4 Lost in The Antarctic The Do - Tod Olson
4 Lost in The Antarctic The Do - Tod Olson
4 Lost in The Antarctic The Do - Tod Olson
TITLE PAGE
DEDICATION
CAST OF CHARACTERS
PROLOGUE: WEDDELL SEA, ANTARTICA
CHAPTER 1: THE LAST GREAT JOURNEY
CHAPTER 2: SOUTHBOUND
CHAPTER 3: RAMMING
CHAPTER 4: FAST IN THE ICE
CHAPTER 5: WINTERING
CHAPTER 6: EVICTED
CHAPTER 7: “SHE´S GONE”
CHAPTER 8: A MISERABLE JOB
CHAPTER 9: LASH UP AND STOW!
CHAPTER 10: AN INFINITY OF ICE
CHAPTER 11: OUR ONLY HOPE
CHAPTER 12: ACROSS THE SEA
CHAPTER 13: OVER THE MOUNTAINS
CHAPTER 14: LAST STAND
EPILOGUE: COMING HOME
GLOSSARY
AUTHOR’S NOTE
SOURCES
END NOTES
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
ALSO AVAILABLE
COPYRIGHT
The ship didn’t stand a chance, and Frank Hurley knew it. He’d been in the
engine room with the carpenter, trying desperately to keep the water out. They
had walled off the leak, where the sternpost and rudder had been wrenched out
of place.
It was hard to imagine how it had happened. The sternpost was a giant pillar
of hardwood embedded in a 144-foot ship, and the ice had ripped it loose like an
angry kid abusing a toy boat. That was the power this frozen land had over them.
Caulking the wall was miserable, frigid work for Hurley and the carpenter.
Ice water soaked their boots. Cold air gnawed their fingers raw.
They were patching seams when Hurley heard the pressure hit again—a
fierce grinding sound just outside the hull. On the other side of those planks, the
ship stood trapped in a vast frozen sea. Slabs of ice the size of small buildings
held her in a vise, and now the grip was tightening. The sidewalls groaned and
creaked. The noise tore through the cramped compartment. Any minute, it
seemed, the boards would splinter, and the ship that had sheltered them for more
than a year would finally give up the fight.
The Endurance was being squeezed to death around them.
Hurley raced up on deck and took in the scene. The sled dogs, trapped in
their kennels, sent out a chorus of howls. The men moved quietly by contrast.
They disappeared into the hold and came out with crates rescued from the rising
water below. There was canned meat and powdered milk, flour and sugar, rice
and barley—all of it ready to be lowered to the ice at a moment’s notice.
Tents and sleeping bags had piled up in a corner of the deck—just a few
yards of flimsy canvas, reindeer hide, and wool. If the ship gave in, the crew
would have nothing else to shelter them from the worst weather on Earth. Today,
the sky was blindingly clear, but the temperature hadn’t made it above zero
degrees Fahrenheit.
Stretching to the horizon around Hurley and the men and the ship was the
new home that awaited them: 1 million square miles of ice—an entire sea, frozen
almost solid. Beyond it lay Antarctica, a continent bigger than the United States
and Mexico combined, also covered in ice and completely uninhabited.
As the expedition’s official photographer, Hurley had spent a year capturing
the strange, stark beauty of this world. Now, he and 27 other men were about to
be dropped into it with no guarantee they would ever get out.
One man stood mostly still, watching the commotion from the raised deck in the
stern. The crew referred to him as Sir Ernest in writing. In person they called
him “the Boss.” He had broad shoulders and a compact frame, blunt features and
a square jaw. He looked like he was built for this kind of venture—leaving every
known thing behind to risk his life in a frozen wilderness.
Ernest Shackleton had been to the Antarctic twice already. Twice he had
almost died there. Now, his third expedition hovered on the brink of disaster.
The expedition had left England more than a year ago, in August 1914. The
goal was to cross the Antarctic continent by dogsled—1,800 miles in a land
where temperatures can drop to −80 degrees at night. It was an ambitious idea.
Crazy was another word used to describe it.
Just getting to the Antarctic coast to start the overland journey was a near
impossible feat. Shackleton had decided to sail south from South America and
push deep into the Weddell Sea, headed for a landing point at Vahsel Bay. That
meant navigating a body of water roughly 1,000 miles across, most of it frozen
into sheets of ever-shifting ice that could crush the ship into splinters—“the
pack,” as it was called.
The Endurance had to make its way with a mix of finesse and brute force.
Sometimes she nosed her way through open waterways. Sometimes she made
her own openings by ramming the ice head-on until it split down the middle.
In January 1915, both strategies had failed. The pack froze around them, and
the ship had nowhere to go. It was now October, and the ice still held her
prisoner.
The Boss knew how close they had come to their goal. Vahsel Bay had been
a day’s sail away when the ice grabbed them for good. If only the current and the
wind had opened a clear lane 60 miles farther. Shackleton and five companions
would right now be trekking across Antarctica—an epic journey to the bottom of
the world.
Standing on the deck with the Endurance groaning under his feet,
Shackleton still had hope. If the ship held out long enough, the pack would break
up. They could sail into open water. They might even be able to resupply in
South America and make another run at Vahsel Bay before the sea froze solid
again.
But right now, some combination of current and wind was squeezing the
pack together, and the Endurance was caught in the middle. Where the pressure
built to a breaking point, the ice buckled into giant ridges. Slabs 5 feet thick and
20 feet tall sprouted into long, jagged tents. To Shackleton it seemed like a
mighty giant, buried under the ice, was writhing to break free. He’d been
watching all day while a ridge on the starboard side slowly rumbled closer to the
ship.
At around 6 p.m., the pressure began to close a crack that had opened behind
the Endurance. Two giant sheets of ice—known as floes—ground together. They
lifted the stern and jerked the entire ship forward in a series of shocks—one,
then another, then another. The force wedged her bow into a floe 5 feet thick,
squeezing her from end to end.
The deck under Shackleton’s feet twisted and bent. Gaps inches wide opened
between the planks. He could actually see the sidewalls bend under the strain
like an archer’s bow. If the front end of the Endurance didn’t slip above the floe
that held it fast, the ship wouldn’t last the night.
Shackleton gave the order to lower the lifeboats to the ice. The three 20-foot
boats could soon be the only seaworthy vessels they had.
Then, sometime after 8 p.m., the pressure suddenly gave up its hold on the
ship. The aching timbers settled back into place. The terrible creaks and groans
faded. There was only the steady clickety-clack of the pumps, laboring to stay
ahead of the leaks. The crew would have to man the pumps in shifts all through
the night. But maybe—just maybe—the worst of the damage had been done.
When Frank Hurley went below for the night, he took out his diary and
wrote, “All hope is not given up yet for saving the ship.”
But for many of the men, a strange memory lingered as they lay in their
bunks. In the evening, just as the pressure reached its height, eight emperor
penguins had hopped up from a crack in the ice. They waddled in their stiff,
strangely human way toward the ship. The birds lined up in formation as if to
give a formal address to the intruder in their land. For a few seconds, they
chattered the way they often did—a range of calls between a pigeon’s coo and a
crow’s shrill caw. Then they threw back their heads and let out an eerie, wailing
fugue.
The men had seen plenty of penguins during the last ten months, but they
had never heard a sound like this. To the ship’s captain, Frank Worsley, it
seemed the creatures were singing a funeral dirge for the Endurance.
Thomas McLeod, one of the older seamen, watched the ghostly concert from
the deck. He turned to the man next to him. “Do you hear that?” he said in his
Scottish brogue. “We’ll none of us get back to our homes again.”
Early in 1914, months before the Endurance took 28 men 9,000 miles from
home, a new sign went up at 4 New Burlington Street in London. It read:
IMPERIAL TRANS-ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION. The sign was 3 feet tall and hung at eye
level. It stood out in the fashionable neighborhood of jewelry stores and clothing
shops. To the wealthy men and women who lived nearby, it may have seemed
like a romantic call to adventure.
To Ernest Shackleton it was the business at hand. He didn’t like to be
confined to an office, but he needed to hire a crew and he had to interview them
all somewhere. He had announced the journey in the newspapers—an invitation
to spend the next couple of years in the coldest, least populated place on Earth.
Five thousand people responded.
Some of the applicants were lifetime sailors who couldn’t stand more than a
year at a time on dry land. Some were scientists, hoping for a chance to study the
strange conditions in a frozen land. Others were drawn by the promise of
adventure, of a ripping good tale to tell their kids and grandkids. Still others
simply wanted a seaman’s job that would pay them decent money for a couple of
years.
Shackleton worked closely with his longtime friend and second-in-
command, Frank Wild. Together they divided the applications into piles: “Mad,”
“Hopeless,” and “Possible.” It was the Possibles who filed through the office on
New Burlington Street in the spring of 1914. Rarely did the interviews last
longer than five minutes.
When Leonard Hussey walked in the door and sat down, Shackleton was too
restless to sit with him. Instead, he paced the floor and talked nonstop. As a
meteorologist, Hussey was applying for one of the more important jobs the
expedition had to offer. He would attempt to predict the brutal weather on the
journey. But his experience hadn’t exactly prepared him for blizzards and sub-
zero temperatures. He’d spent the last year working in the African desert.
Shackleton didn’t seem to care where Hussey had been or what his
qualifications were. He walked around for a few minutes, talking more than
listening. Finally, he decided he liked Hussey’s sense of humor. “Yes, I like
you,” he declared. “I’ll take you.”
Reginald James had an equally baffling experience. James applied to be the
expedition’s physicist, but Shackleton didn’t ask a thing about science. He
wanted to know instead if James could sing. Not opera, he said, “but I suppose
you can shout a bit with the boys?”
Shackleton also asked if James had good circulation. James told him that one
of his fingers tended to go numb in the cold. In response, Shackleton asked how
attached to that finger James was. Would he mind losing it to frostbite on the
way across Antarctica?
To the scientists, the interview process may have seemed like a joke. But
Antarctica had taken a lot more than fingers from the humans who dared to
travel there. And few people knew more about the dangers than Ernest
Shackleton.
When Shackleton was in his twenties, Antarctica was one of the last great
mysterious places on Earth. European soldiers and explorers had marched across
nearly every other part of the globe. But here was a continent bigger than
Europe, and barely anyone had set foot on its shores.
For thousands of years, people had only guessed at its existence. The ancient
Greeks knew there was land near the North Pole, and they decided there had to
be a continent in the south to balance out the globe. This legendary place became
known as Terra Australis, or South Land. In the 1500s, geographers put Terra
Australis on their maps, even though no one knew for sure it was there. Some
people even imagined a land full of rivers, parrots, and “good, honest” people.
The British explorer James Cook finally sailed below the Antarctic Circle in
1773 and put an end to the Great South Land fantasy. Dodging through a maze
of icebergs—which he called “ice islands”—he made it farther south than
anyone had ever gone.
No one would get farther, Cook predicted. In his opinion, there was no
reason to try. All he had seen was a “horrid” region of blizzards and soupy fog.
The entire place was “doomed by Nature never to feel the warmth of the sun’s
rays, but to lie for ever buried under everlasting snow and ice.”
Shackleton first ventured into the snow and ice in 1901. By that time, Antarctica
had been discovered and named. But no one had gotten near the South Pole.
A British navy officer named Robert Scott made the first serious attempt. In
August 1901, he left England on the ship Discovery with Shackleton as his third
officer. After wintering in Antarctica, Shackleton, Scott, and the scientist
Edward Wilson set off toward the Pole in November 1902 with 19 dogs and five
sleds packed with supplies. None of the men had much experience skiing or
handling dogs. Three months later they stumbled back to their ship, frostbitten
and snow-blind. Shackleton was spitting blood and nearly dead from the
nutritional disease scurvy.
But he couldn’t wait to try again.
In 1908 he went back, as leader of an expedition. This time he almost
reached the Pole. He set out from the coast with three men, including his friend
Frank Wild. They bumbled their way south with four ponies to pull supplies.
When the ponies sunk to their bellies in the snow and had to be put down, the
men harnessed themselves to the sleds and trudged on. After 10 weeks of misery,
they made it to within 100 miles of the Pole, farther south than anyone had gone
before. They nearly starved to death on the way back.
At one point, while packing sleds for another brutal day, Wild looked like he
wouldn’t last much longer. Shackleton handed over his biscuit ration for the day
and insisted Wild take it. “All the money that was ever minted would not have
bought that biscuit,” Wild wrote in his diary, “and the remembrance of that
sacrifice will never leave me.”
Shackleton came back to England a hero. He spent the next couple of years
touring Europe, giving lectures about his voyage. He dined with dukes and lords.
He met the tsar of Russia; the prime minister of Canada; and the American
president, William Howard Taft.
By 1912, he was sick of it all and scheming to get back to Antarctica. But
while Shackleton had been touring, the Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen
had made it to the Pole. And Robert Scott had frozen to death trying to beat
Amundsen there.
While the British were still mourning the loss of Scott, Shackleton
announced an even bigger, more audacious plan. “We have been beaten at the
conquest of the North Pole and beaten at the conquest of the South Pole,”
Shackleton wrote. “There now remains the most striking journey of all—the
crossing of the Continent.”
To do it he would take the Endurance through the Weddell Sea to Vahsel
Bay. From there he would lead a sledding party of six men 800 miles overland to
the South Pole. A second ship, the Aurora, would sail into the Ross Sea on the
other side of the continent. The Aurora would send a sledding party toward the
Pole to stash supplies along the second half of Shackleton’s journey. If all went
well, Shackleton and his team would reach the Pole and trek another 800 miles
to the Ross Sea, well supplied along the way.
To Shackleton, it was “the last great Polar journey that can be made.”
Not everyone was convinced. Admiral Winston Churchill, for one, thought
Shackleton’s plan was a colossal waste of time and resources. “Enough life and
money has been spent on this sterile quest,” he wrote. “The Pole has already
been discovered. What is the use of another expedition?”
Churchill was in charge of the British navy, and for some years, he’d been
locked in a dangerous arms race with the Germans. Warships, tanks, cannons,
rifles, and ammunition piled up on both sides. It wouldn’t be long before all the
life and money Britain had to offer was needed for a struggle far greater than a
trip across Antarctica.
On July 14, 1914, a cargo ship chugged up the river Thames into London with a
precious but unruly shipment. The ship steamed into the West India Docks.
Eventually, about 70 dogs—big, shaggy, and loud—clambered onto the pier,
straining at their leashes.
These were not purebreds bound for a dog show. They were mangy,
powerful mongrels. To Frank Wild, they looked like a mix of “wolf and any kind
of big dog.” To the men who were determined to cross Antarctica, they could
mean the difference between life and death.
The dogs would provide the muscle for Shackleton’s expedition. They would
haul sleds packed with food supplies across the snow and ice. Near the end of
the journey, after spending all the strength they had on their job, they might
themselves become food for a party of starving men. That was the harsh reality
of Antarctic exploration.
At the West India Docks, amidst a forest of masts, stood the ship that would
carry the dogs and their human companions into the Antarctic. She was called
the Endurance, and she was built for the task. Planks of oak and fir thicker than
telephone poles made up her hull. Her bow was sheathed in greenheart, a wood
denser than many others on Earth. Every inch of her had been made with one
purpose in mind—to withstand the ice. In case that wasn’t enough, in her rigging
hung three 20-foot lifeboats, the James Caird, the Dudley Docker, and the
Stancomb Wills.
The Endurance was packed to the gunwales with supplies. Crates of food
filled the dark storeroom. There were dense, high-calorie rations for the sledding
journey; tubs of basics like flour and sugar; luxuries like turtle soup, canned
herring, figs, dates, and jam. To keep the crew entertained, Shackleton’s cabin
had a library full of novels, accounts of polar expeditions, and volumes of the
Encyclopedia Britannica.
Sharing space with the books and the food would be the men who had made
it through the interviews on New Burlington Street. Aside from Shackleton,
Wild, and Captain Worsley, there were three officers and a navigator. A biologist,
a geologist, and two doctors joined the scientific staff. Reginald James had
decided to risk his finger in the name of science. Leonard Hussey was about to
go from 100-degree days in the desert to a place where temperatures can drop
below −100 degrees.
The carpenter, Harry McNish, would have two engineers to help him fix
anything that broke down. The storekeeper, Thomas Orde-Lees, would be in
charge of the food supplies. A cook named Charles Green had the thankless task
of keeping 28 hungry sailors fed from a cramped ship’s galley.
Shackleton had also picked eight seamen to hoist sails, shovel coal into the
steam boiler, and do whatever else it took to keep the ship running. Only one of
the men had been to the Antarctic before.
Rounding out the crew were two artists whose skills seemed to have little to
do with polar exploration. George Marston, a slow-moving but likeable man,
brought a supply of paints and sketchbooks. Frank Hurley, who was still in his
native Australia, would meet the Endurance in Argentina with crates of bulky
camera equipment.
Shackleton was counting on Marston and Hurley to supply the images for a
film, a lecture tour, and a book when the men got home. At sea or on the ice
Shackleton was a great leader and organizer. But he was terrible at managing
money. Between expeditions, he always had a get-rich-quick scheme brewing:
gold in Hungary, timber in Mexico, buried pirate treasure in the South Pacific.
Each scheme was a bigger failure than the last. He often struggled to support his
wife, Emily, and their three children.
To pay for the Endurance, supplies, and salaries, Shackleton had run up a
debt of nearly $4 million in today’s money. He could only hope that upon his
return, paying customers would be waiting by the thousands to hear about his
adventures at the bottom of the world.
