Crew of the Discovery
British Antarctic Expedition 1901
- 1904
Robert Falcon Scott
The Discovery ExpeditionThe Crew Alphabetically
Allan, David S. - Petty officer,
1st class, R.N.
Armitage, Albert
B. , Lieutenant R.N.R. - second-in-command and navigator
Baker, John D. - seaman, R.N.
Barne, Michael - Second lieutenant,
R.N.
Bernacchi, Louis C. - physicist
Blissett, Arthur Henry - Steward
Bonner, Charles- seaman,
R.N.
Brett, Henry Robert
- Cook
Buckridge, Horace
Edgar - Laboratory Assistant
Clarke,
Charles - Laboratory Assistant,
later became cook
Crean, Thomas
- seaman, R.N.
Cross, Jacob
- Petty officer, 1st class, R.N.
Croucher,
George Beaver - seaman, R.N.
Dailey,
Fred E. - Carpenter, R.N.
Dell,
James William - seaman, R.N.
Dellbridge,
James H. - Second engineer, R.N.
Dowsett
- Steward
Duncan, James
- Carpenter's mate, shipwright
Evans,
Edgar - Petty officer, 2nd class, R.N.
Feather, Thomas A. - Boatswain
(Bosun), R.N.
Ferrar, Hartley
T. - geologist
Ford, C. Reginald
- Chief Steward / stores officer, R.N.
Handsley, Jesse - seaman R.N.
Hare, Clarence - steward
Heald, William Lofthouse - seaman,
R.N.
Hodgson, Thomas Vere -
naturalist
Hubert - donkeyman
Joyce, Ernest Edwards Mills - Petty
officer, 1st class, R.N.
Kennar,
Thomas - Petty officer, 2nd class, R.N.
Koettlitz, Reginald - Surgeon / doctor
Lashly, William - Chief stoker,
R.N.
Macfarlane, William - Petty
officer, 1st class, R.N.
Mardon
- seaman
Masterton
- seaman
Miller - sail maker
Mulock, George F. A. - third lieutenant
in charge of holds, stores, provisions and deep
sea water analysis.
Page - stoker
Peters - seaman, R.N.
Pilbeam, Arthur - leading seaman,
R.N.
Plumley, Frank - stoker
Quartley, Arthur Lester - Leading
stoker, R.N.
Roper - Cook
Royds, Charles W. R. - First lieutenant,
R.N.
Scott, Gilbert - Steward
Scott, Robert Falcon - Commander,
R.N. - Expedition leader
Shackleton, Ernest H. - third
lieutenant in charge of holds, stores, provisions
and deep sea water analysis.
Sinclair,
Robert - seaman
Skelton,
Reginald W. - Lieutenant R.N. Chief engineer and
photographer,
Smythe, William
- Petty officer, 1st class, R.N.
Vince,
George T. - seaman, R.N.
Walker
- seaman
Waterman -
seaman, R.N.
Weller, William
Isaac - rating
Whitfield, Thomas
- stoker, R.N.
Wild, John R.
Frank - seaman
Williamson, Thomas
Soulsbury - seaman, R.N.
Wilson,
Edward Adrian - Assistant surgeon
The officers of the Discovery
From the left: Edward Adrian Wilson, Ernest Henry Shackleton,
Albert Armitage, Michael Barne, Dr. Reginald Koettlitz, Reginald
Skelton, Robert Falcon Scott, Charles Royds, Louis Bernacchi,
Hartley Travers Ferrar, Thomas V. Hodgson.
Top Right: Plumley.
Back Row:
Blissett, Allan, Wild,Croucher, Kennar, Handsley, Lashly, Crean,
Dell, Evans, Clarke, Weller.
Middle Row:
Pilbeam, Joyce, Williamson, Heald, Cross, Smythe, Scott.
Front Row: Ford, Feather, Armitage, Mulock,
Shackleton, Wilson, Skelton, Scott, Royds, Koettlitz, Bernacchi,
Ferrar, Hodgson, Dellbridge, Dailey.
Not shown:
Barne, Bonner, Brett, Buckridge, Duncan, Hare, Hubert, McFarlane,
Page, Peters, Quartley, Vince, Walker and Whitfield.
The Crew In More Detail
number in brackets is age at the start of this expedition - not always accurate.
David S. Allan (31) - Petty officer, 1st class, R.N.
-
David Allan was born in Montrose Scotland on the
26th of December 1870. He joined the Discovery
Expedition from the Royal naval ship HMS Majestic
where he had previously served with and become acquainted
with Captain Scott.
