Shackleton Tweets
Endurance Expedition
4:
In the Lifeboats to Elephant Island
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
Apr 9 1916
After breakfast tents were
struck and boats loaded ready to launch as soon as possible,
the ice was opening and closing, slowly churning away.
Apr 9 1916
11am our floe splits right through
camp, our home for 156 days is being shattered beneath us, pack
too closed still to launch the boats.
Apr 9 1916
Eat as much as we can in the boats
at 1pm, by 2pm we are a mile away, a rush of foamy water and
tumbling ice like a tidal bore surges after us.
Apr 9 1916
Tide rip impelling a mass of ice
towards us, bending strongly to the oars we only just get clear,
very nearly swamped as soon as we started.
Apr 9 1916
Pulled hard to windward, in the twilight
we hauled the boats onto an old floe rocking in the swell, far
from ideal.
Apr 9 1916
By 8pm the blubber stove was burning
cheerily, all hands fed and happy, snatches of song carried
on the night air.
Apr 10 1916
11pm last night our floe rose on
a swell and cracked right through a tent dropping Holness into
the freezing sea, Shackleton was up and about..
Apr 10 1916
...crack about 4ft wide, Shackleton
reached down, hauled Holness out just before the 2 pieces crashed
together. Shackleton, tent and one boat stranded on one piece.
Apr 10 1916
Several near misses later, boats
and all men on the same floe. Hot milk served at 3am, little
sleep by anyone.
Apr 10 1916
We left the floe in the a.m. gauging
carefully so the boats weren't damaged by crashing ice,
we have made our exit from the pack unscathed.
Apr 10 1916
The welcome heaving bosom of the
ocean makes most of us nauseous, dusk at 5pm we pull up onto
a stout floe in a rough sea, more seasickness.
Apr 11 1916
8 sq.yd. piece of our floe fell off
at 5am so all out in the dark to shift gear to safety, we were
100yds inside the pack again by dawn.
Apr 11 1916
12ft swell, we rise to the top of
the hill then in the valley, carpenter went for a trip, a crack
appeared and he had to jump back to join us
Apr 11 1916
A lull in the storm let us launch
the boats to clear the pack again, we are around 60 miles from
Clarence Island.
Apr 11 1916
Unable to camp, cook was put on a
floe and heated milk on the stove, then returned to his boat,
we will spend the night in the boats.
Apr 11 1916
Unexpected horror, we are surrounded
by a large pod of killer whales, their blood curdling blasts
at first distant, but then right alongside.
Apr 12 1916
Miserable night, covered in sleet,
piercing wind, cramped conditions, some were seasick too. No
hot food, cold rations are almost nauseating.
Apr 12 1916
Able to take a sight from the sun,
we have made no progress since taking to the boats, a bitter
blow, Shackleton takes the news with magnaminity.
Apr 12 1916
A hot drink of milk made in each
boat on a Primus before turning in was the finest you can imagine,
boats tied together for the night.
Apr 13 1916
Cold made sleep impossible, ice built
up on the oars makes them 3x thicker and twice as heavy, ice
axes used to hack build up off the boats.
Apr 13 1916
Split stores between boats in case
of separation, then a cold eat-all-you-can meal, we may need
to dump some stores when we reach open ocean.
Apr 13 1916
Water freezes as soon as it splashes
in the boats, we are covered with sleet and are more or less
soaked, our outer clothing solid with ice.
Apr 14 1916
The storm of the dreadful night faded,
the wind fell to a breeze, a magnificent sunrise showed us Clarence
and then Elephant Island 40 miles away.
Apr 14 1916
Awful thirst, no fresh water, raw
seal meat chewed for blood is so salty it makes it worse, small
amounts of ice melted in the mouth is all.
Apr 14 1916
Marston livens us with songs, more
positive than for days. Blackborow's feet badly frostbitten,
nothing can be done while in the boats.
Apr 14 1916
Open sea between us and land, another
storm, water breaking over the boats, almost constant bailing,
it looks like being another cold night.
Apr 14 1916
Greenstreet's right foot badly
frost-bitten, Orde-Lees restored it by holding it in his sweater
against his stomach. Many other minor frost bites.
Apr 14 1916
Icy sea spray stings the face like
a whip, men are insensible with fatigue, Shackleton has endured
days of being soaked and standing at the tiller.
Apr 15 1916
Unspeakable joy! as dawn broke we
saw we were before a huge glacier face, we picked freshwater
ice from the sea to slake our intense thirst.
Apr 15 1916
The sea breaking heavily against
precipitous cliffs and glaciers made finding a landing place
difficult.
Apr 15 1916
We have landed! A less than ideal
spot, but a reprieve was desperately needed, Shackleton gave
the honour to Blackborow of being the first ashore.
Apr 15 1916
"Then, with a few strong strokes
we shot through on the top of a swell and ran the boat on to
a stony beach."
Apr 15 1916
Reeling about as if there is an unlimited
supply of alcoholic liquor.. laughing uproariously.. smiles..
pebbles treated like gold, first land in 18 months.
Apr 15 1916
Big breakfast of hot milk, huge seal
steaks, unlimited blubber, all day long eating and drinking.
Apr 16 1916
Signs that high tides sweep our camp
mean we have to find a safer place, we moved the boats higher
up the shore.
Apr 16 1916
Wild and 4 men headed west by boat
to search for a long term camp, returned at 8pm having found
a place 7 miles hence.
Apr 17 1916
11am launched the boats, battled
along the wild, inhospitable coast, another drenching and covering
in mushy ice, arrived at new camp by 4.30pm.
Apr 17 1916
Rickinson suffered a heat attack
in the surf as we were unloading the boats, medical attention
by the warmth of the blubber stove brought about recovery.
Next page: 5 - rescue mission to South Georgia
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