On August 1, the Endurance eased out of its London dock and headed for the
coast to start its journey. The next day, 300 miles to the east, tens of thousands of
German soldiers stormed into the tiny country of Luxembourg, preparing to
invade France. The Endurance docked at Margate, looking out on the French
coast across the English Channel. Shackleton went ashore to find that the British
army was mobilizing. In two days England would declare war on Germany to
defend her French ally. Within a week, the First World War would engulf all of
Europe.
Shackleton returned to the ship and called everyone together on deck. The
months of preparations—of planning and raising money and hiring a crew—
looked like they were about to be scrapped. He told the men they were free to
join up and fight. Then he sent a message to Churchill offering the ship and the
men to the navy.
“If not required,” he went on, “I propose continuing voyage forthwith as any
delay would prevent expedition getting through pack ice this year.”
Churchill sent a one-word reply: “Proceed.”
It took the Endurance two months to cross the Atlantic, and the storekeeper
Thomas Orde-Lees did not enjoy the trip.
Sailing out of Plymouth, England, signs of war were everywhere. Battleships
steamed in and out of the harbor. Searchlights swept the water at night. Two days
before the Endurance sailed, a British cruiser hit a German mine in the English
Channel and 150 men went down with the ship.
For Lees, that wasn’t the half of it. He spent the first week on the Atlantic
seasick and barely able to choke down a bowl of soup. When he finally felt up to
eating, he didn’t like the company. The seamen drank and swore too much for
his tastes.
The second week out, Lees forced himself to eat with the barbarians. “I think
it is a good thing to try and accommodate oneself to ideas and ways less refined
than one’s own,” he explained to his diary that night.
But when he sat down with the ship’s carpenter, he couldn’t stand the man’s
table manners. McNish made annoying sucking sounds, picked his teeth with a
match, and spit out the window. Lees was disgusted. The carpenter, he
complained, was a “perfect pig in every way.”
As if eating with the sailors weren’t enough of an indignity, Lees had to
work with them too. On a Shackleton expedition, officers and scientists were
expected to help run the ship, and Lees whined about having to pull ropes and
scrub the decks with the sailors. The ropes were dirty and made his hands sore,
he said.
Yet for all Lees’s haughtiness, he was right about one thing: The sailors were
out of control on the way across the Atlantic. During a stopover on the island of
Madeira, four of the men got into a bar fight. One ended up with his scalp sliced
open by a sword. Another had his face smashed with a flowerpot.
When the ship finally arrived in Buenos Aires, Argentina, two men went off
to get drunk and didn’t come back for a week. Shackleton was traveling
separately to Buenos Aires, and Lees thought Captain Worsley was too
easygoing to keep everyone in line. “It will all be put right when Sir Ernest
arrives, thank goodness,” Lees wrote.
The Endurance headed south from Buenos Aires on October 26, with everything
put right for now. The ship was stuffed with fresh supplies. Shackleton had fired
the two men who went missing for a week. In their place he hired an American
seaman named William Bakewell. Bakewell had turned up at the docks with
Perce Blackborow, his 19-year-old friend. Blackborow desperately wanted to sail
with the Endurance. But he was inexperienced, and Worsley decided they had
enough hands to run the ship.
When the Endurance steamed out to sea, a small, mostly British crowd
gathered to see them off. They waved handkerchiefs, and the crew waved back.
The dogs howled while a band played the British anthem, “God Save the King.”
There would be one more stop—a whaling station at the last populated place
in the frozen south, the isolated island of South Georgia. They would anchor
there for a while, stock up on coal and food, and learn from the whalers about
the ice conditions in the Weddell Sea. But to everyone on board, it felt like they
were finally on their way. The men started singing sea chanties while they set the
sails.
For Shackleton it was a relief to leave all the preparations and the money-
grubbing behind. He knew how to charm people, but he was happiest where
human beings were scarce. The lecturing and the constant money worries had
been a chore since he’d come back in 1909. “All the troubles of the South are
nothing to day after day of business,” he had written to a friend in the middle of
it all.
Ahead there would be frostbite and hunger to worry about. But physical
hardship was simple—it demanded only courage and a willingness to suffer. “All
the strain is finished and there now comes the actual work itself,” he wrote in his
diary. “The fight will be good.”
The first challenge came quickly—at 4 p.m. the next day. They were well out to
sea when Ernest Holness, one of the stokers, finished his turn tending the ship’s
coal-burning engines and went to his locker. His clothes hung inside just as he’d
left them. But on the floor he found a surprising addition to the wardrobe. A
strange pair of boots stuck out from under his oilskin coveralls. In them stood
Bakewell’s young friend, Perce Blackborow.
A few minutes later Blackborow was presented to Shackleton. The
stowaway had been cramped in a locker for a day and a half with nothing but
scraps of food to eat. He tried to stand at attention, but Shackleton ordered him
to sit.
Blackborow could only hope the Boss wouldn’t leave him in South Georgia
with no way to get home. Shackleton was hard to predict, after all. All his good
cheer could turn to anger in an instant.
Shackleton stared Blackborow down and launched into a tirade. Finally, the
Boss leaned close to Blackborow and said, “Do you know that on these
expeditions we often get hungry, and if there is a stowaway available he is the
first to be eaten?”
Blackborow was either a brave man or Shackleton had a hint of a smirk on
his face, because the stowaway looked at the Boss and said, “They’d get a lot
more meat off you, sir.”
A moment passed. Shackleton, who appreciated a sense of humor, turned to
his second-in-command, Wild. “Take him to the bo’sun,” he said. “Introduce him
to the cook first.”
For better or worse, Blackborow was on his way to Antarctica with a job as
the cook’s helper.
Nine days later the Endurance steamed into Grytviken Whaling Station on South
Georgia. As they made their way into the harbor, the smell was enough to take
anyone’s appetite away. Several rotting whale carcasses bobbed in the water 200
yards off the wharf. Four more clogged a slip between two piers. Men stood on
the piers with 10-foot-long lances, slicing thick slabs of blubber off the dead
giants.
The shore was a vast graveyard—except someone had forgotten to bury the
corpses. Hurley counted at least 100 whale skulls, some as long as the 20-foot
lifeboats on board the Endurance.
If the “Great South Land,” had anything of benefit to humans, this was it.
For more than a century, whales in all the world’s oceans had been hunted
ruthlessly for profit. Oil from their blubber was burned in lamps, boiled into
soap, and congealed into margarine.
By the early 1900s, the whaleships had done their job too well. Whales were
few and far between in northern waters. But in the southern summer they
gathered around Antarctica by the thousands to feed on swarms of tiny
crustaceans called krill.
From September to March, the Antarctic teemed with fin whales, majestic
humpbacks, and blue whales the size of buses. They were the biggest mammals
on Earth, too big for predators in the water. But their size made them slow and
easy prey for the most ingenious predator of all—humankind.
The year before the Endurance arrived, Antarctic hunters had slaughtered
nearly 10,000 whales. South Georgia alone was churning out 200,000 barrels of
oil a year.
Hurley was disgusted by the whalers but fascinated by the process. He
toured the factory where they boiled the blubber into oil. He learned about the
exploding harpoons that scrambled a whale’s innards. He discovered the practice
of inflating whale carcasses with air so they wouldn’t sink while they were
towed home.
On the third night in South Georgia, the Norwegian manager of the whaling
station invited the officers of the Endurance to dinner. Hurley went separately
from the rest. A couple of sailors rowed him ashore and returned to the ship.
The photographer picked his way through the whale graveyard by the light
of an oil lamp. Eventually, he found his way blocked by a fresh corpse. The head
lay too close to the water to climb around. A pile of steaming intestines cut off
the path around the tail. Hurley decided to brave a set of ladders bridging the
way up and over the corpse. Halfway across he lost his balance and went
tumbling into the dark, clammy, wide-open carcass of the whale.
Hurley tried a few times to scramble out, but traction was lacking. Finally,
he gave up, swallowed his pride, and yelled for help. With the stench of whale
innards still clinging to his clothes, he would later conclude, “It is impossible to
view this trade with other than loathing.”
The Endurance hit pack ice on her fifth day out, much sooner than the Boss had
hoped. Shackleton thought of the pack as a vast jigsaw puzzle of ice. Most of the
pieces are slabs 5 to 6 feet high and covered in snow. Some are as small as
barges, others as big as islands. In loose pack, the pieces float apart and press
together again. In the lanes between the slabs, known as leads, the water freezes
into thin, brittle “young ice.” When the pack closes, the pieces squeeze together
and the sea becomes land as far as the eye can see.
Everyone knew what the ice could do to a ship. But it didn’t seem to bother
Worsley. “The Skipper,” as the crew called him, guided the Endurance through
the obstacle course as though it were the most fun a human being could have on
Earth. Standing high in the bow, he scanned the pack for leads. McNish had built
him an 8-foot-tall arrow that swiveled in an arc. Worsley used it to tell the
helmsman, 140 feet away in the stern, which way to steer.
Most of the time, the ship crunched and ground its way through young ice.
When an island-sized floe blocked their path, Worsley had two choices. He
could navigate around the chunk. But if the ice measured less than 3 feet thick,
he chose the option he obviously preferred: Ram the floe till it split down the
middle.
When Worsley gave the signal, the stoker built up steam in the engine and
slammed full speed into the ice. The bow of the Endurance, 4 feet thick and
strong as iron, lifted like it was about to lead the ship out of the water onto the
floe. Then it settled, carving a bow-shaped notch into the ice. At Worsley’s
urging they reversed the engines, backed up, and rammed again. This time, if
they were lucky, a crack would open and spread with a croaking echo into the
distance. With a few more bone-crunching impacts, the floe finally split like an
island torn apart by an earthquake.
Worsley stood in the bow through the whole process like a rodeo rider on a
bull, the ship bucking under his feet. “It’s a splendid sensation,” he crowed to his
diary. Alexander Macklin, one of the doctors on board, was convinced that the
Skipper went out of his way to find hunks of ice to smash. “Worsley specialized
in ramming,” he said.
It might have been great fun to Worsley, but Lees was not impressed. The
storekeeper sat below, trying to write in his diary. Every time the ship hit a slab
of ice, it jerked the book from under his pen. The grinding outside the walls
sounded like thunder. He was sure the hull was about to cave in.
They fought their way south, sometimes skirting the ice and sometimes blasting
their way through. In open water, the Endurance could cover 200 miles a day. In
the pack, she made 33 miles one day, 53 the next, 18 after that. The next day the
ship lost 6 miles, drifting backward with the ice.
On December 18, they plowed through seas that looked to Lees like “one
great solid desert snowfield.” He worried they were burning through their coal
supply trying to make headway. The following day they gave up, anchored the
ship to a floe, and drifted with the ice.
The men decided to make the most of the delay. They were so far south at
this point that the sun, at the height of the summer, never set. Even at midnight it
hovered just above the horizon, giving off a strange dim glow. In the midnight
sun, the crew turned out onto the ice and planted tall poles in the snow for goals.
Then they shed their jackets and played soccer, Antarctic style. The scientists
and most of the officers made up one team, with Shackleton in goal. But the
seamen refused to go easy on the Boss. They finished with a 2–0 victory.
The Endurance got under way again on December 21. They had put 700
miles between themselves and the nearest members of the human species. But
they had plenty of companions—a constant escort from the creatures that clawed
out a living on the ice. Snow petrels and skuas swooped low over the ship,
hoping to snatch a bite of meat. Occasionally a blue whale, half the size of the
ship, broke the surface of the water, blasting plumes of spray into the air. Killer
whales with their ominous triangular fins prowled the edges of the ice, waiting
for a seal to make a wrong move.
Of all the residents of the frozen sea, it was the penguins that provided the
best entertainment. They shot out of the water like vaulters from an underwater
trampoline. Landing with a thud on their bellies, they skidded to a stop on the
ice.
Sometimes the little Adélie penguins followed the ship from a nearby floe,
squawking at the crew. That gave the men a chance to have a little fun with the
biologist, Robert Clark, who rarely cracked a smile. They decided the penguins
all knew Clark, because whenever the biologist was at the wheel the birds
hustled along, screaming “Clark! Clark!” No matter how many times the men
told him to answer the penguins, Clark refused to play along.
For the penguins and the seals, however, the fun and games often stopped in
a brutal instant. The men had planned to add to their food supply as they
traveled. Usually the hunt was no contest. The penguins knew to avoid sea
leopards and killer whales. But most of them had never seen a human being
before. They simply stood on the ice and waited for the men to club them to
death.
Sometimes, the world around the Endurance was so strange and beautiful the
men could only pause and stare. Worsley felt like they were seeing things no
human had ever seen before. Even Lees stopped grumbling to marvel at the
scenery.
Icebergs floated like giant sculptures in the water. Some lay stubby and flat.
Others rose from the sea like castles in a fantasyland, spires poking at the sky.
The waves beat against the sides of the taller bergs, and spray shot to the top of
the cliffs. In places, the water carved hollow caverns into the base of the ice with
a great booming sound.
The scenery, to Hurley, was like whale meat to the dogs. He was a born
adventurer who ran away from home at 14. Now, on that rare sunny day when
the light gleamed off the ice in just the right way, he would do anything to
capture it on film. He’d gather his cameras, climb into the rigging, and edge out
onto an icy spar. He perched like a bird, oblivious to the danger and the cold.
When the light and the angle were just right, he took his pictures. Worsley could
hear him from down below cursing into the wind in triumph when he thought
he’d gotten the perfect shot.
As the sea ice grew thicker and more treacherous, Shackleton tried to keep the
men in a good mood. He encouraged the sightseeing and the penguin jokes and
the soccer in the snow. Twice before, he’d been close to death and hundreds of
miles from safety, and he knew that morale could make all the difference. Men
who wanted to work together survived. Men who bickered and held grudges did
not.
Still, progress was slow, and Shackleton felt the strain. By the dawn of the
new year they were 480 miles out from South Georgia—less than halfway to
Vahsel Bay. During the day, the Boss spent long hours in the crow’s nest at the
top of the mast. Standing 60 feet above the deck, he scanned the giant ice puzzle,
looking for open water. There had to be a path somewhere out there that would
take them to Vahsel Bay.
Five weeks out from South Georgia, Lees thought Shackleton looked
exhausted. “Sir Ernest looks dead tired,” he wrote. “He has been up at night so
much lately; and the anxiety of the last few days, to which he never owned, must
have pulled him down.”
On January 10, a sight appeared off the port bow to lift Shackleton’s mood—a
giant wall of ice, rising 100 feet from the surface of the sea. They had found
their first stretch of open water in weeks, and the Endurance had made use of it.
She made 100 miles in 24 hours, and here for the first time loomed the barrier
ice that lined the coast of Antarctica.
All around the continent, masses of ice called glaciers crawl from the high
mountains down toward the sea. (For a glacier, 2 inches an hour is a fast pace.)
At the coast, these ice giants form the floating cliffs known as barrier ice that the
crew now gawked at from the deck.
They sailed southwest along the barrier, knowing now that Vahsel Bay lay
within reach. Just before midnight on January 15, the Endurance pulled into a
quiet bay, protected to the south by a 500-foot-high glacier. Even at midnight,
the summer sun cast a dim glow around the bay. At the shore, the ice made a
perfect landing spot, just 3 feet above the water. Shackleton named the inlet
Glacier Bay.
The Boss conferred with his officers. Worsley thought they should land the
shore party while they had the chance and start the overland trek from there. But
they were still about 200 miles north of Vahsel Bay. That would add two weeks
to the journey, and Shackleton didn’t want to risk it. After all, they had clear seas
to the south. They were in the middle of their best run in weeks.
At noon, three days later, Worsley calculated their position. Vahsel Bay lay
just 104 miles away. One more stretch of open water and there would be
congratulations to go around. The Boss, no doubt, would break out the fine food
and drink. The Weddell Sea had given them all they could handle, but they had
fought their way through.
Lees spent the day sorting through supplies, separating the crates marked
“ship” from the crates marked “shore.” When he turned in that night at 9 p.m.,
he wrote, “Spirits are high all round as we are all eagerly looking forward to the
change which landing will mean.”
On January 19, the morning after Lees started getting ready to land, the entire
crew woke to a grim sight. The ice had closed tight against the sides of the ship.
Worsley climbed to the crow’s nest, hoping to find a way out. “No water in sight
from deck,” he wrote that night, “very little from masthead & dull gloomy pall
over the sky since noon.”
The carpenter, McNish, who wasn’t one to waste words, started keeping
track of their progress in his diary.
“Thursday 21st … we are still fast in the ice …”
“Friday 22nd still in the same predicament with no signs of any change …”
“Saturday 23rd still fast …”
“Sunday 24th still fast & no signs of any opening pressure …”
“Monday 25th still fast …”
That’s not to say the Endurance wasn’t moving. The pack ice in the Weddell
Sea swirls clockwise like a giant pinwheel, 1,000 miles across. The ship and her
28 human occupants had become part of the pack, and they drifted with it to the
southwest. By February 1, they could almost see their goal. Vahsel Bay was just
59 miles away.
It might as well have been halfway around the Earth. The ice between the
ship and the coast was uneven and riddled with cracks. One man on skis would
be hard-pressed to make the trip without plunging into 30-degree water. Hauling
tons of supplies by sled was out of the question.
