Sverre Hassel went to sea aged around 15, serving first on the training ship Christiania before earning a mate’s and then a master’s certificate. In 1895, he entered the Sjømilitære korps (Navy Corps). Based in Horten, the SMK was a technical school for experienced merchant seafarers, with students holding the non-officer rank of constable. From 1898-1902, Hassel took part in the second Fram expedition, led by Otto Sverdrup to north-west Greenland and Canada’s Arctic islands. Here he gained valuable experience in mapping and dog sledging in polar regions. After returning home in 1902, he returned to the SMK before moving in 1904 to the customs service in Kristiansand.
In the summer of 1909, Amundsen contacted Hassel in the hope of taking him on his planned expedition to drift across the Arctic Ocean with Fram. Hassel agreed to look after the dogs on the first part of the expedition, for which he was granted a year’s leave from work in the customs service. But by the time the expedition left Norway in June 1910, Amundsen’s immediate aim had already been switched to Antarctica and the South Pole. Only the captain and two mates were aware of the new plan, until Hassel became the fourth confidant as the Fram sailed for Madeira. Here, on September 9, the remainder of the crew agreed to continue with Amundsen. The rest of the world would only find out in early October.
The five men who reached the South Pole as the first on board Fram after arriving in Hobart, Tasmania in 1912. From left: Sverre Hassel, Oscar Wisting, Roald Amundsen, Olav Bjaaland and Helmer Hanssen. Photo: Norwegian Polar Institute / National Library of Norway.
Hassel played an important role as dog handler during the expedition and was one of four men Amundsen selected to join him on the actual journey to the South Pole. After Antarctica, Hassel declined Amundsen’s invitation to continue with him to the North Pole and returned instead to his old job as a customs officer in Kristiansand.
In 1913, he was a sought-after speaker, presenting lectures on the South Pole journey that often featured Storm, one of the surviving dogs from the expedition.
Source: Flekkefjordsposten 13.11.1913 / National Library of Norway 📜
In 1916, Hassel became involved in discussions about the future of the Fram, proposing to Fritdjof Nansen that the polar ship be turned into a museum and contributing several letters to the newspapers.
In February 1917, Hassel became chief customs inspector, cashier and customs office manager in Farsund. In 1922 he moved to a similar role in Grimstad. By 1928, however, he was struggling with ill health. The newspapers reported a four-week stay at Oslo’s Rikshospitalet (National Hospital) in connection with heart problems, but on June 6 he felt able to visit Roald Amundsen at Uranienborg. While walking in the garden outside the house at Svartskog, Hassel’s heart suddenly failed and he collapsed and died. When he was buried at Vestre Gravlund in Oslo on June 12, 1928, Roald Amundsen was one of several to lay a wreath in his memory.
Sverre Hassel was married to Helene Topper (b. 1889) and they had two sons and a daughter. Among several places that today bear his name is Antarctica’s Mount Hassel, named on the journey to the South Pole.
“Hassel dead, 5.15 p.m.”, wrote Roald Amundsen on his personal calendar for June 6, 1928. Photo: Follo museum / MiA.
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.