For the last nine years the local Heritage Centre has hosted the
Shackleton Autumn School over the October Bank Holiday weekend. It has
grown in status over the years, hosting as it does each year a gathering of
overseas polar experts who bring to an Irish audience an unrivalled knowledge
and experience of polar affairs. This
year the weekend’s event will have lecturers from Norway, America and England
and many overseas visitors will be arriving in Athy to take part in what has become
Europe’s premier Antarctic event.
The mixture of lectures, exhibitions,
drama and film has proved to be a winning formula. With the other local festivals such as the
Bluegrass Festival, the Athy Waterways Festival and the Medieval Festival, the
Shackleton weekend provides a welcome addition to the social and cultural life
of the town.
This year on the opening Friday night
the Shackleton Memorial Lecture will be given by Caroline Casey. Caroline is registered blind but despite this
has packed more into her short life than many of us could hope to do in a
lifetime. You may recall her journey
across India on an elephant some years ago, a trip which got nationwide
coverage on radio and TV. On her return
from the Indian continent Caroline founded the Aisling Project now re-named
Kanchi which works to facilitate the integration of persons with disabilities
into the work force. From that she
developed and presented on Irish TV the O² Ability Awards. Her achievements in the face of enormous
difficulties have been recognised nationally and internationally, culminating
in her appointment as a Young Global Leader of the World Economic Forum in
2006. She was the first and only Irish
person appointed to that forum and further honours came courtesy of the National
University of Ireland when she was awarded an honorary doctorate. Two years ago she received the Eisenhower
Fellowship.
Earlier on Friday evening and prior to
Caroline Casey’s talk, Alexandra Shackleton, granddaughter of Ernest
Shackleton, will launch the book ‘The
Shackleton Letters: Behind the Scenes of the Nimrod Expedition’, a book published
by the Erskine Press of Norwich, England. The choice of Athy Heritage Centre to
launch the book written by Regina Daly is quite an achievement for the Shackleton
Autumn School. Unquestionably the launch
confirms the growing importance of the Shackleton weekend within Antarctic
exploration circles. The Shackleton
School’s own publication, ‘Nimrod’ – Volume
3 will be on sale during and after that weekend. It includes some of the lectures given at the
2008 School and with previously issued volumes 1 and 2 provides a well ordered
and comprehensive coverage of lectures in past years.
On Saturday 24th October the
lectures commence at 10.30 a.m. with a talk by Hans Kjell Larsen, a native of
Norway on his fellow countryman and grandfather, the Antarctic pioneer Captain
C.A. Larsen. This is followed at 12noon
by Professor Andrew Lambert’s talk on the Franklin Expedition. That expedition remains to this day shrouded
in mystery following the disappearance of it’s ships and all their crew in the
Arctic.
Dr. David Wilson, the grand nephew of
Dr. Edward Wilson who perished with Captain Scott’s Polar party, will give an
illustrated talk on Shackleton’s Nimrod Expedition. Dr. Russell Porter from Rhode Island College,
U.S.A. will give the final talk on Saturday on the subject of the Franklin
Expedition. Sunday morning will have
particular interest for book lovers when Dr. Michael Rosove, a Professor of Medicine
at the University of California and the author of several books on Antarctic
history, gives his talk on ‘The Great
Books of Shackletonia’. Dublin-born
Marie Herbert who with her husband Wally spent years with the Inuit in
Greenland will conclude the Sunday morning lectures and in the afternoon a
selection of unusual and long forgotten early polar films will be shown in the
Town Hall.
Sunday night sees the first performance in Athy of John MacKenna’s
new play, ‘We Once Sang Like Other Men’. This prolific writer has produced a body of
work including novels, short stories and plays which has been scarcely
paralleled by any other modern Irish writer.
Adding to his literary achievements is John’s continuing involvement as
an actor and in his new play directed by Marion Brophy John plays the role of
Peter the fisherman, in a modern re-telling of an age old tale. We had hoped to have the local writer’s new
play as the first drama to be shown on the stage of the new Arts Centre in
Woodstock Street, but unfortunately it’s not possible pending the completion of
planned fitting out work. Instead the
play will be staged in the Town Hall on Sunday night, 25th October
commencing at 9.00 p.m. The bus tour
through ‘Shackleton country’ will
conclude the weekend’s activities. Those
wishing to travel should assemble at the Heritage Centre no later than 10.00
a.m. on the Bank Holiday Monday.
This year the exhibition to run in conjunction with the Autumn
School tells the story of Shackleton’s Nimrod Expedition. This was the first expedition led by the
Kilkea-born explorer and it will feature several priceless artefacts from the
1907-1909 Expedition never before displayed in this country. The Scott Polar
Institute of Cambridge has cooperated with the Heritage Centre in putting on
this Exhibition. Some of the items on
display will include equipment from that expedition, together with tins of food
carried by the explorers as they traversed the Antarctic continent. Other items include Shackleton’s sledging
flag and a copy of the route chart prepared for the search party which set out
to find Captain Scott and his companions who perished on the later Terra Nova
Expedition. There will be many more
important artefacts on display, including a unique original copy of the book ‘Aurora Australis’ which was the very
first book printed on the Antarctic Continent.
The help of Kildare County Council, Athy Town Council, Tegral, Athy
Credit Union, Athy Chamber of Commerce and Diageo in supporting the Shackleton
School is acknowledged. The continuing
support of the local people of Athy and district is also welcomed and an
invitation is extended to all our readers to attend the official opening of the
Autumn School at 7pm on Friday, 23rd October in Athy Heritage
Centre. The wine reception that evening
will be sponsored by the Carlton Abbey Hotel.
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