Albert Borlace Armitage, Lieutenant R.N.R. - second-in-command and navigator
Navigator - Jackson-Harmsworth Arctic expedition 1894
Known as "The Pilot". His position in the Discovery expedition was a condition imposed by Sir Alfred Harmsworth, who donated the very large sum of £5,000 toward the expedition, Koettlitz (also of the Jackson-Harmworth Expedition) was also included as a member of the expedition in the same manner.
"Armitage was
an excellent practical navigator, and of the value
of his Polar experience I shall speak late on"
Scott "The Voyage of the Discovery"
John D. Baker (23) - seaman, R.N.
Deserted ship at Port Chalmers, N.Z.
Barne, Michael - Second lieutenant, R.N.
Barne was responsible for magnetometry and depth soundings also participating in several sledge journeys making copious notes throughout his three years with the expedition. He was awarded the Polar Medal for his contributions and efforts to the expedition.
Born 15th October 1877 at Sotterly Park, Suffolk - died 31st may 1961.
Bonner, Charles (23) - Able seaman, R.N.
-
Joined at Capetown, lost his life the day the Discovery
left Lyttleton N.Z. on the 21st of December 1901.
He had climbed the mainmast to wave back to the
crowd cheering the ships departure and fell to his
death, he was buried at Port Chalmers two days later.
Bernacchi, Louis C. - physicist
Astronomer and Physicist- Borchgrevink / Southern Cross 1898-1900
Only member with Antarctic experience on the Discovery expedition. Bernacchi joined the Discovery at New Zealand as a late replacement for the previous physicist who had left on grounds of ill health.
Born 1876 in Tasmania - died 24th April 1942 in London.
Blissett, Arthur Henry (23) - Steward
Brett, Henry Robert (35) - Cook
Joined the ship at Port Chalmers, N.Z. as a replacement
for Roper, was returned to Lyttelton on board the
Morning in 1903 after receiving frostbite
injuries and showing signs of scurvy. He had married
in 1891 and had several children in Tasmania and
Victoria before he went on the voyage. He appears
to have left his family after this and remarried
in New Zealand in November 1904. After his second
wife’s death in 1927 he returned to Victoria &
died there in 1942.
Newspaper article from 1913
Born Tasmania 1867.
Buckridge, Horace Edgar - Laboratory Assistant
-
Joined at Capetown, returned to Lyttleton on the
Morning in March 1903.
Clarke, Charles (24) - Laboratory Assistant
-
Later became the Cook when Brett left in 1903
Crean, Thomas (24) - seaman, R.N.
Able
seaman Discovery
1901-04
Petty
officer
Terra
Nova 1910-13
Second
officer
Endurance
1914-17
Joined the Discovery at Port Chalmers N.Z. from H.M.S. Ringarooma.
Born 20th July 1877 near Annascaul, Ireland - died 27th July 1938, in Cork.
Cross, Jacob (26) - Petty officer, 1st class, R.N.
Croucher, George Beaver (20) - seaman, R.N.
-
Originally from Grimsby, joined the Discovery at
Cowes, Isle of Wight. Died in WW1 as a commander
in the navy.
Dailey, Frederick E. (28) - Carpenter, R.N.
Joined the expedition from H.M.S. Ganges. Apprentice in a wooden shipyard at a time when wooden ships were being replaced by iron and then steel hulled ships. In Antarctica he was responsible for building the Discovery Hut which still stands. A member of Scott's Western Attempt, the Southern Support Party and the Western Depot Party, manhauling and laying depots for others.
Born in Portsmouth.
Dell, James William (23) - seaman, R.N.
Electrician, boatswain Quest- Ernest Shackleton 1921 - 1922
Jimmy Dell became an electrician/ maintenance engineer at the Chapel Cleeve Estate near Blue Anchor in Somerset. This was the home of Gerald Stewart Lysaght, an iron and steel industrialist, who had factories in Bristol, Newport, Wolverhampton, Scunthorpe and Melbourne, Australia. Lysaght was one of the major backers of Ernest Shackleton.
During World War 2 JW Dell, GS Lysaght, and Sothoron Lawrence, the Chapel Cleeve Estate Land Agent, were recruited to the Auxiliary Units Special Duties Section, and were involved in a clandestine intelligence gathering and communication organisation using hidden wireless sets, word-of-mouth, dead-letter drops and homing pigeons. This organisation was one part of the most-secret British Resistance Organisation.