No one was willing to admit they were stuck for good. But their prospects
looked bad. They needed warm temperatures and a stiff south wind to break up
the pack. Instead, the wind died completely, and the temperature dropped below
zero. By the second week, they ran out of seal meat, and Lees started hoarding
the canned food. “I grudge every tin of meat now,” he wrote.
With no sailing to keep them occupied, the men started to get restless. On
Saturday nights, Shackleton let the crew gather in the wardroom, sing, and drink
a toast to “sweethearts and wives.” The second Saturday in the ice, McNish
drank more than his share and got into a fight in the forecastle.
A few days later, Lees and McNish were battling over Lees’s beloved
storeroom. McNish thought Lees spent all his time fussing around and never did
any useful work. So as soon as Lees got everything organized just right, McNish
would come looking for something and leave the room a mess. “He has an
exceptionally offensive manner and it is very hard to be patient with him,” Lees
huffed.
Shackleton had picked crew members he thought would get along with each
other. But McNish was the one man he didn’t trust.
Every day, while the crew tried to keep busy, Shackleton and Worsley
climbed the mast to scan for open leads. The light and the endless expanse of
white often played tricks on their eyes. Clouds looked like icebergs and icebergs
dangled upside down from the sky. Worst of all, if the angle of light was just
right, a streak of open water appeared in the distance. If they squinted long
enough they realized it was just an illusion.
On February 5 the ice shifted and the ship settled into open water with a
sharp jolt. Everyone rushed on deck to see if they’d been liberated, but they were
stuck in a small pool, surrounded by ice. That night, the water around them froze
solid again.
On Valentine’s Day, Shackleton called all hands together. The winds had been
blowing again from the southwest. The pack seemed to be loosening. From the
masthead, open water appeared a third of a mile off—and this time, it wasn’t a
mirage. They were going to make one final attempt to get free.
The crew climbed onto the floe to battle the ice. Two dozen men hacked
away near the bow of the ship with pickaxes, giant ice saws, and 10-foot-tall iron
poles. They carved the ice into blocks and hauled them aside. It was exhausting
work, but eventually, they gave the Endurance 10 feet of open water.
With Lees at the wheel, Worsley rammed a thick, lumpy section of the pack
again and again. The men moved ahead and worked on the young ice beyond the
lump.
All day they chipped and sawed and hauled with the temperature hovering
around 10 degrees. By midnight, the men were soaked and chilled to the bone.
They had opened a hole the size of half a tennis court.
By 4 p.m. the next day, a day and a half of labor had moved the ship 200
yards. Between the Endurance and the open water lay 400 more yards of 10-
foot-thick ice. And the water was freezing up as fast as they could clear it.
Shackleton called off the effort.
The order came as no surprise. It would have been hard to find a single
person on board who thought they had a chance in the first place. “Puny mortals
striving frantically against the mighty forces of nature,” Lees wrote. “The
laughing stock of the Gods; only a handful of us contending against all that ice.”
But gone for the moment were the restlessness and the petty squabbles. “I
never saw such unanimous cooperation and intensity of purpose,” Lees
concluded. And that was probably the point to begin with. Shackleton knew that
grumbling started when there was nothing to do. He also knew that in the
months ahead, these men were going to need to work together. This was a
training session.
That night, the sun dipped below the horizon for the first time in three and a
half months. The days would shorten fast. In April or May the sun would vanish
for several more long, dark months. Winter was on its way, and the crew of the
Endurance would spend it trapped in the ice.
On February 24, Shackleton ordered an end to normal ship duties. He put all
hands to work storing seal meat and moving supplies out of the cargo hold
below. With a little work, the hold, sheltered from the wind and the cold, would
become their winter quarters. “Today … we practically cease being a ship &
become a winter station,” Worsley recorded.
For now, they had food. They could melt snow and ice for drinking water.
Maybe in a few months the ice would loosen. Maybe the giant rotating pack
would carry them far enough north to find open water. Then they could resupply
in South America and try to make their way back to Vahsel Bay.
In the meantime the ship would be their only shelter from temperatures cold
enough to freeze tears on a man’s face. But who could say for sure how long it
would survive?
“We will have to wait Gods will to get out,” McNish wrote. “Temperature
+2.”
Isolated from the world and trapped for the winter, the men felt a gloom settle
over the ship. “A wave of depression seemed to come over everybody on board,”
wrote James Wordie, the geologist. “It was soon noticed that it was best not to
get in the Boss’s way.”
But while the men sensed Shackleton’s anxiety, the Boss didn’t show it
openly. He explained calmly that they would spend the winter in the pack. Then
he put the men to work.
The first task was to build winter quarters—and the crew weren’t the only
ones in need. Worsley spent the first week of March supervising a team of
doghouse builders out on the ice. The team sawed blocks of ice from the floe and
stacked them into round walls for tiny huts. They used boards or sealskin for the
roofs. Then they packed snow on top and poured water over the huts to freeze
them into place. By March 5, a ring of icy doghouses surrounded the ship. The
sailors called their masterpieces “dogloos.”
While the dogloo builders did their work, McNish built a home belowdecks
for most of the officers and the scientists. He made cubicles in the empty hold
and put bunks in each one. A table occupied the middle of the room. A potbellied
stove stood in the corner. The sailors would stay in the forecastle, where they
always slept. Shackleton would sleep in his drafty cabin on the deck.
Like kids moving into a cabin at camp, Lees, Hurley, Hussey, and the rest set
up their quarters. They gave their cubicles names, and Hurley carved little
wooden plaques for each one. Pictures of loved ones went up near the bunks.
The roommates called their primitive hideaway “the Ritz,” after the most
luxurious hotel in London.
The only thing more important than shelter was food. That became only too
clear to the seals and penguins that came to investigate the intruders in their
midst. It was Worsley’s job to stand on the masthead with a telescope and
binoculars, scanning the ice for life. When he saw movement, he called out
directions to a party of hunters through a megaphone.
Frank Wild often led the hunting parties, pistol in hand. They went out on
skis or by dogsled. If everything went according to plan, Wild dispatched his
prey with one shot to the head. But sometimes the hunt turned into a brutal
slaughter. Lees and Worsley once wounded a seal but ran out of ammunition
before they could kill it. They finished the job by clubbing the maimed animal to
death with an oar. According to Worsley, “It was an awful bloody business.”
But the men had a feeling that at any moment the hunters could become the
hunted. They had seen killer whales stalk seals or penguins under young ice.
When the 10,000-pound predators saw their chance they came rocketing up from
below, shattering the ice with their heads. If they aimed well, the blow sent their
prey tumbling into the water, and the whales put their 4-inch-long teeth to work
gathering dinner. “More villainous … looking creatures I have never seen,”
wrote Hurley after watching a couple of killers come up for a look at the
Endurance.
The men lived in fear that a killer whale might have trouble telling the
difference between a seal and a human.
After dinner on Saturday May 1, the officers of the Endurance said good-bye to
the light. The next day, the sun disappeared below the horizon. It wouldn’t make
another appearance for three and a half months. For a week or so, the
temperature failed to rise above zero. Some mornings the dogs had to be hacked
out of the ice because their body heat melted the snow during the night and the
water froze around them.
The Antarctic winter had begun, and the cold wasn’t the only thing to fear.
Three and a half months without sunlight could make even the hardiest sailor
begin to question his sanity. Anyone who doubted that fact had only to listen to
the story of the Belgica. It was a tale that Shackleton knew well, and he didn’t
hesitate to tell it to the crew.
In 1898 the Belgica became the first ship to winter below the Antarctic
Circle. During her long, dark days stuck in the ice, a Belgian sailor died. The
ship’s officers gave him a burial at sea, sliding his body through a hole in the ice.
The image haunted the men—their shipmate disappearing into the frigid waters.
In the eerie half-light, they became convinced the dead man’s body was
following the ship, drifting beneath the ice. “We are under the spell of the black
Antarctic night,” wrote Frederick Cook, an American explorer on board, “and
like the world which it darkens, we are cold, cheerless, and inactive.”
As the dark days dragged on, the men sunk deeper into gloom. They heard
the dead sailor’s ghost in the creaks and groans of the Belgica’s timbers. After a
while, the ship’s cat seemed to lose its will to live. One day it curled up in a
corner and died. With their lone predator gone, rats came out of the woodwork
and ran wild. The sailors stuffed cloth in their ears, but the muffled sound of
little claws on wood still tormented them through the night. Eventually, two men
grew so agitated they had to be restrained.
The sailors of the Belgica were saved by the return of the sun—and by long
hours of backbreaking labor. In January 1899, they hacked and sawed a 2,000-
foot lead out of the ice. The Belgica sailed into open waters, and the crew
returned to Europe, where the sun can be trusted to come up 365 days a year.
With the Belgica in mind, Shackleton fought the winter blues with work, a strict
routine, and fun. Every day like clockwork the men gathered in the Ritz for
meals: breakfast at 9 a.m., lunch at 1 p.m., tea at 4 p.m., and dinner at 6 p.m.
Worsley once came in from a ski a few minutes late for lunch. He heard about it
from the Boss.
At first, the men ate well—Shackleton made sure of it. There might be
porridge, liver, and bacon for breakfast; a seal stew the sailors called “hoosh” for
lunch; and seal steak for dinner with black currant tart for dessert.
Lees fretted over how fast the food was disappearing, but Shackleton
insisted: A well-fed crew was a happy crew. Lees consoled himself by keeping a
close eye on the supplies. He made sure he had a bunk near the storeroom door
so he could pounce on thieves looking for a midnight snack.
At night, the Ritz became a clubhouse with a regular entertainment schedule.
On Saturdays they drank and remembered their loved ones at home. On Sunday
nights they listened to music on the phonograph while they went to bed.
Sometimes the meteorologist Hussey led sing-alongs on his banjo. They held
competitions to see who had the most annoying voice. “It is astounding the
musical talent we do not possess!” Hurley observed.
During the dark winter days, the scientists and the officers read books and
debated important topics. Many a dispute ended with one party digging out a
volume of the Encyclopedia Britannica to get a higher authority on his side.
But for all the knowledge the encyclopedia contained, it offered nothing on
the most important subject of all: the war. Everyone aboard was desperate to
know if their friends and family were safe from the fighting. All they could do
was sit around a map of the world, make wild guesses, and plan imaginary
battles by the light of an oil lamp.
A month later, the Antarctic began to take its revenge. On Wednesday, July 14,
the men woke to the sound of a gale screaming in the ship’s rigging. The
temperature plummeted to −33 degrees. Blinding curtains of snow raked the ship
all day and into the night. Winds tore across the ice at 60 or 70 miles an hour. To
feed the dogs, the men had to crawl to the dogloos. If they stood up, the wind
knocked them down like they were made of straw.
The next day, the blizzard let up enough for the crew to survey the damage.
Drifts of snow had climbed 14 feet to the ship’s gunwales. The dogloos on the
port side lay buried under 5 feet of powder. The men covered every inch of skin
and waddled into the wind to dig their beloved dogs out.
At the height of the blizzard, Shackleton, Wild, and Captain Worsley
gathered in the Boss’s cabin. The wind sounded to Worsley like a train racing
through the room at top speed. In the early hours of the morning, the ship had
taken an unnerving jolt from below. Shackleton had told McNish it was probably
a whale giving the hull a friendly nudge. But the Boss knew what it really meant.
It was the ice, beginning to test the walls of the Endurance.
With the crew, Shackleton always tried to stay positive. But Wild and
Worsley were his two most important officers; he could be honest with them.
The Boss paced the room with his shoulders hunched and his hands behind his
back. Worsley recognized the posture. He knew there was bad news to come.
“She’s pretty near her end,” Shackleton said.
“You mean that the ship will—go?” Worsley asked.
“I do,” Shackleton responded.
Worsley refused to believe it. The ship had held up so far, and he couldn’t
imagine things getting worse than they had been for the last couple of months.
“You seriously mean to tell me the ship is doomed?” he said.
That was exactly what Shackleton meant.
“It may be a few months, and it may be only a question of weeks, or even
days,” the Boss said. “But what the ice gets, the ice keeps.”
The sun came back, and it brightened more than just the sky. In the middle of
August five hours of real light shone on the crew every day. The ship drifted
north at a good pace. By the end of the month they’d moved 300 miles closer to
civilization.
As the weather warmed and the ship edged toward open water, the men
started to think that the expedition wasn’t dead after all. If the pack broke up
soon, they could go back to Buenos Aires or South Georgia for provisions. Then
they could make another run for Vahsel Bay.
At night in the Ritz, they guessed at the date they would finally break out of
the ice. McIlroy put his money on November 3. Lees, who could be counted on
to see the worst in a good situation, bet they’d be stuck until mid-February.
Shackleton, always the optimist, claimed they’d be out by October 2.
The ice had given them a scare at the beginning of August. The floes shifted
and squeezed together, rocking the ship and turning the dogloos into powder.
Now at times they could hear the sea ice, restless in the distance. They struggled
to describe the sounds—to relate the groaning and roaring to something they
knew. It was like traffic in the streets of London. It was a giant train with
squeaking axles, straining across the ice. Throw in steam whistles and roosters
crowing. Under it all, Worsley heard the “moans and groans of souls in torment.”
But near the end of September, life returned to the ice. Wordie saw an
emperor penguin and lured it out of the water. The next day, Wild shot their first
seal in five months. On September 29, two petrels rode the air currents over the
ship. Since petrels feed in the sea, Lees observed, open water couldn’t be far
away. “My birthday,” McNish recorded that day, “and I sincerely hope to spend
my next one at Home.”
Spring fever was working its way through the drafty passageways of the
Endurance. They’d been on board more than a year and hadn’t seen open water
since January. Now, long cracks split the ice floes around the ship. Leads of dark
water striped the vast canvas of white.
Shackleton decided it was time to move from the Ritz back on deck to their
“summer cabins.” McNish, who was convinced they would be sailing again any
day now, got to work putting bunks back in the old quarters. “The ship
reverberates with hammers, sawing, cheers and song,” Hurley wrote on October
12.
Two days later the ice split beneath the ship and for the first time in 8
months, they sailed through 100 yards of open water.
It would be the final voyage of the Endurance.
At 4 p.m. on October 18, the officers and scientists were drinking tea
belowdecks when they felt the ice nudging the hull of the ship. It was enough to
send the men ambling on deck to see what was happening.
As soon as they emerged, all hell broke loose. A wall of ice climbed the
starboard side of the ship. The deck lurched underfoot and pitched to one side. In
five seconds the Endurance tilted 30 degrees to port, and everything that wasn’t
nailed down started to slide. Kennels, sleds, crates, lumber, and men careened
down the deck. James, the physicist, landed under two crates of clothing with a
mass of frightened dogs howling on top.
Worsley stopped himself at the side of the ship and leaned out over the edge.
He watched as the port side of the hull sank, inch by inch into the ice. Just when
it seemed the ship would roll onto her side and give in, all movement stopped.
The ship’s captain brimmed with pride. “She seemed to say to the grinding
hungry pack, ‘You may smash me, but I’m damned if I’ll go over another inch
for you; I’ll see you melting in Hell first.’”
The men spent the next two hours cleaning up as best they could. They
nailed boards to the deck so they could walk without sliding into the mess
jammed against the port gunwales. Then they liberated the dogs from the pile of
kennels and secured the gear that hadn’t already moved.
When everything on deck had been stabilized the crew gathered in the
wardroom for a meal. Hurley managed to get a laugh out of the seating
arrangement. Everyone sat on the floor with their feet jammed against freshly
nailed boards. They balanced their food on their knees. Occasionally someone
would forget their predicament, put a plate down on the floor, and watch it
careen into the port sidewall.
At 9 p.m., the ice shifted. The ship righted itself, and the men were once
again walking on level ground.
The next day a killer whale almost as big as a bus surfaced in the tiny pool
around the ship. All evening, the sleek predator swam from one end of the pool
to the other. It poked its head above water, disappeared, and then rose again. “He
was a cruel looking shark-like beast quite capable of swallowing one of us at a
single gulp,” Lees wrote.
And they could no longer count on the ship for protection.
The final wave of pressure arrived at 6:45 p.m. on October 24. It moved through
the pack slowly, squeezing the ship between giant slabs of ice. Macklin couldn’t
watch. “The whole sensation,” the doctor wrote, “was of something colossal, of
something in nature too big to grasp.”
The crew soon realized that the sternpost—the giant pillar of wood that
anchored the rudder to the rear of the ship—had been battered. Seawater was
gushing into the stern.
McNish went back to start walling off the leak. Worsley and two others went
below to get the main water pump working. A team climbed onto the floe to cut
away the ice around the ship. But as soon as they cleared a section it froze again.
They got a day’s rest from the pressure, but on October 26, the ice closed in
again. Shackleton ordered everyone to get the essential gear onto the floe. Down
went the three lifeboats, the sleds, the harnesses, and the tents. Worsley tore
maps out of the ship’s library books so they could leave the heavy volumes
behind. Marston, Lees, and James hauled crates out of the hold with the sound of
water rushing under them. Beams cracked like pistols overhead.
That night, the penguins popped up from the frozen sea and sang their
strange, mournful dirge at the ship.
At 4 p.m. the next day, a pressure ridge bore down on the starboard side of the
ship. With one surge, the ice slipped under the Endurance, lifting her by the
stern, and then by the bow. With the next surge, the floe climbed the side of the
ship and broke off, sending blocks weighing as much as trucks tumbling
backward. The surges followed, one after another. With each blow came a
thunderous crash as the ship was tossed first to port, then to starboard.
Hurley set up his motion picture camera on the ice, expecting any minute to
record the complete destruction of the Endurance.
