Born: 1868, Plymouth, Devon, England Died: 1912, Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica
Robert Falcon Scott, known to many as “Captain Scott”, led two expeditions to Antarctica (1901-04, 1910-12). He is best known for his expedition to the South Pole, which he reached in January 1912, just over a month after Roald Amundsen. On the way home, both he and the rest of the British polar party died.
Robert Falcon Scott with sledge equipment. Photo: Herbert Ponting, Wikimedia Commons.
In March 1910, Scott was in Norway to test and procure equipment. At Fefor, in Gudbrandsdalen, he tried out vehicles for use on snow. In Kristiania (Oslo), he arranged to buy skis, sledges and other equipment. He also wanted to meet Roald Amundsen, but when he went out to Uranienborg in good faith that he had arranged a meeting, Amundsen was not there. Where Roald Amundsen was that day and whether he deliberately avoided Scott are still unclear.
Scott and four other Britons reached the South Pole on 17 January 1912, where they were greeted by the tent the Norwegians had left behind. Scott’s diary famously reads, “Great God! This is an awful place and terrible enough for us to have laboured to it without the reward of priority.”
At the South Pole. Standing from left: Edward Wilson, Robert Falcon Scott and Henry Bowers. Seated in front: Edgar Evans and Lawrence “Titus” Oates. Photo: National Library of Norway.
The return from the pole was a race against time, with death in the end inevitable. On 17 February, Edgar Evans collapsed and died. Scott’s diary records the next death on 16 March 1912, when Titus Oates left the tent and did not return.
“A Very Gallant Gentleman” (1913), painted by John Charles Dollman, depicts Oates leaving the tent. A print of the painting still hangs in Amundsen’s home. Photo: Follo Museum, MiA.
The three who remained – Scott, Bowers and Wilson – continued their journey with the goal of reaching the large depot they had established near 80° S the year before. On 21 March, they pitched their tent for the last time. They were about 18 km from One Ton Depot but would get no closer.
On 29 March 1912, Scott wrote in his diary for the last time. He also wrote several letters, including one to his wife Kathleen, entitled “To my widow”.
Eight months later, the frozen remains of Scott, Bowers and Wilson were found by the rest of the expedition members who had been waiting at Cape Evans for winter to pass. Once their diaries, last letters and other personal belongings were removed, the tent was lowered over them and a cairn of snow erected on top.
Scott’s diary is held today at the British Museum. 📜
Photographs, diaries and other objects from Scott’s expeditions are on display at the Scott Polar Research Institute in Cambridge, England.
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.