From Antartic to Archive Office: Centenary of Captain Scott

June 15 will mark a hundred years since Captain Scott and the British Antarctic Expedition set sail from Cardiff to the South Pole.

With this milestone date in mind, the team at Glamorgan Archives were interested to discover if they had any records linked to the expedition. The team were pleased to find letters sent from Wilfred Bruce, Scott’s brother-in-law, who was also a member of the Expedition, based on board the Terra Nova.

The letters were written by Bruce to Lillian Knowles, between March 1911 and January 1913 and give an insight into the expedition and the hardships which were endured.  The letters are written on British Antarctic Expedition official notepaper carrying an illustration of a penguin.

The first letter, dated 7 March 1911, was sent from Victoria Land, Antarctica and  describes the voyage of the Terra Nova from New Zealand to Antarctica, including the severe gales in which the ship was nearly lost.

Bruce records that all the crew had to bale out water to save the ship and that all their equipment and everything in the cabins, including their clothes, were soaked.  He also goes on to describes the landing and unloading of stores at McMurdo Sound, and an attack by killer whales which threatened Herbert Ponting, the expedition’s photographer.

The final letter was written on 24 January 1913, titled ‘Homeward Bound’ and written after the loss of Scott’s party.  Bruce describes his feelings and the reasons for the disaster.  Included in his letter is a transcript of a poem written by Dr Edward Wilson, one of the men who died.

The correspondence came to the Archives in 1986 and was donated by the Captain Scott Society.

Like Captain Scott the Glamorgan Archives team have also recently started their own adventure, moving from their old offices in Cathays Park to their new state of the art building in Leckwith. A staggering 45,000 volumes, 60,000 plans and hundreds of items have all been moved to the new centre which opened in February 2010.

Cardiff Council’s Executive Member for Finance and Service Delivery, Cllr Mark Stephens, said:”It’s important that we mark the centenary of Captain Scott leaving Cardiff for the South Pole. It is a key moment in Cardiff’s history and  great to see that the Glamorgan Archives holds documents relating to this milestone in history, that people can look at and get an insight into the expedition.”

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