Lees looked on with a sick feeling in his stomach. The ship was as powerful
as any wooden vessel afloat. Now the ice was tearing her apart, plank by plank.
Finally, the deathblow came. The ship sat high out of the water, with the
already damaged rudder exposed. A tumbling mass of ice swept across the stern
and ripped the rudder and sternpost clean out of the ship. Giant timbers snapped
with the sound of artillery guns firing into the air.
McNish emerged from below. The water was gaining on the pumps, he said.
It wouldn’t be long before the ship’s boiler was swamped.
Shackleton, watching from the ice with Captain Worsley, gave the order to
get the rest of the supplies down. The men lowered crates of food and bags of
clothing while the ship heaved under their feet.
The Boss smoked cigarettes and mingled with the men. He reminded people
not to forget one thing or another, as though they were packing for a weekend
away.
“Mind you put your old diary in my bag,” he said to Lees, “as it has been
kept rather more regularly than mine, I believe.”
Someone stretched a broad piece of canvas from the deck to the ice. One by
one, the dogs were lifted into it and they slid, stumbled, and tumbled to safety.
They were strangely quiet through the operation, as though they understood the
importance of the moment.
By dinnertime, tents sprouted from the ice a safe distance from the ship. The
temperature dropped to −15 degrees, and the men settled in to shiver in their
sleeping bags. The nights in the Ritz, boring as they were, seemed like paradise
now. There would be no more coal fire keeping them warm at night, no more
sturdy hull between the men and the frozen sea. “We are homeless and adrift on
the ice,” Hurley wrote.
Shackleton stayed up to pace the ice. Before going to bed, Lees went up to
him and tried to make conversation. With the work done for now and no orders
to give, the Boss had sunk into a different mood than he’d been in a few hours
earlier.
“I hope you haven’t lost that cigarette case,” Lees said, thinking of a
beautiful gold case Shackleton carried.
“Cigarette case be blowed,” the Boss snapped. “I’ve just lost a bally ship
haven’t I?”
Shackleton was feeling the strain, and Lees understood why. Their best hope
at this point was to drag the lifeboats toward open water. But the ice was a
minefield of jagged pressure ridges and open leads. It would be tough going
even without all the gear they had to haul. And even if they could navigate the
sea ice, where would it get them? Besides their weather-beaten crew of 28 men,
the only land creatures for 1,000 miles around were penguins and seals.
Then, of course, there was the food supply. Lees was in charge of rationing
what they had, and he often felt like Shackleton would use it up in feast after
feast, just to keep the men happy. Despite their efforts to salvage everything,
tons of food was trapped in the ship under many feet of water. How long could
they get by on what they had?
Later that night, in the cold comfort of a tent on the ice, Lees got out his
diary and wrote, “For the first time in my life, we realized that we were face to
face with one of the gravest disasters that can befall a polar expedition.”
In the morning, after a steaming pot of hoosh had been ladled out and
consumed, Shackleton gathered everyone on the floe. He’d been pacing the ice
all night, but he was calm and matter-of-fact when he laid out the plan. “As
always with him, what happened had happened,” Macklin explained. “Without
emotion, melodrama, or excitement, he said, ‘Ship and stores have gone, so now
we’ll go home.’”
As usual, it wasn’t as simple as he made it sound. Shackleton wanted to
march 350 miles northwest to Paulet Island, near the tip of the Antarctic
Peninsula. At Paulet Island, hopefully they would find a hut that had been
stocked with supplies during the relief of the Nordenskjöld expedition. (Never
mind that the supplies had been deposited there in 1903, more than 12 years
ago.)
From Paulet Island, Shackleton could lead a small party 150 miles over
5,000-foot glaciers to Wilhelmina Bay. There, they would make contact with the
whaling ships that used the bay as a stopping place.
The first leg of the journey was going to be grueling work. The crew had to
drag thousands of pounds of supplies and two 1-ton lifeboats across an ever-
shifting sea of ice. The supplies would travel by dogsled. But to move the boats,
the men had to strap into harnesses and pull. If they made 6 miles a day, they
might reach their goal by New Year’s. Then they would have to get to
Wilhelmina Bay before the whalers packed it in for the winter.
The plan was a long shot at best. But Shackleton had something besides
rescue in mind. Even if they never made it to Paulet Island, he wanted the men to
have a goal. They couldn’t just sit down and wait like the crew of the Belgica.
He needed them to feel like they controlled their fate.
There would be a strict weight limit for the trek—six pairs of socks, one
spare pair of boots, one pair of fur mitts, one pound of tobacco or cocoa, and one
pound of personal gear. In front of the men, the Boss took out the gold cigarette
case that Lees had been so concerned about and dropped it on the ice. He added
books, fifty gold coins, and a dozen other things to the pile.
Everyone else reluctantly followed suit. A heap of stuff accumulated on the
ice, slowly disappearing under a blanket of snow. There were suitcases, clothes,
cooking utensils, blankets, clocks, ropes, and tools. The only luxury allowed was
Hussey’s banjo.
Shackleton ordered one last sacrifice before they left. They couldn’t afford
to take McNish’s cat or any of the puppies that hadn’t been trained in harness, he
said.
Big Tom Crean was devastated. The four pups that had been born in January
were trained and part of a sled team. But he’d been caring for three more that
weren’t ready to pull a sled.
Macklin had another untrained pup named Sirius. A dreary shroud of snow
fell on his head as he picked up a shotgun and took the pup aside. Sirius jumped
up to lick his hand, and Macklin had to push him away. His hand was shaking so
badly it took two shots to finish the dismal task.
They set off at 3 p.m. on October 30 in a long line across the ice. Shackleton,
Hudson, Hurley, and Wordie led the way, choosing as level a path as they could
find. The seven dog teams followed, carrying loads up to 700 pounds.
Bringing up the rear were 18 men, strapped into harnesses, straining to pull a
1-ton boat through wet snow and ice. McNish had built runners for the boats to
help them glide across the pack. But instead, the boats sank in the slush. The
men had to lean almost parallel to the ground to make progress. Every 15
minutes or so, they unstrapped and stood panting in the early summer air. Then
they went back for the second boat.
For three hours they relayed their gear across the ice, a quarter mile at a
time. The Boss didn’t want the men spread out too far for fear the floe would
split and leave the team separated for good.
At 6 p.m., the men saw smoke rising from a blubber fire ahead. They
slogged through the final yards, sat down to eat, fell into their sleeping bags, and
slept. “All are in high hopes,” Hurley claimed, “and glad a start has been made
from the depressing neighborhood of the wreck.”
But there was still plenty to be depressed about. The exhausting labor of the
first day left the ship’s “neighborhood” just a mile behind. The men spent the
night on new ice with killer whales spouting in the leads around them. The next
day they dragged their burdens half a mile through a bed of fresh snow before
giving up. The third day they tried again. They sank hip-deep in the slush until
the Boss finally ended the torture.
The plan he laid out with such confidence a few days ago had failed.
They found a spot on an old floe that felt solid underfoot. The tents went up
again, and they named their new home Ocean Camp. After three days of
backbreaking labor, they were 1½ miles closer to civilization.
That night, Lees sat in a tent with his diary. He was soaked to the bone and
shivering, and yet he managed to sound almost optimistic. “So long as we have
the bare minimum of food we shall be all right,” he wrote.
As a statement of faith in their future, it wasn’t exactly up to Shackleton’s
standards. But it would have to do.
Lees had been obsessed with the food supply for months. Now he had company.
With the failure of Shackleton’s epic trek, no one knew how long they would be
on the ice. Everything depended on the whim of the pack. If the winds blew
them northwest, they would make for Paulet Island again over land. If they
drifted northeast, they would hit open water and launch the lifeboats.
But what if they stalled exactly where they were? Shackleton refused to
admit it openly, but they could be spending another winter on the ice. By his
own calculations, they only had enough food to last till March, the very
beginning of the Antarctic winter.
Just when they had to think about rationing their food supply, the men
became ravenously hungry. The human body, after all, wasn’t built for the cold.
Unlike cold-blooded fish or reptiles, humans need to keep an internal
temperature of 98.6 degrees. The body starts cooling when the temperature
outside drops below 78. The men now had a living environment that ranged from
barely above freezing to −30 degrees. And they had no escape. There was no
Ritz with a cozy stove to huddle around after hunting seals on the ice.
To keep their body temperatures from plummeting, they had to move
constantly. They chased seals on skis or exercised the dogs or stood around and
stamped their feet. Shivering alone can generate five times more heat than
standing still.
But everything they did to keep themselves from freezing to death required
calories—and that meant massive amounts of food. After a few days on the ice,
the men became obsessed with meals. “All we seem to live for and think of now
is food …” wrote Worsley.
The cook started throwing slices of seal blubber—pure fat—onto the stove
or mixing it in the hoosh. The men devoured it and clamored for more.
With the men obsessing about food, all eyes turned to the Endurance. They had
clung to their hope for her survival right up to the end. As a result, several tons
of supplies still sat packed in water-tight crates in the storeroom. But retrieving
them wasn’t going to be easy. The crates lay submerged under 12 feet of water.
While they settled into Ocean Camp, half the crew took the dog teams back
to the ship to see what they could salvage. The Endurance looked more like a
junk heap than a vessel. Her main mast had cracked near the deck and fallen into
a tangle of ropes. Twenty-foot spars had broken off entirely and lay caught in the
rigging like twigs in a spider’s web. The men had to take masts down and haul
timbers away before it was safe to work.
For two days they dragged loads of wood, canvas, and cooking pots back to
camp. Hurley stripped to the waist and dove into four feet of water to get his
camera negatives. Someone salvaged part of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Six
pounds of lentils, 7 pounds of oatmeal, and a can of soup made it off of the ship.
But after three days of labor, the bulk of the food still lay deep underwater.
The men had to wade waist-deep just to stand on the deck over the storeroom.
At this point, the entire crew turned to McNish. The carpenter, blunt and
ornery, infuriated Lees. Shackleton didn’t trust him. No one quite knew whether
he belonged with the officers or the sailors. But at times like this it became only
too clear that they couldn’t live without him.
On November 4, four days after the failure of their epic trek, McNish
organized a team at the ship. He rigged a battering ram by tying one of the
heavy, 3-inch-thick ice chisels to a rope and threading the rope through a pulley
hung over the deck. One man hoisted the iron chisel high. Then he let it fall with
a crash on the deck, just over the storeroom.
Again and again, they battered the decking until a crack appeared big
enough to fit a saw. When they had sawed out a 3-foot-square hole, they moved
the battering ram and made another hole. Then they replaced the chisel with a
large hook, snagged the planks in between the holes, and ripped a huge chunk of
the deck away.
It was 11 a.m. when food started bobbing to the surface. A cheer went up as
loose walnuts and onions rushed through the hole. Then came the crates. The
men worked with long boathooks, arms submerged to the shoulders in icy water,
steering boxes toward the hole. It was brutal work, but one by one, crates of
sunken treasure appeared. There were supplies of flour and sugar and tea. There
were boxes of nut food—a tasty candy bar–like snack made of ground nuts,
sugar, and sesame oil. There were crates of sledding rations, the dense mixture of
beef, oatmeal, salt, sugar, and lard they had intended for the overland trek. When
someone snagged an especially coveted box, the hungry, homeless men sent a
cheer into the frigid air.
By the end of the day, 105 crates—3 tons of food—stood stacked on the ice
at Ocean Camp. Thomas Orde-Lees was a happy man. “What this means to us in
our present destitution,” he wrote, “words fail to express.”
Mealtime became a primitive affair on the ice. The men had scavenged sails and
spars from the Endurance and built a tent to serve as a galley. Inside was a stove
that Hurley made out of an old ash chute from the ship. The cook, Charles
Green, used strips of seal or penguin blubber for fuel. He fried seal steaks in
blubber and cooked hoosh in an old oil drum. For plates the men used lids from
biscuit tins or pieces of wood ripped from old crates. They ate hoosh in
aluminum mugs. When they finished, grease and fragments of seal meat flavored
their tea. Each man counted his spoon and his pocketknife as his most precious
possessions.
At breakfast, lunch, and dinner, one man from each tent brought rations from
the galley. He doled out portions while a tentmate closed his eyes and called out
names randomly. Even then, the men couldn’t help comparing their share to the
others. An extra piece of blubber in a neighbor’s hoosh was enough to make a
hungry man burn with envy.
Most of the men devoured their food as soon it was handed to them. Lees,
however, saved scraps obsessively. He stashed away hunks of cheese or pieces of
bannock—a fried dough that became a delicacy as the flour started to run low.
Lees drove everyone crazy by pulling random snacks out of his pocket when no
one else had access to food.
The tents were a miserable substitute for the bunks in the Ritz. The men
slept head to toe like sardines in a can. At night, their breath condensed on the
canvas walls and froze into crystals that fell on their heads like snow. On days
when the sun shone, the temperature in the tents could rise into the 60s, turning
the snow under their sleeping bags to slush. Floorboards salvaged from the
wreck kept them somewhat dry. But many of those boards had been torn from
the dog kennels. It wasn’t always clear what was to blame for the stench in the
tents—the boards or multiple pairs of socks that hadn’t been washed in two
months.
After a couple of weeks on the ice, Lees was ejected from his tent because
the men couldn’t stand his snoring. Worsley called it his “nasal trombone.” They
had already suffered through months of loud rumblings in the Ritz. One night in
May, when Hurley and Hussey were on watch, they had found Lees on his back
snoring at top volume. They stuffed sardines and dry lentils in his gaping mouth
to make him stop. Now, in the confines of a tent, the snoring became unbearable.
Lees accepted his exile without too much resentment. The sailors had built a
storeroom out of timbers from the wreck, and he made his own private bedroom
there.
November turned to December. The midnight sun returned. The men did what
they could to stay busy. McNish labored to make the lifeboats seaworthy. He
built up the sides of the Caird, the largest of the three, using Marston’s paints
and seal’s blood to caulk the boards. Hurley stayed spirited as always. He
tinkered with a bilge pump for the Caird to keep the boat from getting swamped
with water if they ever tried to launch it. He read novels and what was left of the
encyclopedia. He exchanged stories with Shackleton. They even planned a new
polar expedition for the future.
In the tents, the men held a running debate about their fate. Lees, true to
form, figured they wouldn’t reach the edge of the pack till June. Shackleton
called him a pessimist—the worst insult possible in the Boss’s view. They might
find open water any day, Shackleton insisted. On December 8, they practiced
loading the Caird and launching it in a small lead.
A week later they’d drifted to within 230 miles of Paulet Island. But they
were farther east than Shackleton wanted to be. If they got a chance to launch the
lifeboats, they would have to fight a strong west-to-east current in order to reach
Paulet Island or the narrow strip of icy islands just north of it known as the South
Shetlands.
If they couldn’t reach Paulet, they weren’t sure what they would do. There
were two more tiny specks of land on the north edge of the Weddell Sea—
Elephant Island and Clarence Island. Neither of them were inhabited. The men
might find solid ground there and a few penguins or seals to feed them for a
while. But the nearest human beings would still be 800 miles away at the
whaling stations on South Georgia—800 miles of the most treacherous seas on
the planet.
Shackleton called their new home “Patience Camp.” But at this point, patience
was wearing thin.
For his part, Shackleton had already put the failed march behind him. He
acted as though the new plan—do nothing until the ice freed them—was better
than the old. And until now, his unshakeable confidence had held the crew
together.
But after the third change in plans, McNish wasn’t the only one losing faith
in Shackleton. “The Boss at any rate has changed his mind yet once again,” the
geologist Wordie wrote their first night in Patience Camp. “He now intends
waiting for leads, and just as firmly believes he will get them, as he did a week
ago that the ice would be fit for sledging the boats at the rate of ten miles a day.”
To the men it now seemed likely they would have to winter on the ice, and
they began to watch the hunting trips with great anticipation. To make it through
a winter, they needed seal and penguin meat put away by the ton. But Shackleton
didn’t seem to feel the urgency. In early January 1916, Lees came back to camp
after shooting three seals. The Boss wouldn’t dispatch a sled to pick up the
carcasses. They had a month’s supply of meat now, he said. The ice was soft, and
he didn’t want to risk the trip.
Lionel Greenstreet fumed. Nothing so far, he reflected, had turned out the
way Shackleton predicted. “His sublime optimism all the way through,” the first
officer wrote, “is to my mind absolute foolishness.”
By January 13, word got around that Shackleton had made a decision to kill
at least some of the dogs. Every day for four days, hunting parties had scoured
the ice without spotting a seal. Their meat supply was dwindling, and it took one
seal a day just to feed the dogs. Everyone knew it was only a matter of time,
since they couldn’t take the dogs on the lifeboats. But when they heard about the
Boss’s decision, it still came as a shock.
The next day, Wild, Marston, McIlroy, and Crean harnessed their teams and
led them about a quarter mile away from camp. Macklin and McIlroy guided the
dogs one by one behind a hill of snow, where Wild waited with a revolver. The
dogs went willingly, their tails wagging, no idea what lay in store.
Wild had never in his life had a job as miserable as this one.
Back at camp, the men could hear the shots ring out across the ice, a grim
reminder of just how desperate their lives had become.
For four days, the wind blew in a gale from the southeast. By January 21 they
had drifted 74 miles north, and Shackleton was feeling good again. “Lees and
Worsley are the only pessimistic ones in the camp,” he crowed, “but this strong
wind even made Lees suggest larger steaks.”
