Day and Lashly with motor sledge.

£750 · Offered by Shapero Rare Books

Classic Ponting photograph from Captain Scott's Terra Nova expedition (1910-1913), showing Bernard Day, who was in charge of the motor sledges and William Lashly, an Antarctic veteran, who served as Chief Stoker on both the Discovery and Terra Nova expeditions. Photograph taken in November 1911. The Terra Nova expedition was supposed to be the high-water mark of the Golden Age of Antarctic exploration; led by Captain Robert Falcon Scott, the expedition was to have been the first to reach the South Pole, marking the event with the planting of the Union Jack flag. However the more professionally equipped Norwegian expedition led by Roald Amundsen got there first. Nevertheless Scott's expedition will always be the one best remembered on account of the tremendous courage and bravery shown by Scott and his companions, Wilson, Bowers, Oates, and Evans on their return from the Pole in appalling conditions - perhaps best exemplified by Lawrence 'Titus' Oates who walked from the tent into a blizzard whilst suffering from frostbite and gangrene, knowing that he was not going to survive the journey but hoping that his self-sacrifice might help the others survive. Scott originally chose a light-weight French-designed motor sledge which he tested in the Alps, but this was abandoned for a sledge designed by Major B.T. Hamilton, built in Britain and tested in Norway. The weight of these sledges was a problem, and the first to be offloaded from the Terra Nova fell through the ice and sank to

  • Binding: Hardcover

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