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Dulwich College

Environment, Sustainable Travel

The Incredible Afterlife of the James Caird Lifeboat

Most of us know the “Endurance” story’s climax: Sir Ernest Shackleton and five companions navigating 800 miles of the world’s most violent ocean in a tiny 23-foot lifeboat, the James Caird, to reach South Georgia. But what happened to that sturdy little boat once it hit the gravel at Cave Cove, King Haakon Bay?

The journey of the James Caird didn’t end with the rescue of Shackleton’s men. With the next James Caird Society dinner, and a reception in front of this plucky boat, coming up soon for me – plus 24th April is the date Shackleton left Elephant Island heading for South Georgia Island – I wanted to explore the story more. Its survival as a physical relic is almost as miraculous as its voyage!

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Environment, Sustainable Travel

An Evening of Antarctic Inspiration: A James Caird Society Dinner to Remember

Last week, I had the immense privilege of attending the bi-annual James Caird Society dinner, at Dulwich College, an event that always promises a deep dive into the heroic age of Antarctic exploration. This year, however, felt particularly special, leaving me filled with inspiration and a renewed sense of awe for those who braved the frozen continent.

The air bubbled with anticipation as members gathered around the James Caird, many of whom have their own incredible stories connected to polar exploration. The evening’s speaker in the Great Hall at Dulwich, was Bob Headland, a renowned writer and polar historian whom I had had the pleasure of sitting next to at the previous dinner. His address was, as expected, a masterclass in storytelling, ‘Non-existent Islands & Rocks of the Southern Ocean’, bringing to life incredible marine tales of endurance and resilience that define the era of Shackleton, Scott, and their contemporaries.

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Environment, Sustainable Travel

Standing Next to History

… with a group of like-minded, inspirational people who get together to preserve its memory

Hands up who knows the remarkable story of Sir Ernest Shackleton’s voyage to Antarctica on the ship Endurance? It’s the one that took place in 1914 on his endeavour to attempt the first land crossing of the Antarctic, from the Weddell Sea through the South Pole to the Ross Sea.

Remember the part where Shackleton and his men are stranded on Elephant Island? He takes a lifeboat with Frank Worsley, Tom Crean and three others battling treacherous seas and ice for 16 days and 800 miles before reaching the ‘wrong’ side of South Georgia, with mountains between them and the whaling station that could provide the help to rescue his men…

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