In the
early hours of the morning of the 5th of January 1922 the Kilkea
born explorer Ernest Shackleton died on his ship the Quest, anchored off
the island of South Georgia. He was 47 years of age. On learning of his death,
his wife, Lady Shackleton decided it would be more appropriate that he would be
buried in South Georgia in the area to which he journeyed so often. Shackleton
was buried in the cemetery in Grytviken, South Georgia and the crew of his ship
erected a simple wooden cross over his grave.
This would
remain his grave marker for a number of years and Alastair Hardy a zoologist,
visiting Shackleton's grave in 1926 was shocked to find it had no proper
headstone. This was remedied the following year when the ship RSS Discovery
on an expedition to study the biology of the Antarctic waters delivered to
South Georgia a headstone for Shackleton's grave. The Discovery was the
ship on which Shackleton had first sailed to the Antarctic in 1902 as an
officer on Captain Robert Falcon Scotts first Antarctic expeditition.
Fittingly a
member of the crew of the RSS Discovery was the Kildare born Francis
Kennedy Pease. Kennedy, a young midshipman, was born in the Curragh on the 13th
of February 1908 where his father Major Charles Pease was an officer in the
British Army.
The Captain
of the Discovery, J R Stenhouse, who had served with Shackleton, and
being a relation of Pease secured Pease a place in the crew. Pease himself had
met Shackleton as a schoolboy and wrote “I, myself, had met Shackleton. It was
years before, when I was a boy, aged 15, a pupil of St. Helen's College, South
Sea and I had had the great privilage of been presented to him. He was then
just departing on one of his expedititions to the Antarctic. It was he who
first inspired me with desire for Polar Exploration. Looking at him I thought
how wonderful, it would be to be a man like him.”
In his book
'To the Ends of the Earth' he recorded the ceremony in which Shackleton's
headstone was installed “Most memorable, of all my South Georgia experiences
was the unveiling of the tombstone on Sir Ernest Shackleton's grave. The grave
was in the little cemetery at Grytviken, on the slope overlooking the harbour,
and we had brought the tombstone in the Discovery from England as far as
the Falkland islands, where it had been suitably engraved and then brought here
to South Georgia. It was South Georgia's great day – her greatest day. All the
whaling work was stopped for the occasion. The whale catchers came in from the
sea; the little harbour was filled with their ships. In their hundreds the men
lined the slopes about the little cemetary; old men and young, nearly all
Norwegians, seabooted, heavy woollen gloves on their hands, thick mufflers
about their throats. Almost all of them had known Shackleton. There were whale
captains who had been his great friends – rugged, large hearted men. A hymn was
sung - “Abide with me”. Leaflets containing the words in both English and
Norweign had been supplied. There was no music, nor was any wanted. All hands
sang with all their hearts. Their voices went over the snowclad slopes,
resonant and deep. There was no mistaking the throb of it. Some of them who had
known Shackleton closely found it hard to sing at all. I knew what they were
feeling. At the end of the ceremony another hymn was sung, deep and resonant
like the first and buglers in the guard of honour sounded the last post. The
men were in no hurry to drift back to the whale work on their ships. They stood
about the grave. The eyes of many were wet. Shackleton's grave was in the midst
of the graves of seven whale captains and two Polar Explorers. There was
something infinitely moving in the fact that he should be in such fitting
company.”
Pease,
after leaving the Discovery Expedition continued his Polar Exploration
career with a period in the Arctic in 1934. After service in the Royal Air
Force in World War II he spent the rest of his life as a landscape contractor
dying in 1987. He enjoys the unique distinction of being the only other Kildare
born Polar explorer who met Shackleton.
Very interesting to find some additional information about Francis Pease. I have just read his book and was wondering what became of him following his Arctic adventures. Good to read that he had a long life following the 2nd World War even if not so exciting as his early life. His descriptions of events in his early travels are vivid to say the least. But he wasn't very good at penguin identification (or may be that was the publisher). A couple of images of Adelie penguins are labeled as emperor penguins!
ReplyDeleteReally nice to read this account. Francis Pease was my mother's first cousin.
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