Then, as if nature had chosen sides in the running battle between the Boss
and his storekeeper, the wind died.
Worse, the seals vanished. Hurley thought they had migrated south for the
summer; McNish thought they had gone north. Either way, a critical source of
food was gone.
For now, the men still had meat, but their supply of blubber for the stove was
running painfully low. They had to shut down one of the galley fires, and that
meant no hot milk at lunch. Drinking water had to be rationed since they
couldn’t afford the fuel to melt enough ice. The men started packing snow into
cans and tucking them into their sleeping bags at night so they would have water
by morning.
The sad crew of 28 men, stranded on the ice, were competitors in a race. But
unlike any race they had ever witnessed, they had no influence on the outcome.
On one side stood their food supply, on the other the ice. If the ice vanished
before their food, they had a chance at victory.
Everything depended on the wind, and they became obsessed with each gust.
They pestered Hussey, the meteorologist, for predictions, but he had nothing to
tell them. Without help from science, they fell back on superstition. Mention the
wind and you had to touch wood. The 7th of every month would bring good luck
and gusts from the south, but beware the 13th.
On February 19, an army of little Adélie penguins appeared on the floe. The
men turned out like medieval warriors with oars, pickaxes, and whatever else
they could find for weapons. They surrounded the birds and slaughtered more
than 300 of them. Most of the men could not have imagined themselves killing
like this just a year ago. Now, hunger had hardened them. “The result was very
satisfactory,” Hurley wrote.
But the Adélie slaughter hardly meant a life of luxury for the hunters.
Burning 20 penguin skins a day, they had fuel for 15 days. And the meat—two
or three pounds per bird—wouldn’t feed 28 men for long. McNish sat with his
diary that night and grumbled about their meager provisions. They celebrated the
butchery with “stewed penguin heart, liver, eyes, tongues, toes and God knows
what else,” he wrote. “I don’t think any of us will have nightmares from over-
eating.”
March dawned cold, damp, and calm. Winter was bearing down again, and the
weather ruled the daily routine. The hardship was relentless. When they relieved
themselves in the snow, they wiped themselves with ice. Their eyes teared
constantly in the wind. The tears froze into icicles at the tip of the nose, and
when they swiped the ice away, pieces of skin came off with it. To wash with
water meant risking frostbite. It had been four months since anyone had taken a
bath, and no one had a change of clothes left.
The only relief from the cold was to crawl inside a sleeping bag and stay
there—and that’s what most of the men did, from six at night to eight in the
morning. The boredom grew nearly intolerable. The only topic of conversation
that drew any interest at all was the wind. Every other subject had been covered
a hundred times over. “The monotony of life here is getting on our nerves,”
Greenstreet wrote. “Nothing to do, nowhere to walk, no change in surrounding,
food or anything. God send us open water soon or we shall go balmy.”
Stuffed into tents together 14 hours a day, the men did what they could to
keep from strangling one another. The doctor Macklin lay down one night with
his tentmates next to him and blasted each one of them in his diary. He was sick
of Clark, who sniffed all the time. Lees, who was back in the tent now, snored
“abominably.” When he wasn’t snoring, he did nothing but “argue and chatter”
with Worsley about trivial things. “At times like this,” Macklin complained,
“with Clark sniff-sniffing into my ear, my only relief is to take up my diary and
write.”
On March 9, an extended blizzard finally let up, and the men emerged from the
tents to enjoy their first time outside in three days. Captain Worsley went off on
skis to look for a seal that had been left on the ice two weeks earlier. On his way
back, he paused on a fragment of young ice. Beneath his feet he felt a swaying
movement he hadn’t felt in a year. As a sea captain, he knew the feeling well: It
was the slow, rhythmic swelling of the sea. And if the swells were once again
making their way through the ice, open water couldn’t be far away.
Worsley hurried back to share his discovery. Everyone turned out on the ice
and stared for hours into the slushy pools around the camp. They measured the
height of the swells and the time between them. With a few calculations from the
physicist James, they figured they were 20 to 30 miles from open water.
It was a welcome sight, this distant echo of the open ocean. But it also raised
another fear. If the swells increased, they would bend and warp the floes.
Eventually, the ice would give in and crumble under their feet. If that happened
before open leads formed in the pack, they would be in deep trouble. The pack
would be too fragmented to camp on and too tight to navigate. They would have
no choice but to launch the lifeboats into a minefield of jagged ice.
On March 17, they consumed the last of the flour. The cocoa was gone. In a few
days, the tea would be gone too. They had almost nothing to eat but meat and
fat, and without carbohydrates in their diet, the men were getting weak. “Hunger
is now our lot,” Lees wrote. “Not starvation, but real hunger all day long.”
The men started to covet food they wouldn’t have touched a few months
before. They drank pure oil rendered from blubber. They no longer had water to
wash dishes, so the hoosh arrived with extra texture—penguin feathers or
reindeer hair from the sleeping bags. No one seemed to care.
Worsley and Greenstreet started telling Marston, the plumpest of the crew,
that he’d be perfect if they had to resort to cannibalism. “We implore him not to
get thin and even go so far as to select chops, etc., off him and quarrel about who
shall have the tenderest part,” Worsley wrote.
Marston did not appreciate the humor. He did his best to avoid his
tormentors when he saw them coming his way.
“Land in sight! Land in sight!” The cry rang out across the camp the morning of
March 23. Shackleton had been peering west through the fog when he caught a
glimpse of a mountain in the distance. There had been plenty of false alarms in
recent weeks, so he called Hurley over, and the photographer agreed. They
decided the mountain belonged to Joinville Island, at the tip of the Antarctic
Peninsula. It was the first land they had seen in 14 months, and it couldn’t have
been more than 40 miles away.
Hurley could barely contain his excitement: “General rejoicing! If the ice
opens we can land in a day.”
But in fact, there was nothing to rejoice about. Joinville Island was
uninhabited. And with no open water in sight, it was also unreachable. So was
Paulet Island, which lay south of Joinville. Still stuck in the pack, the men were
drifting helplessly past the northernmost edge of Antarctica. Another 100 miles
north lay the stormy Drake Passage, the vicious stretch of open ocean just below
the southern tip of South America. And all that remained between the Drake
Passage and the crew were those two tiny, uninhabited specks in the sea:
Clarence Island and Elephant Island.
The next day, Lees tilted his head to the sky and gazed at the birds with
envy: “A flock of Dominican gulls passed over. Oh! had we but their wings.”
The moment of decision came two weeks later. The swells Worsley noticed had
grown into a menace. All around them, their once-stable floe had been wrenched
into slabs of ice not more than 100 yards square. “[W]e are in the hands of a
Higher Power,” wrote Macklin, “and puny mortals that we are, can do nothing to
help ourselves against these colossal forces of nature.”
On April 9, they woke to find a new crack headed straight for the camp. The
cry went up: “Lash and stow!” Shackleton ordered the tents struck and the
supplies ready to load.
But even with the ground vanishing under their feet, no one wanted to
launch. All around them treacherous chunks of ice churned in the current. Cracks
opened and closed in an instant. Slabs of ice slapped together with enough force
to crush their tiny lifeboats.
At 11 a.m., the pack left them no choice. A crack split the floe right where
the tents had been, leaving the crew barely room to stand. They slid the boats
awkwardly into the swells. Stumbling to keep their footing, the men hoisted
crate after crate into the three boats. Lees knew their rations to the ounce: 24
cases of sledding rations, 13 cases of nut food, 11 cases of biscuits, two 72-
pound bags of seal meat, and so on.
When the boats were full, they shoved off into the sea. It was the moment
they had been dreaming of for months. But now that it had finally arrived, they
felt lost. As hard as life had been on the floe, Shackleton thought, it had given
them a sense of security. Now their home had shattered under their feet. They
could see the peaks of Clarence Island and Elephant Island 60 miles to the north.
But no one knew if they would ever get there.
All afternoon, the three wooden boats bobbed and weaved through the churning
ice. Shackleton commanded the Caird, with Wild at the tiller. Worsley piloted
the Dudley Docker. Hudson and Crean took charge of the Stancomb Wills.
Shackleton had decided they would head northwest for the South Shetland
Islands. At the far western end of the island chain lay a C-shaped spit of land
called “Deception Island.” Supposedly, supplies and shelter had been left there
for shipwrecked seamen. Whalers also used the island’s bay as a summer way
station. If the men were lucky, a stray ship or two might still be sheltering in the
harbor.
Getting there, however, was going to be treacherous. The island was at least
150 miles to the west. In their path lay a minefield of sea ice. If the crew
managed to clear the ice, open water might prove even more dangerous. High
winds tormented the strait that separated the Antarctic Peninsula from the South
Shetlands. Huge swells could easily swamp the 20-foot boats.
For now, they rowed their way through a confusing mix of slush, slabs of
pack ice, and jagged hunks of broken bergs called “growlers.” In the waning
light they found a solid floe to camp on, about half the size of a football field.
Around 11 p.m., Shackleton was pacing the ice when he felt the floe lift on a
swell and crack under the camp. The biggest tent crumpled as the ice beneath it
gave way.
Shackleton rushed toward the tangle of canvas and yelled, “Are you
alright?”
“There are two in the water!” came the reply.
The crack had opened 4 feet wide, and in the water between the two icy
walls, Shackleton saw a white object, bobbing with the swells. He leaned down
and grabbed a handful of reindeer skin. With the crack threatening to slam shut
again, he heaved a sleeping bag and a struggling man to safety. The man was the
young stoker Ernest Holness, who came out sputtering and furious that he’d lost
his supply of tobacco to the sea. Seaman Walter How, the other man who had
fallen in, had managed to pull himself back to solid ground.
The men spent much of the night huddled around a blubber fire, listening to
killer whales blow in the leads. They took turns walking Holness around to keep
him warm. The ice on his clothes crinkled as he moved.
In the morning, giant hunks of ice surrounded their little island, slamming
together on the swells. They kept a close watch and saw an opening at 8 a.m.
The order went out to launch, and once again the men leaned into the oars,
staving off lumps of ice as they made their way through crowded channels of
water.
After two hours, they emerged into long, rolling swells—not just a lead, but
an unbroken expanse of water. For the first time since they left South Georgia 16
months ago, it felt like they had found the open ocean. At first, Lees felt a grand
sense of freedom to have left the pack behind.
Then he felt the morning’s hoosh rise in his stomach.
The swells tossed the boats like toys, turning several of the men pale with
seasickness. Still, they raised the sails for the first time in a stiff wind and made
good time. In the Docker Worsley handed out a lunch of biscuits and uncooked
dog pemmican—a dense mix of dried beef, ground beef, and fat. Lees could
barely look at the raw meat.
With a wet, cold blizzard beginning to blow, Shackleton ordered the boats
back into the edge of the pack in the late afternoon. They found a low berg,
about 20 yards across, and camped for the night.
At dawn, Shackleton, Wild, and Worsley took turns climbing to the crest of
their iceberg to look for open water. Giant swells swept through the pack, lifting
their little camp 12 feet in the air and then dropping them deep into a trough with
a sea of ice rising on either side. Hurley took a turn and saw an “infinity of ice-
covered ocean-berg fragments, shattered floes and brash ice, heaving … and
grinding, crunching, groaning into an indescribable chaos.”
A couple of the men, sick from the constant motion, vomited onto the ice.
Others forgot the danger they were in, entranced by the spectacle around them.
Shackleton, however, did not forget. He watched while their floe
disintegrated, hoping desperately to find an opening for the boats. He was
convinced that he had finally led the men to their end.
Around noon, he decided they had to take a chance. The ice surrounding the
floe loosened enough to get the boats into the water. They loaded up as fast as
possible and launched. Lees looked back to see their floe collide with another,
obliterating the channel they had just escaped with a “splitting, pulverising
crash.” They rowed furiously for a few minutes and cleared the treacherous belt
of ice that had nearly ended their journey.
But once again, the hardship was just beginning.
When darkness fell that night they found a floe, anchored the boats, and put the
cook ashore to heat some milk. But while they started to unload the tents, the
swells rose and the boats bobbed like corks. Shackleton gave the order to cast off
before the churning sea dashed the boats against the floe. They would spend the
night jammed into their boats, drifting aimlessly in the frozen pack.
For four months they had been stuck on the ice with no escape. Now they
had been exiled from it for good. The cramped tents that had been their prisons
just three days ago seemed like palaces next to the boats.
They spent the night huddled on the benches or in the icy bilge below. Spray
and sleet soaked their clothing, froze instantly, and coated them in ice. They
couldn’t row to keep warm because the darkness hid the obstacles lurking in the
water. Instead they jockeyed for position or held one another for body heat. One
or two men staved off marauding chunks of ice with the oars. Others simply sat
and groaned, trying to keep from losing their dinner into the sea.
When dawn finally broke, the men willed their frozen bodies to life. They
leaned into the oars, drained from lack of sleep. The sky was clear, and at noon
Worsley got out his instruments. With frost-numbed fingers, he measured their
position.
For three days they had barely slept. They had lived on raw meat and cold
biscuits. They had narrowly escaped being cast into 30-degree water and crushed
by 10-ton slabs of ice. For all their efforts they had somehow drifted south and
east of Patience Camp. They now found themselves farther from land than when
they started.
The next day, Shackleton took a good look at the three crews and didn’t like
what he saw. The men looked terrible, lips cracked and bleeding, faces crusted in
salt. Fingers had turned white from frostbite. Several of the crew had diarrhea
from eating raw meat.
Deception Island was now out of the question. They had to make land fast,
no matter the risk. Elephant Island and Clarence Island lay 80 miles away across
treacherous seas. If they didn’t get there fast, men would begin to die.
The Boss distributed crates of food to the Docker and the Wills and gave
everyone freedom to eat their fill. Then he led the way recklessly through the
ice. The men tried to fight off growlers with the oars. The Caird was gored by a
piece of ice above the waterline but kept going.
By the time darkness fell they had hit open water, and the men spent a
harrowing night at sea. Sheets of water sprayed the boats relentlessly. The
temperature plummeted. The men in the Wills had to bail constantly to keep the
water from freezing around the supplies in the stern. Even so, a thick crust of ice
weighed down the boat, threatening to sink her in the dark. Every hour, someone
had to chip away at the ice with an ax.
Even in the Caird, men were stretched to the breaking point. They had no ice
left to melt for drinking water, and thirst tormented them. Their tongues swelled
in their mouths from dehydration, making it hard to eat. To Hurley, it seemed as
though the torture would go on forever. “Never was dawn more anxiously
awaited, never did night seem so long,” he wrote.
Finally, the sun climbed above the horizon and glistened off the water, and
as the morning brightened, a distinct grayish-white shape, and then another, rose
from the water in the north. To the men it was the sight of hope itself—Clarence
Island and Elephant Island looming in the distance, not more than 30 miles away.
It took yet another day and night, but on the morning of April 15, they rowed
beneath the cliffs of Elephant Island. The shore was nothing but sheer rock walls
and ice, pounded by the sea. To Hurley the coastline looked “wild and savage
beyond description.”
Finally, they found a beach guarded by a treacherous-looking row of rocks.
Shackleton decided they had to risk it. They had been rowing in half-hour shifts
to stay warm. By the time each shift gave up the oars their hands were frozen to
the handles. They had started chewing hunks of frozen seal meat to let the blood
moisten their mouths.
Some of the men in the Wills looked like they wouldn’t survive another half
a day without water and a hot meal. Blackborow was losing his feet to frostbite,
and the saltwater had worn painful boils into everyone’s skin. Hudson had
collapsed and was no longer making sense. Frank Wild decided that half the
crew had gone insane from cold, hunger, thirst, and pure exhaustion.
The boats maneuvered across a narrow channel between the rocks until the
hulls scraped solid land. Giddy with relief, Shackleton insisted Blackborow take
the honor of stepping ashore first. The Boss had come to like the young
stowaway and knew he’d had a hard time of it in the Wills. Apparently, he didn’t
know how badly frostbitten Blackborow’s feet were. When Blackborow made no
move to climb out, Shackleton nudged him over the side. Blackborow’s feet
failed to support him, and he promptly sat down in the frigid surf. He had to be
carried onto the beach, where he sat while the men unloaded the boats.
Two hours later, smoke rose from a blubber stove in the middle of the rocky
beach. On top of it, a pot of powdered milk simmered. Steaks from two freshly
killed seals awaited room over the flames. Around the stove, the men kneeled on
solid ground for the first time in more than 16 months. When they smiled, beads
of blood rose through the cracks in their lips. They buried their faces in the rocks
or gathered pebbles in their hands and let them trickle through their fingers. To
Shackleton they looked like “misers gloating over hoarded gold.”
The men spent their first day on dry land moving crates, setting up tents, and
eating. A herd of Weddell seals had welcomed them to the beach. In exchange
for their hospitality, the cook went on a killing spree with an ax. When he was
done, he served the weakest of the men first with hot milk. He spent the next
hours frying seal steaks and blubber. The men ate them as fast as they came off
the fire.
That night, they had trouble getting comfortable. The smooth bed of snow
they’d slept on for six months had been replaced by a rocky beach. But a few
rocks poking at their ribs seemed a small price to pay for the knowledge that the
ground below could not crack and send them plunging into the sea.
Hurley, for one, was ecstatic: “How delicious to wake in one’s sleep and
listen to the chanting of the penguins mingling with the music of the sea. To fall
asleep and awaken again and feel this is real. We have reached the land!!”
