The South Polar Times: Captain Scott's newspaper revisited
This article is more than 12 years oldCaptain Scott's two Antarctic expeditions had their own newspaper, the South Polar Times, now reprinted for collectorsIt had the lowest possible circulation for any newspaper in the world. Only one copy of each edition was ever printed. Yet the South Polar Times had a readership that would bring tears to the eye of a media mogul. Every single person on the continent of Antarctica read it. For good measure, the paper also had a startlingly impressive list of editors that included polar exploration leader Ernest Shackleton as well as Apsley Cherry-Garrard, author of the travel classic The Worst Journey in the World.
By any reckoning, the paper was an extraordinary publication whose treasures can now be shared with readers in Britain – for £495 for a bound Folio Society reproduction of its entire 12 issues. Each paper – which ran from 30 to 50 pages – includes photographs, features, caricatures of officers and men, whimsical observations of life in Antarctica, cartoons, weather reports and a range of breathtaking watercolours of the polar landscape – most of them works by zoologist Edward Wilson, Scott's deputy, and a painter of considerable talent.
"Wilson turns out to be an artist who was capable of some truly exquisite work," says Joe Whitlock Blundell, the Folio Society's production director. "These are some of the key high points of the South Polar Times. Wilson was clearly a remarkable artist."
Written a century ago, the papers are also intriguing historical documents in their own right, including popular music-hall songs rewritten with new lyrics; a pastiche of Walt Whitman's poetry; and an account of their own expedition as recently decoded papyrus leaves – a spoof on the great Rosetta Stone controversy.
The South Polar Times was produced by the men of Robert Scott's two journeys to Antarctica: the Discovery expedition of 1901–04, and the Terra Nova expedition of 1910–13. (Each journey was named after the ship that took Scott's teams to Antarctica.) Regular journals on long voyages were a Royal Navy tradition and Scott was determined to keep it up. Among the boxes of cargo brought by his ships, Scott included a typewriter, reams of good quality paper and art supplies. In the end, 12 issues of the Times were produced: eight from the first of Scott's trips to the Antarctic and four from his second, ill-fated expedition.
All are marked by their jollity and would have provided a welcome diversion for the men during the long, dark austral winters. However, it is the last issue of the South Polar Times that provides the most touching copy. It was written and produced in June 1912, by which time Cherry-Garrard and the rest of the men living in the expedition hut of Ross Island knew that Scott and his four companions – Wilson, Henry Bowers, Edgar Evans and Lawrence Oates – were dead. Their supplies would have run out weeks earlier.
"They still produced the Times, but there is no mention of the fact that Scott and the polar team were missing. Yet their absence would been like an elephant in the room," says Blundell. "The paper has jokes in it but they fall flat.
"However, it is the weather records in that issue that are the real eye-openers," he adds. "They show that for the few preceding months, the wind and snow conditions were the worst that had been experienced for that time of year and illustrate just how unlucky were Scott and his men. As the South Polar Times reveals, they were simply caught in some of the worst weather in the world."
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