Shackleton's Heroes (18 page)

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Authors: Wilson McOrist

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Spencer-Smith:

17 Oct: A severe day: overcast and a strong and very cold wind from nearly dead ahead. Temp -10° F rising to +1° F in the evening.

The whole day was a long slip, stumble and fall: all glare surface and quite impossible to see where to place one's foot even when the drift ceased. The wind was so strong that it actually blew Wild and self backwards sliding on our feet at one halt.

We did 6 miles 1150 yds nevertheless and camped at 3 o'clock, quite fed up. If only the wind would stop, the surface is perfect for quick work.
19

Wild:

20 Oct: Had to pack up at three o'clock on account of a strong head wind. I fell down or was blown down 5 times. Once the wind blew me 3 or 4 paces to the rear. I was just sliding. It would have been a lovely surface for travelling had there been no wind.
20

More stores are laid at Minna Bluff

In late October Mackintosh and Joyce's parties added provisions to those already at the Minna Bluff depot and went back to Hut Point to pick up more supplies. With a southerly wind behind them and lighter loads (having deposited stores at the Bluff depot), the trek back was much quicker than coming out. Diary entries casually mention some of the hardships they endured.

In one diary entry by Joyce we learn of his party finding a note written in 1912, left by Apsley Cherry-Garrard, for Scott. Cherry-Garrard was the youngest member of Scott's
Terra Nova
Expedition. In early 1912, while Scott's party was struggling back from the South Pole, Cherry-Garrard made a supply run to a depot called ‘One Ton Depot', about 140 miles from Hut Point – he had hoped he might meet Scott returning from the Pole.

Joyce:

23 Oct: Had another bad night. Cold + shivering warm when we turned in but got very cold in the night. Temp -30.

Under weigh usual time a cold S wind temp –20 –2. Just before we started Hayward + Jack opened sleeping bags + a very heavy drift struck us + before they could be closed were filled up. Hard luck.

Could not see anything to steer by so going by drift. Set sail found we had to run to keep up to sledge. Came on to an ivory surface. So had to take sail off. The wind was so strong that it still carried the sledge forward one man had to brake. We came some awful croppers on the hard Sastrugi. Going along between 2 + 3 miles an hour. Lunched usual time took all hand to spread out tent + then it took some 20 minutes. Under way usual in the afternoon drift eased but wind + surface the same as forenoon, going at a good rate. Slipped all about the place.

Camped @ 6 oclock. Distance done from 16 to 18 miles. I am bruised all over. Temp –20.
21

Spencer-Smith: ‘Spent the morning playing hunt the crevasse. Wild went down 2 little ones. We spotted 12 in all, including 4 or 5 large ones ranging from 7 to 30 feet width.'
22

Joyce:

26 Oct: Sighted a sledge or part stuck up. NW. Made for it arrived at 4-10. Started digging out, then found it would be a long job decided to camp, made cocoa + carried on.

Came across a note from Cherry Garrard to Capt Scott, tied on a 12ft ice pick as follows:

19 March.

Dear Sir.

We leave here this morning with the dogs for Hut Point. We have laid no Depots on the way as being off course all the way. I have not been able to leave a note before.

Yours Sincerely

Cherry Garrard

Rather pathetic picking this note up + dated I think after Scotts death.

Finish digging about 8. Found 4 cases of Spratts Biscuits + some Wolseley Motor Oil. Made a Depot, had dinner, turned in 9 o'clock. Temp -26.
23

Late October 1915: All the men are back at Hut Point

The dogs at Cape Evans had not been used, except for taking stores to Hut Point in September. This was in spite of Joyce's experience with dogs – he first worked with them on Scott's 1901–04
Discovery
Expedition and then again on Shackleton's 1907–09
Nimrod
Expedition. Richards, in one of his interviews, tells us that they had decided not to use the dogs because they felt that men and dogs were not compatible. The pace of a man hauling a sledge with a heavy load behind him was just trudge, trudge, with one foot a few inches in front of another in the snow. Dogs liked to go at a reasonable trot when they were pulling sledges. They thought it would be quite impossible to marry the two.
24

It is not clear why they then decided, in late October, to start using the dogs to help with the sledge-hauling. Joyce wrote there were five dogs used but only four were taken, Oscar, Gunner, Con and Towser.

