Shackleton Tweets
Endurance Expedition
2:
Midwinter 1915 to the Sinking of the Endurance
The events of the expedition: 1 - South Georgia to Midwinter 1915 | 2 - midwinter to the sinking of the Endurance | 3 - life on the ice | 4 - lifeboats to Elephant Island | 5 - rescue mission to South Georgia | 6 - rescue from Elephant Island
2 Jul 1915
Early July, hints of the returning
sun with beautiful sunrise glows on the horizon about noon.
Ice good for runs with dogs, poor for skiing.
15 Jul 1915
Severe blizzard been blowing for
last two days, temps from -21F to -33.5F winds of 60-70 mph
making the ship tremble, subsiding a little now.
15 Jul 1915
All hands out to shovel snow, many
dogs buried in their kennels but all survive. At least 100 tons
of snow piled at the port side of the ship.
20 Jul 1915
Ice-pressure indicated by distant
rumblings and formidable ridges appearing is an increasing cause
of anxiety as they gradually approach us.
20 Jul 1915
Catch 4 emperor penguins today in
a small lead, a very welcome addition to our larder, they are
from 45 to 75lbs.
21 Jul 1915
It is as if a mighty giant is beneath
the ice, ice is rafting to 15ft high moving at 200 yds an hour,
driven by the power of distant storms.
21 Jul 1915
Creaking and groaning ice, we have
24 hour watches, the deck is cleared to bring the dogs aboard
in a moment.
The Endurance is rocked slowly around by the
moving ice
23 Jul 1915
An unknown practical joker substituted
coal in the bucket for Sir Ernest's stove with ice, spluttering,
steam and swearing ensued...
23 Jul 1915
Ship shaken by heavy bumps in the
night. Long months of rest and safety seem to be at an end,
and a period of stress has begun.
30 Jul 1915
The sun's edge has been seen
thrown above the horizon by refraction, it is now delightfully
light at noon, the end of the darkness is near.
30 Jul 1915
SW storms have set the ice northwards,
chances of clearing the pack in spring rest on getting north,
real fears of the ship being nipped.
1 Aug 1915
10 am a year to the day we left London
our floe began to break up cracking creaking and rafting of
ice tips the ship to one side and back.
1 Aug 1915
Our 45 dogs were brought aboard in
8 mins, split floes push together again and rise up. Picture
- Worsley with rafted ice.
1 Aug 1915
Dog Town and landmarks are no more,
left behind or broken up, the ship groans under the pressure,
we pole away an ice lump from the rudder.
1 Aug 1915
We were standing at the ready to
take to the boats and leave the threatened ship when it all
stopped in an instance, Antarctic serenity prevailed once more.
3 Aug 1915
9 hours of twilight. Occasional rumbles
from the ice. Dogs rehoused on deck in wooden kennels we have
moved 37 miles north in 3 days.
18 Aug 1915
Rigging encrusted with rime. 10 hours
daylight today but cold with drifting snow.
Rime or hoarfrost formed on the ships rigging
19 Aug 1915
Two emperor penguins captured yesterday
and a further ten today, Hudson is our champion catcher, a highly
valued skill.
Hubert Hudson, navigating officer, the best penguin catcher
29 Aug 1915
Hurley took a picture of the ship
at night with 20 flashes, stumbling around half blinded banging
his shins after!
The Endurance in the depth of the long Antarctic winter night
1 Sep 1915
The ice was active in the night,
ships timbers groaning and creaking, snapping sounds, planks
on deck buckle and relax again but no leaks yet.
3 Sep 1915
Very cold, temp down to -47C, heavy
rime on all surfaces, Having to melt snow for dogs to drink,
they used to eat snow when out on the ice.
3 Sep 1915
Exercise the dogs, soccer in the
afternoon.
Shakespeare
4 Sep 1915
Explosions from the ice in the night,
ship creaks as if in pain, some doors no longer close, the ship
is leant over.
9 Sep 1915
Hercules is the leader of the canine
orchestra. 2 or 3 times a day he starts a deep melodious howl,
in 30secs the pack is in full song...
9 Sep 1915
We live very well, looking forwards
to getting fresh seal meat again. Powdered milk formerly disliked
and given to the dogs is now popular with the men.
1 Oct 1915
The ice seems on the move again the
ship is shaken from stem to stern, nearly shook Orde-Lees out
of the crows nest! It moves and then nothing.
5 Oct 1915
Dozens of crab eater seals appearing,
managed to get 3. Many bear large scars from close encounters
with killer whales. The floes are moving.
5 Oct 1915
Several cracks appeared in the ice,
the rudder can be seen not to be as damaged as feared though
we are held in a huge ice cradle 40ft deep.
12 Oct 1915
Today we move to summer quarters
in the upper cabins in high spirits, everywhere drips with a
thaw, we eagerly anticipate an early release.
13 Oct 1915
The ship is upright again and free
of the floe, dogs are in uproar at the penguins, seals and even
whales all around.
Crabeater seals on the sea-ice
14 Oct 1915
The breeze freshened today and we
progressed 200-300 yds along a lead before the ice closed and
held us fast again.
