Artefacts From Shackleton’s South Pole Expedition Bought by UK Govt

The Associated Press
The Associated Press

LONDON (AP) – A sledge and flag used in one of explorer Ernest Shackleton’s famed expeditions to the South Pole have been bought by a British government-funded body to keep the treasured artefacts in the U.K.

The National Heritage Memorial Fund, a government-funded body, said Wednesday it paid 204,000 pounds ($274,000) to help purchase the two items, used in the first of three British Antarctic expeditions led by Shackleton in the early 1900s. The artifacts will be donated to two English museums.

Earlier this year, British authorities slapped a temporary export ban on the artefacts.

The expedition was named Nimrod after the ship, which came within less than 100 miles of the South Pole for the first time in 1909. But before reaching their target, the explorers were forced to turn back, having stretched their rations to the limit.

Despite ultimately ending in failure, the expedition is considered the greatest advance to the pole in history, and set the stage for Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen´s successful trek just two years later.

A conservator handles a “sledge flag” used on Anglo-Irish explorer Ernest Shackleton’s British Antarctic Expedition on a table at Prince Philip Maritime Collections Centre, London, Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. A sledge and flag once used in a famed 1900s expedition to the South Pole have been bought by a British government-funded body, preventing the treasured artefacts leaving the country to an overseas buyer. The National Heritage Memorial Fund, a government-funded body founded in 1980, said Wednesday it had provided 204,000 British pounds to help purchase the two items, which will be donated to two English museums. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

The eleven-foot wooden sledge was one of four used to haul supplies and equipment across the Antarctic tundra. The flag, which features a red unicorn head and golden anchor, appears in many grainy photographs from the journey.

“Very little from the expedition survives,” said Jeremy Michell, senior curator at the National Maritime Museum in London´s Greenwich. “In our Polar gallery that we´ve got, we have one item which is a rather uninspiring lamp racket from Nimrod. And you can´t really tell the same dynamic stories that you can when you´ve got a sledge.”

Shackleton never reached the South Pole and died of a heart attack in 1922 off South Georgia, a British overseas territory, during a fourth Antarctic expedition.

The sledge and flag were owned by Eric Marshall, a surgeon and polar explorer who accompanied Shackleton on Nimrod´s “sledge march” to the South Pole.

Marshall brought the items back to Britain and in the 1950s donated them to his former school.

Eilish McGuinness, executive director of the National Heritage Memorial, said the body has paused a lot of normal funding during the coronavirus pandemic, but it is still open to “urgent and special things” at risk of loss.

“The general agreement throughout was that it was so important that we really had to help save it and keep these precious items in the U.K.,” she said.

The National Heritage Memorial Fund said the sledge will be donated to London´s Thames-side National Maritime Museum, a d the flag to Cambridge´s Scott Polar Research Institute.

“People will see that sledge and they´ll be able to kind of imagine the stories and really get close to those incredible items,” McGuinness said.

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