Richards recalled that it was not Mackintosh's idea to take the dogs. He tells us that he (Richards) persuaded Joyce to try out the four dogs and that Joyce then had to ‘sell' the notion to Mackintosh. The dogs were then brought from Cape Evans to Hut Point and they required some time to adapt themselves to the men's slower rate of progress, but to Richards the decision to take them was justified. He wrote later: ‘None of us who made the southern journey will ever forget those faithful friends of the dog world – Con, Gunner, Oscar and Towser.'
25

The men enjoyed travelling with the dogs, yelling instructions such as ‘Ready' for the dogs to stand and be ready to start, ‘Mush' for the dogs to go, ‘Ha' to turn right, ‘Gee' to turn left and ‘Whoa' to stop.
26
Oscar was Richards's favourite. He described him as a powerful brute, a massive dog at about 110 lb, but not a lovely-looking dog. He had a broad leonine head and a low ‘criminal type' forehead. Richards thought he was disliked by the
other dogs on account of his homosexual activities. To Richards he was a lazy brute usually but ‘when the chips were down he came through, when the other three chucked their hands in'.

Gunner (called Gunboat by some of the men) was as big as Oscar. Towser was the lightest and not much use for pulling in Richards view. Those three were Canadian huskies and Richards remembered them as lazy and quarrelsome, with no interest in hunting seals or anything else. Whereas Con was a samoyed dog and completely different in character. Richards described him as a ‘good living dog', lively and keen on hunting seals. He believed that the other three dogs ‘hated his guts' and they often tried to kill him.
27
But as far as he and the others were concerned, in the sledging, they all did ‘yeoman's service'.
28

Neither Joyce nor any of the others write on the sledging arrangement used at this time. From photographs we can see the dogs usually travelled in single file, not a fan formation, harnessed onto one rope back to the sledge. At the front of them was the leading man who the dogs followed. The other men were attached to the sledge separately, not in single file like the dogs.

Joyce:

28 Oct: Had a very good night's rest. Rather too warm with a roaring fire going all night. Temp +16 +30. Southerly blizzard was drying clothes + Bags.

Had a yarn with the Skipper about things. So we have decided to take on the 5 dogs next trip + see what we can do.

All our appetites are of the best so having a good stock of seal meat such as Liver Kidneys Steak etc. We found a seal with young so they are breeding now + we shall be getting up a great many. Had a bonzer dinner of seal. Turned in 9 o'clock.
29

Hayward: ‘23–27 Oct 15. Arrived Hut Point after very favourable run back. Have decided to make use of dogs next trip.'
30

Additional stores are taken out to the Bluff depot

From late October through to late December the two parties trekked out to the Barrier and to the Bluff depot, also loading up other depots on the way.
Mackintosh's party (he, Spencer-Smith and Wild) would now not return to Hut Point, preferring to pick up supplies from other depots on the Barrier, such as the one at Safety Camp, and go back south from there. Joyce's party, now with the dogs, would return to Hut Point on a number of occasions.

Some of the men maintained a daily log over these three months but most of their notes relate to day-to-day activities, or simple aspects of their existence. Wild seems to keep his peace with Mackintosh as there is no mention of any arguments, although he often included diary comments on Mackintosh, for dropping and losing things, and acting irrationally. Spencer-Smith often wrote of his thoughts and his dreams. Hayward's diary entries, so detailed when he first arrived in Antarctica and on his early sledging journeys of February and March 1915, had now become quite brief, and devoid of any reference to his fiancée, but he regularly made a note of the distance travelled each day.