Information provided courtesy of Tim Wray, Auxiliary Unit researcher, , Shepton Mallet, Somerset.
Born ca. 1880, Worthing, Sussex - died 21st January 1968, Somerset
James H. Dellbridge (29) - Second engineer, R.N.
-
James Dellbridge was second engineer under Reginald
Skelton, his duties on the Discovery were to ensure
that the engines were always in good repair and
working order, a task that he achieved admirably.
Dowsett (23) - Steward
-
Discharged at Port Chalmers, N.Z. by "mutual
consent" ( a less severe form of dismissal)
and replaced by Hare.
Duncan, James (31) - Carpenter's mate, shipwright
Duncan returned to Lyttleton on board the Morning in 1903
"My great uncle James Duncan served aboard Discovery 1901-1904 as assistant carpenter and shipwright. His journals which he kept while on board Discovery are in keeping of a museum in Dundee along with a water colour of Discovery which he won at sports day on the ice and also his Polar medal." - John Duncan Johnston. MBE
Edgar Evans - Petty officer, 2nd class, R.N.
petty
officer Terra
Nova 1910-13
Born 1876 at Middleton,
Wales - died 17th Feb 1912 with Scott on the return
from the South Pole.
Feather, Thomas A. (31) - Boatswain (Bosun), R.N.
While south and during the winter, with little or no ship-board duties to perform, Feather was given the responsibility for the sledging equipment, making sure it was ready and prepared for the sledge journeys, a task he performed as diligently as his duties on the ship.
"Thomas
Feather, was a thorough seaman, and took that intense
pride in his charge which was so well known in the
old sailing days. A sailor will understand well
the merits of a boatswain who can make the proud
boast that the Discovery circumnavigated the world
without losing a rope or sail".
Robert Scott
Feather was also enlisted by Scott again in April 1910 for the ultimately ill-fated Terra Nova expedition, though by November of the same year his service record had the note, "Sent home as unsuitable for Antarctic Expedition". The reason is unclear, though frictions between Feather from the regular Navy and other Mercantile Marine expeditioners may have had a part to play.
Ferrar, Hartley Travers - geologist
Following graduation in June 1901, Ferrar was appointed geologist to the Discovery Expedition a just month later in July setting sail for Antarctica in the August. He was not an experienced geologist and was not at all well prepared for the work he would encounter in the South though spent much time applying himself to bookwork and study to learn all he could in the time available.
After Shackleton's departure from the expedition he also took over his role of sea-water analysis in addition to being a geologist.
C. Reginald Ford (23) - Chief Steward / stores officer, R.N.
Scott had difficulty in selecting the steward for the Discovery Expedition, partly as it is such an important position on an exploratory trip with little or no chance for replenishment of supplies, compounded by the fact that they were heading largely into the unknown in the way that events may have progressed.
Ford was a very young man and inexperienced at the time of the voyage, though he fitted the task very well. Like many other young men on such expeditions, compensating with inexperience with a quick ability to learn and detailed application to his appointed job.
Biography of Charles Reginald Ford's later life in the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography
Handsley, Jesse - seaman R.N.
-
Joined at Port Chalmers
Hare, Clarence (21) - steward
New Zealander (the only one on the expedition) joined the ship at Port Chalmers, N.Z. as a replacement for Dowsett, was returned to Lyttleton on board the Morning in 1903 and re-engaged on June 8th 1904 for the voyage home to England.
Hare was a part of the group that tried to return to the Discovery after getting caught in a blizzard and led to Vince losing his life. He fell asleep and lay covered by snow for around thirty-six hours. Despite this he didn't suffer from frostbite also enduring forty hours without food and sixty without any warm food.
Died June 1967 in Queensland Australia. more
Heald, William Lofthouse (25) - Able Seaman, R.N.
Saved Ferrar's life in 1902 when he was in danger of dying of scurvy during a sledge journey.
Born in York.
Hodgson, Thomas Vere - naturalist
Thomas Vere Hodgson born in Birmingham, England started his life in business through necessity rather than design. His desire was to qualify in medicine and natural science, though circumstances did not allow this for many years during which he devoted his spare time to scientific study.
Eventually he was appointed to a minor position in the Plymouth Biological Laboratory from which followed a lectureship and a post as curator of the Plymouth Museum.
At 37 years old when he joined the Discovery expedition Hodgson was one of the oldest members.