But when the initial elation wore off it wasn’t exactly clear what they had
gained. Hurley and the rest of the men could count themselves pioneers of a
barren wasteland. Elephant Island supports no year-round life besides the moss
and lichens that cling to its rocks. Seals and penguins visit the island but desert it
in the winter.
It didn’t take the men long to realize they couldn’t stay where they had
landed. They could see watermarks on the cliffs at the back of the beach. When
high tide came in they’d be swamped.
No one wanted to get back in the boats, but on April 16, the day after they
landed, Shackleton sent Wild out in the Wills with four men to scout the coast.
They found another haven, and the next day, the crew packed up the boats and
moved. After a miserable six-hour sea journey they made camp yet again. They
called their new home “Cape Wild.”
They settled in as best they could. At least eight men were completely
useless. The engineer, Louis Rickinson, had collapsed from a mild heart attack.
Blackborow still couldn’t walk. Hudson’s hands hadn’t recovered, nor had his
brain. He lay in his sleeping bag, refusing to move.
As Greenstreet’s hands came back from frostbite they blistered badly. On the
boat journey to the new beach, the liquid in the blisters froze solid. When he
came ashore he saw steam rising from freshly butchered seals. He stumbled over
to a carcass and plunged his hands inside to warm them up.
Their new home was no more comfortable than the old one. Hurley said it
was “like the courtyard of a prison only 250 yards by 50 yards wide.” Cliffs
1,200 feet high and the icy slope of a glacier formed the walls of the prison.
Penguin poop, known as guano to the seamen, carpeted the ground. Winds swept
down from the cliffs powerfully enough to lift pebbles in the air. “A more
inhospitable place could scarcely be imagined,” Macklin concluded.
A five-day blizzard greeted them at Cape Wild, and it seemed as though
some of the men had finally had enough. According to Wordie they had to be
“dragged from their bags and set to work.” Driving snow rushed down the throat
with every breath. The first night in the new camp the wind shredded the largest
of the tents, and the men had to pull the remains around them and huddle till
dawn. McNish curled up with his diary the night of April 20 and made a
prediction: “I don’t think there will be many survivors if they have to put in a
winter here.”
In front of the men, Shackleton was as confident as ever. He knew that many
of them were ready to give up, and it was his job to make sure they stayed
motivated. “The boss is wonderful,” Wordie wrote, “cheering everyone and far
more active than any other person in camp.”
In private, Shackleton struggled with the fear McNish had confessed to his
diary. As the blizzard persisted, he took the doctor Macklin aside and asked him
how long he thought the men would last on the island. At this point they had full
rations for five weeks, maybe three months if they cut their meals to near
starvation level. Seals and penguins would add to their supply, but no one knew
when the animals would disappear for the winter. If the conditions didn’t change,
Macklin said, they’d start losing men in a month.
The fifth day on Elephant Island, Shackleton confirmed the next plan, which was
no surprise to the men. They had been talking about it since before they left
Patience Camp. As soon as the weather cleared, the Boss would launch the Caird
with a crew of five.
Cape Horn at the tip of South America and the Falkland Islands in the South
Atlantic were the nearest targets. But they both lay north and west of Elephant
Island while the current and the wind ran hard to the east. Shackleton didn’t
think they stood a chance of fighting their way north. Instead they would make
the longer voyage east to South Georgia, find their way to one of the whaling
stations, and return with a ship to carry the rest of the men back to civilization.
It could all be done, he claimed, in a month. They’d be back before the end
of May.
Many of the men wondered if it could be done at all. They had traveled no
more than 80 miles to get to Elephant Island and it nearly killed them. South
Georgia lay 800 miles away across seas that had swamped far bigger boats than
the Caird. “I would rather die than undertake such a journey,” Lees confided to
his diary.
Lees, and perhaps a few others, thought Shackleton was making a mistake.
The whaling station at Deception Island lay 200 miles to the southwest across
calmer seas. Lees thought that should be their target. But the Boss was
convinced the pack was too dense to make the journey now. And the whalers had
no doubt abandoned the harbor for the winter. The men would have to wait till
September at the earliest to make the trip. Shackleton was convinced they didn’t
have that long.
McNish went to work in the howling gale building a deck for the Caird. Right
now she was open to the sky and the sea, and the men would never survive the
journey exposed to the surf. With help from Marston and the old seaman
McLeod, the carpenter scavenged wood and nails from the Docker and plywood
from old crates. They used runners saved from one of the sleds to build a
framework across the gunwales. They nailed boards on top for decking. Then
they stretched canvas from the shredded tents across the entire thing, hoping it
would keep most of the raging ocean out.
McNish had a personal stake in his work on the Caird because he would be
aboard for the voyage to South Georgia. For all his faults, the carpenter had
proved himself essential to the crew several times over. If the Caird needed work
in the middle of the Drake Passage, Shackleton wanted McNish aboard to do it.
For the rest of the crew, Shackleton chose Worsley for his navigation skills,
the indestructible second officer Crean for his experience and his loyalty, and
two hardy sailors named Timothy McCarthy and John Vincent.
All work came to a halt on April 22 when a blizzard turned Cape Wild into a
war zone. No one left his sleeping bag unless he absolutely had to. The men on
mess duty could barely walk upright long enough to get food from the galley and
hustle it back to the tents. Ice and gravel, tossed by the wind, slashed the skin on
their faces. A 10-gallon aluminum pot went airborne and landed far out to sea.
Socks, mittens, sheets, wood, and boots followed the same route. Lees lost a
shirt even after weighing it down with two stones the size of a man’s head.
Two days later, the gale had finally died. Just after noon, 22 men stood on the
shore of Cape Wild, watching the Caird’s sail lift on a swell and then vanish into
a trough. The 22-foot boat carried four weeks’ worth of food, two casks of water,
a ton of rocks as ballast, and six men—including their leader, their navigator,
and their carpenter.
According to Hurley they were “six proven veterans seasoned by the salt and
experience of the sea.” He had confidence they would make it to South Georgia
in 14 days and return as planned. Then again, Hurley rarely expressed anything
without confidence.
Wordie, who was more of a realist, watched the sea until the sail disappeared
for the last time. He and the rest of the men turned back to their wind-swept
prison with its walls of granite and ice. That night he went to bed thinking of the
Caird. He tucked himself into his sleeping bag on a reeking bed of penguin
guano, and wrote, “She is our only hope.”
Their first night out in the Caird, Shackleton and Worsley sat up piloting the
boat through the darkness. Worsley took the tiller and Shackleton huddled for
warmth with his arm around the Skipper’s shoulder. They had rowed their way
through the first hazard of the voyage—the loose pack that surrounded Elephant
Island. Now they were under sail, taking advantage of winds out of the south.
They would sail as far north as they could to make sure they cleared the ice.
Then they would ride the westerly winds toward South Georgia.
Shackleton was in a reflective mood. Alone with Worsley, he didn’t have to
bolster anyone’s morale. In the dark he dropped the cloak of confidence he
showed to the world and allowed the sound of pessimism to creep into his voice.
He was sick with regret that he had to split up the party and leave 22 men
behind. It was the only reasonable choice—he knew that. They couldn’t simply
camp on a barren island and wait until they starved to death. And if the voyage
had to be made, as the leader of the expedition, he couldn’t leave it to anyone
else.
But it was a terrible choice to have to make, and now the fate of the men
depended on the whims of the weather and the sea. Already, the stiff west-to-east
current of the Drake Passage was making itself felt. They had sailed into the one
place on Earth where the ocean circles the entire planet, unbroken by land.
Winds lash the water at speeds up to 200 miles per hour. With no obstacle for
12,000 miles, waves known as “Cape Horn Rollers” can reach heights of 80 or
90 feet. The famous biologist Charles Darwin witnessed them when he sailed
past Cape Horn, at the tip of South America, in 1834. “One sight … ,” he wrote,
“is enough to make a landsman dream for a week about death, peril and
shipwreck.”
The swells didn’t approach 80 feet the night of April 24, 1916. But they
were perilous enough. When they caught the Caird broadside they swamped her
deck and sent saltwater streaming through McNish’s handiwork. Less than 24
hours out, it was already clear they would spend the entire voyage soaked to the
bone.
Shackleton rolled cigarettes, and they fought the wind and the spray to get
them lit. He asked Worsley if he thought they’d made the right choice. If they
headed for Cape Horn, they could cut the distance almost in half. Worsley
assured him the wind would blow them too far east. South Georgia was the only
reasonable target.
As the boat rode on into the dark, Shackleton asked again. Worsley gave him
the same answer. It was an unfamiliar scene, someone offering reassurance to the
Boss. But Shackleton obviously needed it. He felt responsible for the entire
ordeal, starting with his decision 16 months earlier to pass up a landing at
Glacier Bay and start the overland trek from there. His men now sat on Elephant
Island with nothing to do but wait. He was in fact their only hope. If they didn’t
survive, he told Worsley later, he would feel like a murderer for the rest of his
life.
As the Caird disappeared into the waves on April 24, Shackleton’s trusted friend
and second-in-command Frank Wild was left guarding the survival of 22 men.
And when the party turned to trudge back to camp, Wild noticed a couple of
them crying. Someone said, “that’s the last of them,” and Wild felt like picking
up a rock and knocking the pessimist down. Instead he spent a minute or two
cursing him out.
Frank Wild was Shackleton’s man, and he had taken up where the Boss left
off, doing what he could to keep the men from sinking into despair. And like
Shackleton, his most effective tactic was to put them to work.
On the 28th, the men gave up on their ragged tents and made a shelter out of
the Wills and the Docker. It was grueling work for a crew that had been starved
of carbohydrates for months on end. They hauled stones from 150 yards away
and stacked them into walls four feet high. Lees said it took three men to haul a
load normally fit for one. With the end walls in place, the boats were turned
upside down to make the roof. Marston hung tent canvas from the gunwales of
the boats for the sidewalls.
When it was done, the men jockeyed for positions inside. Ten of them
immediately claimed the benches of the overturned boats for beds. The rest slept
underneath on a thin carpet of canvas stretched over the pebbles and the penguin
guano.
The finished structure was something to be proud of—until they woke the
next morning buried in snow. Yet another blizzard had swept the beach during
the night, finding every little imperfection in the hut. Boots were frozen so stiff
they had to be put on in stages. The men brushed off the snow and sat on their
sleeping bags, quietly cursing their miserable prison of rock and ice. “All
attempts seemed so hopeless,” Macklin wrote, “and Fate seemed absolutely
determined to thwart us.”
On April 26, two days into the Caird’s voyage, a westerly gale ripped into her
sails. They had turned east, and Worsley did his best to keep them on course for
South Georgia. But the boat pitched and rolled violently on the waves. The
Skipper needed two men steadying him on either side to free up his hands for the
instruments. Even then, he found it impossible to line up his sextant accurately
with the sun. He figured they’d made 128 miles so far. But he wasn’t at all sure
he could find an island 700 miles away.
As they fought their way through the giant swells, the men took four-hour
watches in groups of three. The sailors on duty took turns steering and pumping
seawater out of the hold.
For the men below there was no escape from the water. It sprayed into the
hatch near the stern. It trickled through the seams in the canvas. As fast as they
could pump it out it pooled in the cracks between the supplies and the ballast. It
soaked underwear and socks, boots and mittens, sweaters and sleeping bags.
When the men went below for their four hours’ rest, their bags had frozen solid.
All they could do was crawl inside and wait for their body heat to thaw the skins.
On the 28th, McNish took off his boots and socks to find his feet swollen
and stark white. Frostbite had set in, and Vincent had it even worse. He was
already having trouble moving around. They had made 146 miles by Worsley’s
reckoning—650 to go.
Shackleton kept a close eye on the men. When someone looked to be
struggling, he noticed. But instead of singling the poor sailor out, he simply
ordered an extra ration of hot milk or a biscuit for everyone.
Food, however, was a chore. It took three men just to heat a pot of hoosh.
One man held the oil-burning camp stove; the other two protected it from the
spray and kept the pot from overturning when the boat rocked. Every cup of
hoosh came clogged with reindeer hair from the sleeping bags. The biscuits were
drenched and tasted like the sea.
They made 92 miles the fifth day and 78 the sixth. At times the swells rose
so high that when they rode into the troughs the wind died and their sails
slackened. If the men looked sideways, it seemed they were riding in a tunnel
made of water.
The temperature plummeted the night of April 30, and they woke around 3
a.m. to find the boat riding dangerously low in the water. Shackleton and
Worsley stood up in the hatch and discovered the reason. A thick sheet of ice
coated the entire deck, and the extra weight was slowly sinking the Caird.
One by one in the pitch dark, the men climbed onto the deck to hack away at
the ice. The wind whipped and the boat lurched under their feet. They fought to
keep their balance on the sheer surface. Every five minutes, one man would
crawl back, exhausted and fingers frozen. Another would take his place.
At one point the boat lurched and Vincent, whose frostbitten feet would
barely support him anymore, lost his footing. He slid toward the edge of the
boat. Worsley leaned over to grab his hand but missed. Vincent managed to
clutch the mast just before he went overboard into the Drake Passage.
Worsley took Vincent’s place and breathed a sigh of relief. He found it less
stressful to be out on the deck himself than to watch the others, knowing that
with one slip he might have to sit helpless while a boatmate disappeared into the
frigid ocean.
Two hours later, the Caird still had six passengers. Once again she rode high
enough in the water for the men to relax. They retired below for a cup of hair-
infested hoosh. That day and the next they would have to perform the de-icing
ritual again.
Just after noon on May 2, a wandering albatross soared in on a southwest
wind. It swept down to within 10 feet of the Caird. Its wings, built for long-
distance flight, stretched nearly half the length of the boat. The bird circled the
men for hours, filling them with envy. Worsley figured it could fly Elephant
Island to South Georgia, hundreds of feet above the bone-chilling spray, in 15
hours.
They had been at sea for eight days. They were not yet halfway there.
Back on Elephant Island, the men rallied after the blizzard swamped their hut.
With Wild’s encouragement, they patched the holes in the walls and brought in a
blubber stove to warm the cramped space. Someone decided to call their home
the “Snuggery.” It became a haven from the wind, the sleet, and the snow.
During the day, the men arranged crates around the Snuggery so they could
sit for meals. Over hoosh or penguin steak they debated the date of their
liberation. Guesses ranged from May 12 to June 1. Lees was among the few
willing to disagree out loud. He was convinced they would have to winter on the
island. Even if the Caird made it to South Georgia, he thought, the pack would
close and the Boss wouldn’t make it back until spring.
Finally, after two weeks of brutal weather, May 2 brought a welcome sight:
the sun. “This is the first time we have seen it since reaching the God forsaken
spot,” Lees wrote. By midmorning a display of soggy sleeping bags and clothes
lay around the camp, drying in the air.
By their tenth day at sea, the men on the Caird had been enjoying the sun for
two full days. During the day the boat looked like the camp at Cape Wild,
sleeping bags and clothes draped over the deck to dry. “We manage to get most
of our gear into a pleasantly moderate state of dampness,” wrote Worsley.
That was about all they could hope for. And the sun hadn’t made any real
improvement in their condition. No one on board could feel his feet anymore.
Without any room for exercise, all they could do was sit and wiggle their toes,
hoping they wouldn’t get any worse. Their hands were raw and blistered from
frostbite. Knees were scraped and bleeding from crawling among the rocks in
the keel. Nasty boils from the saltwater rose on their wrists, ankles, and
backsides.
They’d been making 30 to 50 miles a day for several days. As they made
their way through a relatively calm sea on May 4, Crean noticed they had
finished one cask of drinking water. He tapped into the second and last cask and
took a drink. To his horror, it was only half full and tasted salty. He immediately
thought back to the day they left. As they were loading the Caird, one of the
casks had been dropped overboard. Crean realized that it must have been
punctured on the rocks.
South Georgia still lay 300 miles to the east, and the only water they had left
was contaminated with salt. Drinking it could dehydrate them faster than not
drinking at all.
Crean called Shackleton down from the deck to give him the news. The
Boss, feeling the strain of the voyage, snapped at his loyal second officer.
Obviously they had no choice, he said; they would have to drink it anyway.
They made more than 150 miles the next two days. But everyone grew
weaker by the day. On May 6, Shackleton cut the daily water ration to half a cup.
Vincent grew sullen and dejected. McNish had stopped writing in his diary. The
men sometimes begged for an extra drink, but the Boss refused to bend. If
Worsley’s reckoning could be trusted, they should see land in two days. But if
the wind shifted they could spend another week on the boat, and they couldn’t
afford to exhaust their supplies.
The next day, the boat lurched on unpredictable seas. Worsley tried several
times to calculate their position. He told Shackleton he could be at least 10 miles
off. They had been planning to aim for the northwestern tip of South Georgia
and sail around the north edge to one of the whaling stations in Stromness Bay.
Now, Shackleton didn’t want to risk missing the island to the north. If they did,
there would be nothing but 3,000 miles of ocean between them and the African
coast. Instead, they decided to make for the broad southwestern shore. That
would put them on the other side of the island from the whaling stations. But at
least they would be standing on dry ground.
On May 9, 200 Gentoo penguins popped up from the ocean onto the dry ground
at Cape Wild. The men had been killing penguins since they arrived, and they
had it down to a system. They would chase the 2-foot-tall birds up the sloping
side of the glacier. Lees would then climb up and herd seven or eight of them
down at a time, where they were met by a mob of salivating, bearded men with
clubs and axes.
On this day, Lees had made the climb six or seven times when Wild called
off the hunt. Fifty penguins was enough for the day, Wild said.
