exiled to the Caucasus. After two years in detention, he escaped, first to Switzerland, where he met Henryk Arctowski while studying in Zurich, and then to Belgium, where he began studying biology, physics and chemistry at the University of Liège. During his time in Belgium and in the official Belgica expedition reports, he would go by the French form of his first name, “Antoine”.
When Dobrowolski joined the Belgica expedition in Ostend, it was not as a scientific assistant, as Arctowski had earlier recommended to de Gerlache, but as an ordinary deckhand. Just five days before the expedition’s final departure, Dobrowolski is said to have turned up with nothing more than a change of clothes, a few bed sheets and a bursting energy 📜.
But Dobrowolski would become a formal member of the scientific team, and with Henryk Arctowski carry out a mass of detailed scientific observations that included ocean and air temperatures, air pressure, snowfall, wind, and the aurora australis. Spanning as they did an entire year, these meteorological and oceanographical observation series were the first of their kind from south of the Antarctic Circle.
When Émile Danco died on June 5, 1898, it hit the expedition members hard. Having inherited Danco’s expensive winter coat, Dobrowolski wrote in his diary, “Goodbye, goodbye, Lieutenant Danco! You are not the first and you are not the last. Perhaps we will ‘meet’ again! Perhaps even this winter.”
As winter descended, Dobrowolski was one of several on board to be sceptical about changing his diet, and was also one of several who became ill.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
After the Belgica expedition, Dobrowolski dedicated his life to the twin callings of science and education. He began by contributing to the reporting of the research from the Belgica, particularly that dealing with meteorology, and continued his studies with the help of a scholarship at the Royal Belgian Observatory, where Georges Lecointe was now scientific director. He stayed in Belgium until an amnesty in 1907 allowed him to return to his native Poland, where he became a schoolteacher.
Dobrowolski and Roald Amundsen stayed in touch for several years. The letters Amundsen received are kept in the National Library of Norway, and at Uranienborg is a copy of a book written by Dobrowolski in 1914: Wyclawy polarne (Polar expeditions). On the title page is written, “A monsieur Roald Amundsen, hommage affectueux de l’auteur” (“To Roald Amundsen, affectionate homage from the author”).
Photo: Follo museum, MiA.
Photo: Follo museum, MiA.
While living in Sweden during the First World War, he returned to his scientific specialism of snow and ice. His important work, Historja naturalna Lodu (Natural history of ice) was published a few years after the war’s end.
In December 1928, on Dobrowolski’s inititative, the University of Warsaw organised a memorial for Roald Amundsen and the others lost on Latham 47.02. Dobrowolski addressed the event with a lecture entitled “A little about the Vikings Amundsen and Nansen” 📜. At the time, he was both professor of education at the Free Polish University and director of the State Meteorological Institute. From 1946 until 1954, when he died aged eighty-one, he was a professor of education at the University of Warsaw. He was also president of the Polish Geophysical Society for several years and a member of the Polish Academy of Sciences.
Poland’s first Antarctic research station was named in Dobrowolski’s honour, as were Dobrowolski Island in Antarctica and Dobrowolskibreen in Svalbard.
Kilder:
Belgica genootschap: Antoine Dobrowolski Julian Sancton: Madhouse at the end of the earth (2021)
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.