Born Birmingham in 1864 - died in 1926
Hubert (35) - donkeyman
-
Hubert returned to Lyttelton on board the Morning
in 1903. The "donkeyman" is the crew member
whose job is to deal with the operation and maintenance
of any and all assorted machinery other than the
main ship's engines.
Kennar, Thomas (25) - Petty officer, 2nd class, R.N.
Koettlitz, Reginald - Surgeon / doctor / botanist
doctor - Jackson-Harmsworth Arctic expedition 1894
The oldest member of the Discovery Expedition, 40 at the time. This was Koettlitz's second polar journey after being the doctor on an earlier Arctic journey. His position in the Discovery expedition was a condition imposed by Sir Alfred Harmsworth, who donated the very large sum of £5000 toward the expedition, Armitage (also of the Jackson-Harmworth Expedition) was also included as a member of the expedition in the same manner.
Born in 1861 in Ostend, Belgium - died, Port Elizabeth, South Africa in 1916.
Lashly, William (33) - Chief stoker, R.N.
Chief stoker Terra Nova 1910-13, his diary of the expedition was published in 1938-39 by the University of Reading.
Joined the expedition from H.M.S. Duke of Wellington.
Born Hambledon, Hampshire died 12th June 1940 at Hambledon.
Mardon (25) - seaman
-
Discharged at Cape of Good Hope by "mutual
consent" ( a less severe form of dismissal)
and replaced by Vince.
Masterton (33) - seaman
-
Discharged at Cape of Good Hope at his own request,
replaced by Sinclair.
William Macfarlane (27) - Petty officer, 1st class, R.N.
-
Invalided and returned to Lyttelton on board the
Morning in 1903.
Miller (36) - sail maker
-
Invalided off the ship at Port Chalmers N.Z. before
reaching Antarctica.
Mulock, George Francis Arthur - third lieutenant in charge of holds, stores, provisions and deep sea water analysis.
Replacement for Shackleton in 1903, reached Antarctica on the Morning from New Zealand.
Born February 1882 - died in Gibraltar on 26th December 1963
Page (25) - stoker
-
Page returned to Lyttelton on board the Morning
in 1903
Peters (22) - seaman, R.N.
-
Peters returned to Lyttelton on board the Morning
in 1903
Arthur Pilbeam (23) - leading seaman, R.N.
Frank Plumley (26) - stoker
-
Plumley joined the Discovery at Cape Town
Arthur Lester Quartley (28) - Leading stoker, R.N.
Roper (23) - Cook
-
Discharged at Port Chalmers, N.Z. by "mutual
consent" (a less severe form of dismissal)
and replaced by Brett.
Royds, Charles W. R. - First lieutenant, R.N.
Charles Royds was the first lieutenant on the Discovery Expedition, his duties were do with every day running of the ship, dealing with the crew, ensuring they knew what their work was and that they did it correctly.
Born 1876 in Rochdale, Lancashire - died London, 1931Gilbert Scott (25) - Steward
-
Gilbert Scott joined the Discovery at Cape Town.
He was born in Langford Wiltshire on the 6th of
February 1878 and joined the Royal Navy on the 7th
of November 1896 becoming a Royal Marine. He was
promoted to Sergeant and was killed at Gallipoli
on May 3rd 1915 at the age of 37. His body was never
recovered.
Robert Falcon Scott - Commander, R.N. - Expedition leader
expedition leader Terra Nova 1910-13, second expedition to reach the South Pole 1912, perished on the return journey.
The Discovery Expedition was the first encounter with polar exploring that Scott had. He had been in the navy for 18 years and was somewhat restless. A meeting with Clements Markham an advocate of Antarctic exploration and a man who was impressed with Scott is what led to Scott applying for and being given the position of Expedition Leader.
The Discovery Expedition was widely praised for the value of the science that was carried out, though no exploration particularly memorable to the general public took place. On his next trip, Scott was to make a successful bid for the South Pole, though die along with all of his companions on the way back.
Ernest H. Shackleton - third lieutenant in charge of holds, stores, provisions and deep sea water analysis.
expedition
leader Nimrod
1907-09
expedition
leader Endurance
1914-17
expedition
leader
Quest
1920-21
-
Born in County Clare Ireland , Shackleton had a
career in the merchant navy in the Pacific before
joining the Discovery. He was invalided
back to England in the relief ship Morning
though went on to organize three trips of his own
and become one of the most famous Antarctic explorers.