Mackintosh gave Joyce instructions to place more stores at the Bluff depot:

28 October 1915

 

Dear Joyce,

The plans for you to carry out your next trip to the Bluff Depot will be as follows The above is what I require you to do, anything you can to better this or to accelerate the speed (3 weeks out and back) will be to your credit.
31

  • Stores to be left at the Bluff by each unit (3 men) to be 159 lbs. To enable you to undertake this five of the dogs will be used each day to pull a weight equal to 70 lbs, their ration to be 1.5 lbs per diem
    .
    §
     
  • To enable two efficient sledge parties, they should consist of yourself (in charge) Hayward and Gaze. For the other party, Richards, Cope & Jack with the dogs
    .
     
  • The party under you then can pull the load according to the programme (560 lbs), while the other party with the dogs should easily manage that amount or I hope over without undue overloading
    .

Joyce:

5 Nov: …broke our shovel a rather serious thing, as it will mean both parties to use one.
32

 

6 Nov: Dogs doing their best. I suppose they find it strange pulling in harness with the men. Now + again we would get a heavy snow drop making a great noise + the dogs would get frightened and jump forward with gusto.
33

Wild:

16 Oct: We saw one of Scott's bamboos with the remains of a flag on it this morning. We dug down about 8 feet but didn't come across any bacco. Still on Hut Point mixture.
34

 

21 Oct: I found one of Skipper's finneskoes which had dropped off on the way out.
35

 

1 Nov: Skipper lost his watch & I found it on the sledge.
36

 

2 Nov: Another record, the Skipper didn't drop any mitts today.
37

 

9 Nov: Started back at 10.15 & have come 9 miles that's without counting & meter & a few trifles. I took meter off when Skipper wasn't looking because I knew he would want it on if he saw me. Ha-ha.
38

 

17 Nov: Skipper broke the compass and we had to mend it between us.
39

 

19 Nov: Skipper acted wet just now & took his boots & socks off & ran around in the snow. He says he reckons it will be alright to go on the march with them off. I'd like to see him.
40

 

9 Dec: Skipper's boot fell off. Smithy went back ¼ mile for it.
41

Spencer-Smith:

5 Nov: Cam
¶
has been trotting in and out of my mind all day. I Wonder why? A huge halo has encircled the sun all day; sun very warm, almost windless. Temp morn +13, evening +8°F.
42

 

7 Nov: Graft! Graft! Graft! Even the sun deserted us at 10am and the sky became overcast, so that steering became very difficult: we must have passed within 150 yards of a cairn without seeing it.

Dreamt last night I had promised to preach today in London, but had not written the sermon, nor could remember where the church was. Joan
||
could not find the text about Absalom's complaint of David's niggardliness in forgiveness (a crib of Dr Macgregor's sermon in part).
43

Hayward:

9 Nov: Under way punctually 8 o/c. Surface A1.
**
By lunch camp had done 4 m. After lunch fresh N. Easter sprang up, set sail, great assistance. Total for day 9M. Excellent. What!

 

11 Nov: Weather lovely. Going excellent. Dogs A1. Total mileage for day 9½ M

 

15 Nov: Richards & I took dog team & fetched back stores depôted by us last trip 2 m from our Camp these stores we left here, this being a more convenient point & also right on our course.

Got under way 10.30 heavy going weather bright & warm, so warm in afternoon in fact that I indulged in a wash snow making quite a good substitute for water, soap & towel. Mileage 5½ m.
44

Mid-November 1915

Mackintosh, Spencer-Smith and Wild seemed to enjoy each other's company. Spencer-Smith made diary notes on their debates, such as on ‘Home Rule',
45
on the sledge-meter,
46
and with ‘the Skipper about laymen taking scientific observations'.
47
There is no diary note of any conversations between Mackintosh and Wild; however, it is not hard to imagine that they would have discussed their shared Bedfordshire connection and their naval experiences. Mackintosh was at Bedford Modern School from 1891 to 1894.
48
Wild lived at Eversholt, a tiny village in Bedfordshire, from 1884 to 1894. Mackintosh served as an officer on a number of ships, working for the merchant shipping company P&O from 1900 to 1909, and Wild served with the Royal Navy on battleships, cruisers and gunboats, from 1895 to 1913.
49
50
But, from a Mackintosh diary note from the year before, we have some insight into the conversation between these three men:

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