17 Oct 1915
Huge ice pressure, metal floor plates
bent and buckled, at last the ship rode upwards, the stern lifted
9ft we survived against expectations.
19 Oct 1915
Spent the day making good after yesterday,
at 4pm floe pressure pushed the ship over to 50 degrees, we
thought the ship might turn turtle..
19 Oct 1915
Rescued dogs from kennels, everything
is at a ridiculous angle. Battens have been fixed to the deck
to aid walking, later the ship righted herself gently.
20 Oct 1915
Got steam up today for the first
time in 8 months and turned the engines, watchmen are set to
take immediate advantage of any open lead.
21 Oct 1915
The ice grinds all around making
a sound like distant traffic, the Endurance shakes slightly
but constantly, only major upheavals cause concern.
22 Oct 1915
The open water is freezing again
and cementing the floe together once again, nothing to do but
wait, some are better at this than others...
23 Oct 1915
A strong NW wind results in formidable
movement of the floes and pressure ridges, water-sky over 100
miles to the north shows open water.
24 Oct 1915
A great crash this evening, the Endurance
listed over at 8 deg, all went out to find Shackleton already
there.
Strong winds push the pack ice which exerts
enormous pressure on the Endurance
pushing her over and causing
damage
24 Oct 1915
Worse than imagined, sternpost almost
wrenched out, water pouring in, steam got up and the bilge pumps
started.
24 Oct 1915
The ship is bent by the pressure,
McNish is building a coffer dam to keep the water back, others
are moving stores preparing to abandon ship.
24 Oct 1915
The steam pumps are not up to the
job and water is still rising. Worsley Greenstreet and Hudson
are down in the bilges to clear ice from the hand pump.
24 Oct 1915
Worsley - We dig a hole down through
the coal, beams and timbers groan and crack around us like pistol-shots.
The darkness is almost complete.
24 Oct 1915
Hand pump working through the night,
trenches dug in the ice are easing the pressure, all are wearing
extra clothing ready to abandon ship.
25 Oct 1915
Ice pressure has subsided, hand pump
is being worked round the clock, McNish has worked without sleep
to build a dam across the inside stern.
25 Oct 1915
The outlook is bad, heavy pressure
ridges are all about, many tons of ice are pushed by winds or
currents, piled up and tossed aside.
25 Oct 1915
We are helpless intruders in a strange
world, our lives depend upon the play of grim elementary forces
that made a mock of our puny efforts.
26 Oct 1915
Pumping water from Endurance continues,
we are burning seal blubber as extra fuel to try and eke out
the coal, the roar of ice pressure surrounds us.
26 Oct 1915
Serene sunshine, blue skies and over
22 hours of daylight contrast with our predicament, 3 boats,
sledges and provisions are lowered to the ice.
27 Oct 1915
Our worst fears are realised, the
Endurance is stove in, crushed by the ice beyond anything we
can do for her.
This time there was no going back, the Endurance
was fatally damaged by ice pressure
no longer floating but
being held in place by the ice
27 Oct 1915
Shackleton - A
sickening sensation to feel the decks break under one's
feet, great beams bending and snapping with a noise like heavy
gunfire.
27 Oct 1915
Like a cat with a mouse, the ice
plays with her lifting and letting her slip, holds flooded but
she does not yet sink "Out all sledges".
27 Oct
1915
Our intention
is now to make for one of 3 islands, the nearest is 346 miles
away. We have 2 boats on runners and all dog sledges, a camp
is made on the ice floe.
27 Oct 1915
We were putting tents up for the
night when the ice began to split beneath us, boats, stores
and equipment had to be moved 200 yds to a larger floe.
28 Oct 1915
A cold and uncomfortable night, at
midnight the ice cracked right through the camp, all were roused
to rescue gear and move once more.
28 Oct 1915
Continuous and terrible sound of
cracking timbers all day and night from Endurance, yards on
foremast carried away.
29 Oct 1915
Polar clothing issued by Marston,
lots were cast for the 18 reindeer fur sleeping bags Bakewell
called shenanigans.
30 Oct 1915
We are to start a march across the
ice at 3pm to reach land, limited gear only, all other items
to be thrown away, we call this place "Dump Camp".
30 Oct 1915
Shackleton set an example and threw
away his watch, 50 gold sovereigns, silverware etc we did the
same, piles of scientific and navigation gear lie discarded
in the snow.
30 Oct 1915
Mrs Chippy, the ships cat, and 4
pups were shot as we set off, decades later McNish when interviewed
would only say "Shackleton shot my cat"!
30 Oct 1915
28 men and 49 dogs set off pulling
sledges and boats we thought 5-7 miles a day possible, this
first day we did 3/4 of a mile.
Initially the men tried to pull the lifeboats and supplies towards land
31 Oct 1915
A wretched day, heavy snow, warm,
everything wet, very heavy work pulling the boats, made just
3/4 of a mile again, sounds of killer whales all night.