Knighted in 1909.
Sinclair (31) - seaman
-
Deserted the ship at Port Chalmers N.Z. before leaving
for Antarctica. His shipmates believed that Sinclair
held himself responsible for the death of Bonner
who had fallen from the mainmast two days earlier.
Skelton, Reginald W. - Lieutenant R.N. Chief engineer and photographer
Reginald Skelton had served with Scott aboard the Majestic, Scott's posting immediately prior to the Discovery Expedition when the two men grew to know each other well. Like several others of the officers and crew who joined the Antarctic journey from this ship, Scott was impressed with his manner and abilities. He was hoping to accompany Scott on his 1910-1913 Terra Nova Expedition but was unable to. He returned to the Royal Navy and became an Admiral. He was knighted in 1931.
Born 3rd June 1872 at Long Sutton, Lincolnshire - died 5th September 1956Smythe, William (24) - Petty officer, 1st class, R.N.
-
Smythe had been demoted to able seaman at Christchurch
after going awol (absent without leave) from the
ship. He was re-instated to petty officer after
the season on Scott's recommendation.
Vince, George T. (22) - seaman, R.N.
-
Joined the Discovery at Cape of Good Hope.
Vince lost his life on 11th March 1902 after sliding
down a snow slope into McMurdo Sound, his body was
never discovered.
Walker (25) - seaman
-
Walker was returned to Lyttleton on board the
Morning in 1903.
Waterman (21) - seaman, R.N.
-
Invalided off the ship at Port Chalmers N.Z. before
reaching Antarctica, replaced by Croucher.
William Isaac Weller (23) - rating
-
Joined the Discovery at Lyttleton N.Z.
John R. Frank Wild - seaman
in
charge of provisions
Nimrod 1907-09
Sledge-master
Australasian
Antarctic Expedition 1911-13
second
in command
Endurance
1914-17
Wild was a direct descendent of Captain Cook through his mother, one uncle had been three times on expeditions to the Arctic. He entered the merchant navy in 1889 and joined the Royal Navy in 1900. He had received a polar medal and clasp for his work on the Discovery expedition and the Royal Geographical Society's silver medal.
Born 10th April 1873, Skelton, Yorkshire - died 20th Aug 1939
Williamson, Thomas Soulsbury (24) - Able seaman, R.N.
Petty officer Terra Nova 1910-13.Joined the Discovery from H.M.S. Pactolus, Born 1877 Sunderland - died January 1940.
Wilson, Edward Adrian - Assistant surgeon
chief of scientific staff and biologist Terra Nova 1910-13
-
Wilson was by nature more of a field naturalist,
but turned to medicine more through necessity. He
was regarded as the life and soul of the party during
the Discovery expedition. The source of
amusements and recreation, always even tempered
and cheerful. He was highly regarded by all, possibly
best summed by Scott:
"Words must always
fail me when I talk of Bill Wilson. I believe he
really is the finest character I ever met."
- Scott
Born Cheltenham 23rd July 1872 - died with Scott and Bowers in a tent on the way back from the South Pole in March 1912.
Whitfield, Thomas (32) - stoker, R.N.
The Discovery in 2005 in Dundee
where she
is currently on
public
display
Picture credits: Discovery at Dundee - courtesy of Mike Pennington, used under Creative commons, Attribution Share-Alike 2.0 Generice license / Officers of the Discovery - courtesy of Alexander Turnbull National Library, New Zealand
Biographical information
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Robert Falcon Scott Books and Video
The Coldest March: Scott's Fatal Antarctic Expedition
by Susan Solomon
The Worst Journey in the World. Apsley Cherry-Garrard
The Voyage of the Discovery: Scott's First Antarctic Expedition
by Robert Falcon Scott, Ross MacPhee (Introduction), Fridtjof Nansen (Preface)
The Great White South: Travelling with Robert F. Scott's Doomed
South Pole Expedition by Herbert Ponting
Scott's Last Expedition: The Journals of Captain R.F.Scott
Edward Wilson's Antarctic Notebooks
With Scott to the Pole
Herbert Ponting, illustrated
Discovery Illustrated: Pictures from Captain Scott's First Antarctic Expedition
Captain Scott by Sir Ranulph Fiennes
90 Degrees South: With Scott to the Antarctic (1933) DVD
History Chapters: Roald Amundsen and Robert Scott Race to the South Pole. Ages 4-8
Diary of the "Terra Nova" Expedition to the Antarctic, 1910-12