The storekeeper was livid. Two men could go through meat from a penguin
in a single meal. At this point they had six weeks’ worth of seal meat. They were
eating the penguin meat as fast as they butchered it. Why wasn’t Wild taking
every opportunity to stock up for the winter?
The next day, Hurley arranged 20 bearded, grim-faced men in front of the
Snuggery for a picture. They were a sorry-looking lot. Wordie was nursing an
infected hand. Rickinson was recovering from his heart attack and had a giant
boil on his backside from the boat journey. Greenstreet was still hobbled from
frostbite. Blackborow, whose feet were beginning to turn black, didn’t make it
out of the hut for the photograph. Hudson hadn’t been out of his sleeping bag
much at all. No one knew exactly what was wrong with him, but they described
his condition as a “nervous breakdown.”
They were “the most motley and unkempt assembly that ever was projected
on a plate,” Hurley thought. “All looking forward to the relief which we
earnestly hope to be here in a few days.”
On May 8, their “relief” woke to choppy seas and a thick mist. The crew of the
Caird ate breakfast quickly so they could go on deck to look for land. They had
made good time the day before, and Worsley figured they were getting close.
The mist gave way to tantalizing breaks of sun. Then the sky closed again and
they couldn’t see a thing. Could it be that Worsley’s calculations had been wrong
all along? Had they missed South Georgia and were now headed out to sea?
Then, just after 10:30 a.m., Vincent saw a clump of seaweed floating in the
surf. Not long after, a cormorant appeared in the sky above the boat. As all
sailors knew, cormorants rarely stray more than 15 miles from land.
The fog lifted again just after noon, and the men heard McCarthy call out,
“Land!” Sure enough, to the northeast, a black cliff rose from the sea, spotted
with patches of snow. It couldn’t have been more than 10 miles off, but clouds
moved in and cut it off from view.
Shackleton said simply, “We’ve done it.”
No one responded. They stared toward the horizon, as if needing another
glimpse before they were convinced it was true. In a minute or two the clouds
parted again and the land reappeared. Now they could make out grass on the
hillside—the first vegetation they’d seen since they left the very same island in
December 1914.
The Caird touched the shore at 5 p.m. two days later. She’d been battered by
hurricane force winds on the way in, and for a time it seemed as though she
would be smashed against the land they’d been dreaming of for two weeks.
Now, she floated in the calm waters of South Georgia’s King Haakon Bay.
Shackleton jumped into 3 feet of water and dragged her toward the beach.
Three others jumped out and held the boat against the pull of the surf while
Shackleton fixed the rope around a rock.
They all came ashore and stood as best they could on shaky legs. To the side,
someone noticed a small stream of clear, cold water, running to the sea. In an
instant, six men were on their knees, funneling water into their mouths with
cupped hands.
Above the kneeling men rose a line of craggy, snow-covered peaks. Thirty
miles beyond the mountains, on the northeast coast of the island, lay the only
human settlements within 950 miles. No one had ever set foot more than a mile
inland on South Georgia. But the six men couldn’t think about that now. At the
moment, they were just grateful to be alive—and back on solid ground.
At 2 a.m. on May 19 Shackleton, Worsley, and Crean climbed out of their
sleeping bags and into the cold morning air of King Haakon Bay. They made a
pot of hoosh and devoured it. By the light of a full moon they gathered a 50-foot
length of rope, an ice ax, a compass, and binoculars. They shoved three days’
worth of sledding rations and biscuits into socks. They picked up a small pot, a
box of 48 matches, and the oil-burning stove with enough fuel for six hot meals.
Shouldering the socks and the rest of their equipment, they headed east along the
beach.
The men picked their way across the foot of a glacier, with the surf lapping
at their feet. Then they turned inland up a long, snow-covered slope in the
general direction of the whaling stations at Stromness Bay. In their path lay an
obstacle course of 6,000-foot peaks and valleys filled with glacier ice. The
whalers Shackleton had spoken to in the past assumed it was land that no one
could cross. Then again, no one had ever needed to.
Shackleton, Worsley, and Crean had no choice. The Caird had been battered
on her way into King Haakon Bay, and no one thought she could stand a 150-
mile journey around South Georgia to Stromness Bay. The overland route was
the only option. Worsley figured it was 17 miles in a straight line. But the rugged
terrain would force them onto a much longer path.
Since they beached the Caird, the men had spent the last week gathering
strength. They feasted on albatross and elephant seal. But even after they’d
consumed all the clean water and hot food they could, Vincent and McNish were
in no shape to travel. They would stay behind with McCarthy.
With the moonlight guiding them, Shackleton, Worsley, and Crean trudged
up the slope, sinking shin-deep in snow. They roped themselves together for
safety. Shackleton broke trail, Crean followed, and Worsley brought up the rear.
The Skipper checked his compass and called out “Starboard!” “Port!” or
“Steady!” as though they were still aboard a ship.
To the east lay a range of peaks silhouetted against the sky like the fingers of
a hand. Between the fingers the ridgeline dropped into high passes. Through one
of those passes, Worsley figured, lay a route to Stromness Bay.
When the three men reached the foot of the range, they had no idea which
pass would give them the easiest path. Twice they trudged up the mountainside,
carving steps in the ice when the slope got too steep. Twice they peered over the
edge of a pass to find a sharp slope that dropped off into a 1,500-foot cliff a few
yards away.
By the time they reached the third pass it was late afternoon. They sat atop a
ridge so sharp they could straddle it. The light was slipping away. A dense fog
crept up the mountain range on either side. They could barely see the slope
below them. It looked more gradual than the last two, but no one could be sure.
Shackleton decided they had to risk it. The ridge stood at about 4,500 feet. If
they got caught at this elevation at night without sleeping bags, they could easily
freeze to death.
Still roped together, they made their way down, the Boss hacking steps into
the slope. A half hour later they had descended 100 yards at best. With darkness
closing in, Shackleton carved out a ledge big enough for the three of them and
peered down the slope. It seemed to be flattening out, but it vanished in the fog
before they could see the bottom. There was no way to be certain it didn’t fall off
into a sheer cliff.
Shackleton told the men they had to speed up their descent, no matter the
risk—and he knew exactly how. At the Boss’s instruction, each man looped his
section of rope into a coil. Worsley sat on his coil and linked his legs and arms
around Shackleton in front of him. Crean did the same behind Worsley. Then,
with the fate of 28 men resting in their laps, they launched themselves into the
fog.
On May 19, as the three men careened down a mountainside on South Georgia,
pack ice moved in and choked Cape Wild. For weeks, the Elephant Island party
had been watching the wind the way they had at Patience Camp. When it blew
from the south, the pack ice loosened. Penguins gained access to their beach,
oblivious to what lay in store for them. When the wind blew hard from the north,
the ice moved in. Their food supply vanished—and so did any path a relief ship
might follow to the shore of Cape Wild.
But no matter how icebound the cape became, Wild woke the men every
morning with the same hopeful greeting: “Lash up and stow! The boss may
come today.” In a few minutes, sleeping bags were rolled and ready to go—not
that any of the men ever wanted to see the inside of one again.
The entire day revolved around meals—supplying food for them, preparing
them, eating them, and talking about them. At 9:30 a.m. they sat around the
stove for a breakfast of fried penguin breast. Wild assigned tasks for the day:
There might be mending to do on the Snuggery, but mostly they hunted, skinned,
and butchered penguins. They ate hoosh at 12:30 p.m. and hoosh again at 4:30
p.m. At night Hussey often played banjo while some of the men sang. By 7 p.m.
they were in their sleeping bags and they didn’t come out for 14 hours.
As winter closed in, Lees’s anxiety grew. Seals were few and far between.
And if the pack clogged the cape for good, penguins would probably vanish too.
In the middle of May they ran out of seal blubber to fuel the fire and started
burning penguin skins. The stove consumed 20 or 25 of them a day, and on May
15 they had enough for just two weeks.
As May wore on, Lees counted off the dwindling supplies. On May 23:
“goodbye sardines.” The next day: “Farewell tapioca.”
Fewer and fewer of the men in the Snuggery were willing to bet on an early
escape. “Installing ourselves for the winter, little hope being entertained of
immediate relief,” wrote Hurley on May 23. “It is now a month since the Caird’s
departure.”
But most of the men shared Macklin’s reluctance to give up hope. Every
morning, even when pack ice clogged the ocean as far as the eye could see, the
doctor climbed to the highest point on Cape Wild and scanned the water for a
sail. “In spite of everything,” he wrote, “I cannot help hoping to see a ship
coming along to our relief.”
When Shackleton, Worsley, and Crean pushed off the lonely South Georgia ridge
on their improvised sled, Worsley was terrified. Snow lashed at their faces as
they hurtled through the darkness. At any moment the ground could disappear
beneath them, and they would plummet a thousand feet to their deaths. The
months of cold and starvation, the mind-numbing hours in the tents, the
harrowing boat journeys through the ice—all of it would come to nothing.
Then, as they gathered speed and the mountain rushed past, Worsley
suddenly realized he was grinning. Maybe it was delirium from lack of food and
water. Maybe it was months of tension finally breaking loose. But before long all
three men were yelling into the wind like they were out for a toboggan ride on
Christmas Day.
After a minute or two the slope began to flatten out. They slowed and came
to a stop in a snowbank. The men stood up and looked at one another. In the
strangely formal gesture they used to mark the milestones of their survival, they
shook hands.
Then they looked back up the slope. No one knew how far they had slid.
Shackleton, who was not given to exaggeration, figured 900 feet. The more
colorful Worsley would later claim 3,000.
Finally, Shackleton said, “It’s not good to do that kind of thing too often.”
They had two more slopes to climb, and it took them all night. But in the
first glimmer of daylight they stood at the top of a ridge. They could see the
tortured rock formations of Stromness Bay below. A short while later, the throaty
sound of a steam whistle rose from the bay below. It was 7 a.m., and the whistle
was calling the whalers to work. It was the first sound of civilization the men
had heard since they left the island on December 5, 1914.
Seven hours later they stumbled into the Husvik whaling station in
Stromness Bay, not far from Grytviken, where they had stayed before setting out
17 months ago. The familiar stench of decomposing whale hung in the air. They
paused for a moment, suddenly self-conscious. They hadn’t bathed in more than
half a year. Their beards were long, their clothes tattered and stained. Worsley
surprised Shackleton by producing a couple of safety pins from his pocket. He
made some hasty repairs to his pants that only called attention to the mess.
The first people they saw were a couple of boys, 10 or 12 years old.
Shackleton asked them how to get to the station manager’s house. The boys took
one look at the strangers and ran.
Finally, the three survivors stood facing the station manager, who had hosted
them briefly during their month on South Georgia in 1914. Now, the man stared
at them blankly.
“Don’t you know me?” Shackleton asked.
“I know your voice; you’re the mate of the Daisy,” the station manager said,
confusing him with someone else.
The response came, quiet and matter-of-fact: “My name is Shackleton.”
On Tuesday morning, May 23, the steam whistle that had welcomed
Shackleton, Worsley, and Crean to Stromness Bay three days earlier sounded
again. This time it blew a farewell to the three men, who stood on the deck of a
whaler called the Southern Sky. They steamed out of the bay and turned west for
Elephant Island.
Three days was not a lot of recovery time, but Shackleton felt he couldn’t
wait any longer. The coldest days of winter had nearly arrived. The pack would
be closing soon—if it hadn’t already.
During their time on South Georgia, the men had been bathed, shaved, and
fed. They had told their story to a host of astonished whalers. They also retrieved
McNish, McCarthy, and Vincent from King Haakon Bay and arranged to have
them sent back to England. Seeing McNish without layers of bulky sweaters and
jackets, Shackleton realized how emaciated the carpenter was. Their rescue had
come just in time.
As the Southern Sky motored through the Drake Passage, Shackleton started
to worry. On the third night out, the temperature dropped and a thin coat of ice
formed around the ship. They veered north to avoid the pack, and then steered
south for Elephant Island. When ice blocked their way they ventured farther
west and tried again. The pack ice that had closed in on Cape Wild in the middle
of May still surrounded the island.
Recognizing that the Southern Sky wasn’t built for battle with the pack,
Shackleton gave in and retreated north to the Falkland Islands. He had been
stopped 70 miles from Elephant Island, no closer than he had been when they
had launched their boats from Patience Camp.
In the Falklands, Shackleton searched desperately for another ship. He
cabled the British navy, and word came back that they couldn’t send a ship until
October.
Shackleton had assumed that the war would be a thing of the past. In fact,
battles were still raging around the world. The young men of Western Europe
had been dug into trenches for two years, slaughtering one another. More than 10
million people had died in the war already.
It was a rude awakening for Shackleton. He had expected a rousing
welcome, but the rest of the world had other things to worry about.
All Shackleton had earned for his ordeal on the ice was a cable from the
king: “Rejoice to hear of your safe arrival in the Falkland Islands and trust your
comrades on Elephant Island may soon be rescued.”
On Elephant Island, Shackleton’s comrades were wondering just how soon that
rescue would come. “One cannot help but be a bit anxious about Sir Ernest,”
Lees wrote on June 7 from his perch in the Snuggery. “One wonders how he
fared, where he is now and how it is that he has not yet been able to relieve us.”
The most common guess from the men around the stove was that the Boss
had tried to get to them in a whaler and failed. Now he was hunting for a ship
that would be a match for the ice. Accurate as it was, that scenario left an
important question unanswered: Would he make it before they starved to death?
The penguins came and went, providing food and fodder for the running
feud between Lees and Wild. On June 8, after a few days of bloody slaughter,
Wild thought they had food to last them through August. Lees insisted they
would run out in July.
On June 15, the monotony was interrupted by a grim but essential task. The
flesh in Blackborow’s frostbitten toes had died and turned completely black—a
condition known as gangrene. Now the rot was threatening to spread up his leg.
The doctors Macklin and McIlroy decided they would have to amputate the toes
on Blackborow’s left foot.
Wild ordered everyone out of the Snuggery except Hudson and Greenstreet,
who couldn’t walk. The doctors stripped to their undershirts. Hurley tended the
fire while Wild boiled the surgical instruments in a hoosh pot to sterilize them.
Macklin held a cloth soaked in chloroform over Blackborow’s face until the
patient dropped off to sleep. Hudson, still bedridden, turned away. Greenstreet
followed the whole procedure, fascinated. When Macklin cut the toes off
Blackborow’s foot they dropped with a frozen clatter into a tin can below.
After three hours the medical team emerged from the hut. The rest of the
men had huddled in a cave and cut each other’s hair to pass the time. Cold,
hungry, and bored, they filed back into the Snuggery to find the patient sleeping
peacefully.
By the beginning of June, the men on Elephant Island had been waiting for
nearly two months. Wild had stopped the charade of rolling up the bags in the
morning. He insisted that everyone except the invalids get an hour of exercise
each day. But there wasn’t much work to do. Sometimes the men stayed in their
sleeping bags nearly the entire day. Macklin noted on July 6 that he could lie for
hours on end “without even so much as thinking.”
Greenstreet summed it up even more vividly one night: “Everyone spent the
day rotting in their bags with blubber and tobacco smoke—so passes another
rotten day.”
On Saturday, July 22, while the men in the Snuggery toasted their loved ones,
Shackleton anchored for the night in an Argentine schooner, 100 miles away. It
was his third attempt to reach Elephant Island. A month earlier he had come
within a few miles of Cape Wild before the ice nearly destroyed his ship.
Now, Worsley once again tried to carve his way through the pack. But the
schooner was half the size of the Endurance. She was pushed around by slabs of
ice heavier than the ship. Worsley couldn’t get them anywhere near Cape Wild.
At the beginning of August, exactly two years after the Endurance left
London, Shackleton gave up again. He and Worsley fought their way through a
gale back to the Falklands, knowing they were running out of options. By this
time, for all they knew, half the crew could be dead. Shackleton could no longer
talk about the men he’d left behind without growing sullen and testy. Worsley
noticed that the Boss’s hair had turned gray since they left England.
On August 6, just after the schooner turned her stern to Elephant Island and
headed north, Frank Hurley stood on a rise the men called Lookout Bluff.
Temperatures had started to climb above freezing the last week. The sun shone
bright on the ocean. A number of men joined Hurley, warming themselves on the
rocks. Beyond their little inlet, a few icebergs absorbed a pounding from the
Cape Horn rollers. Aside from the bergs, the sea was clear of ice, as far as the
eye could see. “It would be ideal weather for the ship to arrive,” Hurley
concluded.
Even as it seemed more and more unlikely, rescue was still everyone’s
fantasy. The Snuggery had become intolerable. On warm days, snowmelt seeped
in from all corners. The floor turned into a soupy mess of rotting seal bits,
reindeer hairs, and penguin guano. At one point Lees found a pool of penguin
blood under his sleeping bag and half a pound of rancid meat stuck between the
stones. They had started referring to their home as the “sty.”
Blackborow, who had barely left the hut in four months, had the worst of it.
His foot wasn’t healing well, and the doctors were worried about infection. The
young stowaway was in a lot of pain, but he never complained. The engineer
Alfred Kerr had appointed himself Blackborow’s personal nurse. On August 12,
he sewed a few transparent photo coverings into the wall of the tent so
Blackborow could have some light.