1 Nov 1915
It has been slow and hard progress
across the floe, Shackleton has decided to sit it out, we make "Ocean
Camp" 1.5 miles from the ship.
After exerting huge amounts of effort but making very little progress, it was decided to make a camp on the ice
1 Nov 1915
Awful surface for travel, the snow
is 2 ft deep everywhere, we sink hip deep at times, to save
sledging rations we are to live on seal and penguin.
2 Nov 1915
Wild took dog teams and sleds to
retrieve supplies from Dump Camp and the ship, though her deck
is now under water.
Supplies and materials were salvaged from the ship before she finally sank and taken to Ocean Camp on the sea-ice
2 Nov 1915
Hurley cut through a thick wall and
dived through 4ft of mushy ice to rescue his negatives. (so
we have the pictures on this page today).
All of the pictures you have seen up to this
point of the Endurance were rescued
by Frank Hurley diving
through ice cold water to reach them
3 Nov 1915
Wood, rope and other provisions are
being retrieved from the ship by relays of sledges, short rations
are leading to weakness.
It took a few days after she was abandoned
for the ship to be crushed and sink.
Time taken to go back
again and again to rescue what was possible.
4 Nov 1915
A party cut through the 3" deck
of the Endurance 3ft under water to get stores, a gush of water
with walnuts and onions emerged.
4 Nov 1915
Cases are guided to the opening by
boathooks, cheers or groans when they buoyantly emerge according
to their contents, calm ice conditions help.
4 Nov 1915
We now have 3 tons more stores, all
the flour and most of the sugar, for the first time in 10 days
we have eaten well, it has been hard work.
5 Nov 1915
A galley has been made from sails
and spars, the wheel house has been removed intact, a lookout
has been made to sight our position and also to spot seals and
penguins.
A lookout post built from salvaged timber to
see over the flat ice
6 Nov 1915
Howling blizzard, drifts everywhere,
provisions are under 2ft of snow, Hurley & engineers are
cutting an ash chute with a chisel to make a blubber stove.
10 Nov 1915
The blizzard is over but has pushed
us north. We are 300 miles from Snow Hill Island which we hope
to reach. Weather warm and fine, we would prefer to be pushed
by a blizzard.
10 Nov 1915
It is almost beyond conception we
are living on a colossal ice raft, 5ft separates us from 2000
fathoms of ocean drifting to who knows where.
11 Nov 1915
Hurley and Shackleton sort through
photographic negatives to reduce weight and space, 400 are broken
to prevent later rescue and 120 kept.
11 Nov 1915
All food is eaten carefully and accurately
divided. One man shuts his eyes calls random name, while cook
points to each portion, saying "Whose?"
14 Nov 1915
No dry place to go in the thaw, warm
temps enable us to pack rations and provisions for the sledges
in preparation for our journey.
14 Nov 1915
A distant crash from the Endurance
later in the day as the mast went, the bows are under water
and are over-ridden by ice, soon she will be gone.
17 Nov 1915
We keep returning to Dump Camp to
retrieve what we can, it is a monument of desolation with costly
equipment and expensive clothes scattered.
18 Nov 1915
Our 3 boats have been named James
Caird (25ft), Dudley Docker and Stancomb Wills (both 21ft) after
the main backers of our expedition.
18 Nov 1915
The carpenter is adding the gunwale
from the now derelict motor boat to the James Caird, raising
her height by 10".
Modifications being made to one of the ships
lifeboats, the 'James Carird'
20 Nov 1915
The blubber stove performs admirably,
baked "bannocks" of flour, fat, water, salt and baking
powder alleviate our craving for bread somewhat.
21 Nov 1915
She has gone. Lying in our tents,
the Boss called "She's going!" 1.5 miles away
we saw the bows down, stern in the air..
The Endurance before she was trapped and crushed
21 Nov 1915
...one quick dive and ice closed
over the Endurance for ever. She was a link with the outer world
our isolation is complete "She's gone boys".
Next page: 3 - life on the ice
Credits, sources and references
Diaries - the diaries of expedition members were as sources of information and quotes to inform this narrative of the expedition.
Ernest Shackleton - South! - at Project Gutenberg
Thomas Orde-Lees - see book links below
Frank Worsley - see book links below
Frank Hurley - link
Harry McNeish (Henry McNish) - link
Pictures - from a variety of sources particular credit to:
State Library of New South Wales - link
National Library of Australia - link
National Library of New Zealand - link
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - link
Ernest Shackleton Books and Video
South - Ernest Shackleton and the Endurance Expedition (1919)
original footage - Video
Shackleton
dramatization
Kenneth Branagh (2002) - Video
Shackleton's Antarctic Adventure (2001)
IMAX dramatization - Video
The Endurance - Shackleton's Legendary Expedition (2000)
PBS NOVA, dramatization with original footage - Video
Endurance : Shackleton's Incredible Voyage
Alfred Lansing (Preface) - Book
South with Endurance: Frank Hurley - official photographer
Book
South! Ernest Shackleton Shackleton's own words
Book
Shackleton's Way: Leadership Lessons from the Great Antarctic Explorer
Book