By mid-August the food supply was dwindling, and Lees wasn’t the only
one worried anymore. They were nearly out of penguin breast so they boiled the
skinny legs and ate them for breakfast. On August 20, the nut food supply gave
out, casting everyone into a deep depression. A few days later they were stewing
penguin carcasses and seal bones to make broth. They boiled seaweed into a
jelly and ate it. The men spent hours scouring the rocks in shallow water for
limpets, shellfish that are so tiny it took hundreds to make a meal.
On August 29, they had seen exactly 6 penguins in 2 days—enough to feed a
single breakfast to 12 men. They had 5 days’ worth of food left, and the men
were openly worrying about Shackleton. Even Wild admitted the Boss and the
rest of the Caird’s crew might well have been swamped in the Drake Passage
and lost forever.
That day, Wild announced to a few of the men that he had made up his mind.
At the beginning of October he would take the Docker from the Snuggery and
patch it up as best he could. With a crew of four men, he would launch for
Deception Island.
The plan was a long shot. They’d be running against the wind, and all they
had for a mainsail were tattered pieces of tent canvas. As for the men left behind,
they were already packed like sardines into their hut. With the Docker gone their
space would be cut in half.
But when he sat with his diary that night, Lees felt like Deception Island was
probably their only hope. “The idea of a ship ever coming now,” he wrote, “is
getting more and more remote.”
The next day, a clear, cold dawn gave way to gloomy skies by late morning.
Several feet of wet snow had accumulated around the Snuggery in the last two
weeks. The men spent the morning shoveling and catching limpets. At around 1
p.m., they were sitting around the hut eating a hoosh made from seal backbone
when they heard Marston’s voice outside. “Wild, there’s a ship! Shall we light a
fire?”
Twenty men, who had been hungry and listless a moment before, suddenly
sprang to life. Mugs full of precious hoosh dropped to the ground. The entire
crew tried to exit the tent at once. In seconds the wall had been torn to shreds,
and a crowd of bony, bearded castaways hobbled down the slope to the shore.
Even Hudson roused himself from his sick bed. He and Lees carried Blackborow
out and sat him down where he could watch the excitement.
The ship was still a mile off, and everyone took a long look to make sure
that it wasn’t an iceberg. They had been fooled before and couldn’t tolerate it
happening again.
She was unmistakably a ship—but it wasn’t clear what kind. She wasn’t a
whaler or an ice-breaker but some kind of steam tug. The men thought maybe
she had arrived by accident, but they didn’t care, as long as she didn’t leave
without them.
Hurley made a pile of seal blubber and dry grass and doused it with
kerosene. It exploded in flames when he put a match to it, but failed to produce
much smoke. Macklin ran to an oar they had dug into the snow and hoisted his
jacket as high as it would go.
Neither effort was especially effective, but at this point it didn’t matter. The
ship was fast approaching, until she anchored 150 yards from shore. The men
still couldn’t tell if Shackleton was aboard.
Finally, the ship lowered a lifeboat, and a sturdy figure climbed down into it.
The men let out as loud a cheer as they could manage. As the boat approached,
Shackleton called out, “Are you all well?”
“We are all well, Boss,” Wild yelled back.
“Thank God,” Shackleton said.
He stepped off the boat into the crowd of grateful men. Perhaps proud of the
fact that they had survived four months on their own, the men begged
Shackleton to come see the Snuggery.
The Boss refused. He was already looking anxiously out to sea for signs of
their old enemy, the pack. In an hour, he had all 22 men and their meager
possessions aboard the ship. Worsley pointed them north for Argentina.
There was no ice in sight.
At 7 a.m. on October 8, 1916, the crew of the Endurance gathered one final
time at the railway station in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Shackleton and Worsley
were leaving for a ship that would take them to the other side of Antarctica. The
Ross Sea party—the men who laid supplies for the overland trek that never
happened—had been trapped on the ice for nearly two years and needed rescue.
The men at the railway station had been ashore for a month and they were
beginning to look like human beings again. Their clothes were clean. A year’s
worth of stove soot and penguin grease had been scrubbed and scraped from
their skin. They’d been shaved, clipped, and snipped by a barber.
But no amount of grooming could erase the effects of their ordeal.
Blackborow had been willing to do almost anything to join the expedition. Now
he was in the hospital recovering from the emergency amputation of his toes.
Thomas McLeod was just starting to gain back the 100 pounds he had lost.
The men had been crammed together in close quarters for two years, and yet
they had trouble saying good-bye. Both the Boss and the Skipper felt depressed
to be leaving the others behind. The old seaman McLeod wept when he said
good-bye to William Bakewell. And Bakewell felt just as sad. “I had to say
goodbye to the finest group of men that it has ever been my good fortune to be
with,” he recalled later.
A train pulled up. Shackleton and Worsley stepped inside and they were
gone. How easy this journey must have seemed after 18 months spent paying for
every mile in blood and sweat, aching limbs and frostbitten fingers.
For most of the men, the return to Europe was a shock. They had been through
the most grueling experience of their lives. The rest of the world was trapped in
its own brutal hell.
The Endurance had left England during the first week of World War I. Since
then, millions of people had died on the battlefields of Europe, Africa, and the
Middle East. It was the bloodiest war Europe had ever seen, and the crew of the
Endurance had missed it all. “We were like men arisen from the dead to a world
gone mad,” wrote Shackleton.
That world didn’t exactly give the men a hero’s welcome. Barely a village in
England had gotten by without losing a good portion of its young men in battle.
Those men had made the ultimate sacrifice, and even though the crew of the
Endurance had been through hell, they had survived. When Shackleton returned
from one of his attempts to rescue the Elephant Island crew, a newspaper
reporter overheard someone on the docks grumbling about what a waste the
expedition had been. “ ’E ought ter ’ave been at the war long ago instead of
messing about on icebergs,” the man complained.
At least some of the men took that criticism to heart. They felt ashamed they
had missed so much of the war. Nearly all of them enlisted in the military as
soon as they could. Most made it through to the end. Tim McCarthy, who had
survived an open-boat voyage across the worst seas in the world, was killed at
sea by enemy fire six weeks after he signed up. Alf Cheetham, third officer on
the Endurance, went down with his ship in the North Sea less than two months
before the war ended.
By war’s end, Shackleton had found his way back to the snow and ice. He was
directing the transport of troops and supplies in northern Russia. Now, he had to
think about making a living again. And that meant telling the story of the
Endurance to whoever would pay to listen.
Reliving the ordeal on the ice wasn’t easy for Shackleton. Before he left for
the war, he had dictated much of the story to an author he hired to help him write
a book. Shackleton had to stop and leave the room to compose himself during
the retelling. After the first half hour, he turned to his longtime friend and
adviser Leonard Tripp, who was sitting in on the sessions. Fighting back tears,
he said, “Tripp, you don’t know what I’ve been through, and I’m going through
it all over again, and I can’t do it.”
But Shackleton did do it, because he needed the money. He traveled through
England showing Hurley’s slides and telling the story to half-full rooms. The
experience wore him down. Night after night he recounted the details—the diet
of blubber and bannocks, the shooting of the dogs, the desperate boat journeys.
All the while the images flickered behind him like a bad dream—the Endurance
crushed to death in the ice a thousand times over. Before long Shackleton was
drinking heavily and wracked with colds, fevers, and back pain.
Three years back at home had brought him to a familiar place: It was time
for another expedition.
Shackleton hatched a vague plan to sail around the entire Antarctic
continent. But the real goal was simply to get away from civilization again. He
didn’t have the patience for bills and cocktail parties. “I am just good as an
explorer and nothing else,” he had written to his wife before leaving in the
Endurance.
Or as Reginald James the physicist put it, “Shackleton afloat was a more
likeable character than Shackleton ashore.”
Frank Wild took command of the Quest and sailed without much purpose for a
few more months. Before he headed home to England, he navigated past
Elephant Island. The men squinted over the side of the ship at the windbeaten
shore where Shackleton had rescued them from near certain death.
That night, Macklin sat down to write in his journal. “Ah what memories
what memories!—they rush to one like a great flood & bring tears to ones
eyes… Once more I see the little boat, Frankie Wild’s hut, dark & dirty, but a
snug little shelter all the same. Once more I see the old faces & hear the old
voices—old friends scattered everywhere. But to express all I feel is
impossible.”
The Quest turned and sailed for home. Behind them, Shackleton lay buried
under the snow on South Georgia with the stench of rotting whale in the air. It
was exactly what he would have wanted. Before the Quest left England, he had
told a friend that he didn’t want to die in Europe. He said, “I shall go on going
till one day I shall not come back.”
ballast: heavy material placed in a boat to make it more
stable in the water
bilge: lowest part of a ship where water collects
bo’sun: an abbreviation for boatswain, the sailor in charge
of most work on deck
chanties: songs sung by sailors, often in rhythm with their
work
dirge: a slow, mournful piece of music
floe: a large sheet of floating ice
fugue: a piece of music with one interwoven theme played
by different instruments
growler: a floating chunk of ice, broken free from an
iceberg
gunwales (pronounced gunnels): the top edge of a ship’s
sidewalls
mutiny: deliberate revolt against officers in the military or
on board a ship
port: the left side of a ship when you’re facing forward
scurvy: disease that terrorized explorers for centuries,
caused by a lack of vitamin C in the diet
skua: seabird that scavenges for food by stealing fish from
other birds
snow petrel: white seabird that feeds on fish and dead
animals
spar: strong pole used to support lines or sails on a ship
starboard: the right side of a ship when you’re facing
forward
stern: the rear of a ship
stoker: sailors whose job it is to throw fuel into the boiler
that powers a ship’s steam engine
Antarctica is unusual in the history of exploration because the people who risked
their lives there knew they wouldn’t get much in return—nothing that would
make them rich, anyway. In all its 5.4 million square miles, Antarctica had not a
single acre of fertile soil. If the ground harbored gold or silver, it was buried
under thousands of feet of snow and ice.
The fact that Antarctica had little of practical value to offer to visitors makes
its story a happy one compared to the rest of the world. In the Americas and in
Australia, European explorers created new nations but left a trail of destruction
in their wake. In the years after Europeans arrived, close to 90 percent of the
American and Australian indigenous population died, either in battle or from
diseases carried across the ocean by the newcomers. On the west coast of Africa,
slave traders captured or bought more than 12 million human beings and
transported them to the Americas. For 350 years, black men and women worked
and died in slavery from the sugar plantations of Brazil to the tobacco fields of
Virginia.
In Antarctica, however, the entire continent survived almost unchanged. It
was uninhabited by humans when the first European explorers arrived, so there
was no one to befriend, conquer, or enslave. No one could settle there. Hunters
went after whales and fur seals with a vengeance. But for most of the last 50
years, hunting has been outlawed. The Antarctic whale and fur seal populations
are recovering.
Today Antarctica is the one large piece of land on Earth that has barely been
touched by humans. About 5,000 people stay there during the summer. That’s
one resident for every 1,080 square miles. During the winter, the population
drops to 1,000.
Nearly all of Antarctica’s residents are there for one reason: to do scientific
research. More than 50 countries have signed a treaty agreeing that no single
nation can claim to own the continent. The treaty bans all military activity and
mining.
Thanks in part to the international agreement, Antarctica is one of the least
polluted places on Earth. There are no landfills there. All trash has to be burned,
recycled, or carried back to civilization. Antarctic waters are free of the toxic
runoff that has created low-oxygen “dead zones” in other ocean regions.
Unfortunately, that’s not the full story. Antarctica may not have much of a
human presence on its shores, but in today’s world, no place on Earth can stay
fully isolated from human activity.
As we burn fossil fuels to run factories, cars, and power plants, we pump
methane and carbon dioxide gas into the atmosphere. Those gases act like a
greenhouse around the planet. They trap heat from the sun close to the Earth.
As the gases build up, our climate warms, and Antarctica is already feeling
the effects.
The entire continent is surrounded by floating ice shelves—the barrier ice
that the Endurance encountered as it got close to Vahsel Bay. Scientists now
think warm water is drifting in from the north and melting the ice shelves from
below. In July 2017, an iceberg the size of Delaware broke off the Larsen C ice
shelf, about 250 miles south of Paulet Island. In that area, near the tip of the
Antarctic Peninsula, temperatures have warmed by about 5 degrees in the last 70
years.
All of this may sound like good news if you’re planning a visit to Antarctica.
And it may, in fact, make a journey through the Weddell Sea less treacherous
than it was for the crew of the Endurance.
But for the rest of the planet, melting ice means trouble, because when ice
turns to water it drains into the sea. Some scientists predict that melting in
Antarctica alone could cause sea levels to rise 3 feet in the next century.
Eventually, many experts think, all the ice in Antarctica will disappear. It will
happen slowly over hundreds, maybe thousands of years. But as it does, coastal
areas all around the world will flood. New York, Miami, London, Amsterdam,
Beijing, Venice, and Tokyo will be underwater.
The men aboard the Endurance were humbled by the size and power of the
frozen world around them. Macklin and Lees used almost identical language to
describe how the landscape made them feel—like “puny mortals” overwhelmed
by the “colossal forces of nature.”
Something about that experience felt larger and more authentic than the
world of meetings and bosses and social obligations that awaited them at home.
On Christmas 1915, Lees wrote in his diary, “Were it not for a little natural
anxiety as to our ultimate progress I have never been happier in my life than I
am now, for is not this kind of existence the ‘real thing,’ the thing I have for
years set my heart on.”
Maybe it was that longing that drew these men to a world that offered them
tremendous risk without much material reward. They wanted to feel dwarfed by
icebergs and humbled by the wind. It was a world they couldn’t tame. They just
hoped to prove they were worthy of it for a while.
Now, the ice that nearly killed them is in danger from the civilization they
tried to leave behind. I wonder how that would make them feel.
Books
Television
Articles
the temperature hadn’t made it above zero: Worsley diary, Oct. 26,
1915
“All hope is not given up”: Hurley diary, Oct. 26, 1915
“Do you hear that?”: quoted in Alexander, The Endurance, 88
Chapter 2: Southbound
“I think it is a good thing”; a “perfect pig”: Lees diary, Aug. 17,
1914
“It will all be put right”: Lees diary, Oct. 1, 1914
“God Save the King”: Worsley diary, Oct. 26, 1914
“All the troubles of the South”: quoted in Smith, Shackleton, 248
“All the strain is finished”: quoted in Fisher and Fisher, Shackleton,
331
“Do you know that on these expeditions”: Wild’s account of the
encounter, quoted in Hurley, South with Endurance, 12
“It is impossible to view this trade”: Hurley diary, “An Epitome of
our Stay at South Georgia, Nov. 5, 1914 to Dec. 5, 1914”
“She is breathing her last”: Nordenskjöld, Antarctica, 536
“something which resembles the chill of death”: Nordenskjöld,
Antarctica, 290
Chapter 3: Ramming
bare land less than 2 percent of the time: for natural history of
Antarctica see Fothergill, Life in the Freezer, 16
“I have never heard or felt”: Cherry-Garrard, Worst Journey
“It’s a splendid sensation”: Worsley diary, Dec. 16, 1914
“Worsley specialized in ramming”: quoted in Butler, The Endurance
They fought their way south: Worsley kept track daily in his diary.
“one great solid desert snowfield”: Lees diary, Dec. 18, 1914
played soccer, Antarctic style: described in McNish diary, Dec. 20,
1914
“Clark! Clark!”: Worsley diary, Dec. 12, 1914
The scenery, to Hurley: described in Worsley diary, Jan. 24, 1915
“Sir Ernest looks dead tired”: Lees diary, Jan. 11, 1915
Shackleton named the inlet Glacier Bay: Shackleton, South, p. 27
“Spirits are high all round”: Lees diary, Jan. 18, 1915
Chapter 5: Wintering
Lees added sausage: incident described in Lees diary, Nov. 22, 1915.
Lees spends a lot of time complaining to his diary that no one but
him understands the need to ration their food.
“nasal trombone”: Worsley diary, March 12, 1916
“As far as I have seen”: quoted in Lansing, Endurance, 89
“I hate to see so much good food”: Lees diary, Dec. 22, 1915
“The Boss at any rate has changed his mind”: Wordie, “Weddell Sea
Log,” Dec. 29, 1915
“His sublime optimism”: quoted in Butler, The Endurance
The men picked their way across the foot of a glacier: crossing of
South Georgia described in this account taken mostly from
Shackleton, South, 192–204, and Worsley, Endurance, 145–162
“Starboard!” “Port!” “Steady!”: Worsley, Endurance, 148
“Lash up and stow!”: Shackleton, South, 215
“Installing ourselves for the winter”: Hurley diary, May 23, 1916
“In spite of everything”: quoted in Lansing, Endurance, 202
“It’s not good to do that kind of thing”: Worsley, Endurance, 156
“Don’t you know me?”: Shackleton, South, 201
They steamed out of the bay and turned west for Elephant Island:
account of the rescue attempts based on Shackleton, South, 205–
217, and Worsley, Endurance, 163–179
“Rejoice to hear of your safe arrival”: Shackleton, South, 209
“One cannot help but be a bit anxious”: Lees diary, June 7, 1916
“without even so much as thinking”: quoted in Lansing, Endurance,
209
“Everyone spent the day rotting”: quoted in Alexander, The
Endurance, 176
“The idea of a ship ever coming now”: Lees diary, Aug. 29, 1916
“Wild, there’s a ship!”: Lees diary, Aug. 30, 1916
“Are you all well?”: Worsley, Endurance, 179
Illustrations by: cover and throughout, Shane Rebenschied; 16, 80, 131 maps Jim
McMahon
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responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.
e-ISBN 978-1-338-20735-4