Frank V. Browning (1882–1930) was a native of Devonshire and explorer of Antarctica. He was part of the Terra Nova Expedition of 1910–1913. In this service he was one of the castaways of the Northern Party that was marooned overwinter on Victoria Land in 1912.
Frank Vernon Browning was born in June 1882 in Stockland, Devon. After ending his schooling he joined the Royal Navy in June 1900. Continuing in the Senior Service, he made Petty Officer 2nd Class in November 1905. As a Petty Officer he joined the Terra Nova Expedition, bound for Antarctica, in 1910. [1]
As a messdeck seaman, Browning helped sail the Terra Nova from Cardiff to McMurdo Sound in Antarctic waters. His expedition mates remembered his kindness to the ship's cat, which was named Nigger, this being an acceptable name for a black cat in 1910. [2] After the Terra Nova anchored at Cape Evans, Browning joined the Shore Party and embarked upon active Antarctic service. Expedition commander Robert Falcon Scott and one of his officers, Victor L. A. Campbell, chose Browning to serve under Campbell in what became the Northern Party, a subsidiary expedition to a patch of Victoria Land Antarctic coastline northwest of the main base. [3] The Northern Party was supposed to explore a section of rocky and icy coast, collect geological specimens, and then be retrieved by the Terra Nova. However this retrieval did not take place. Instead, during the winter of 1912, the party was icebound and marooned on Inexpressible Island, an island on the coast being explored. They were forced to fall back on their own resources. [4] This was the Antarctic winter in which expedition commander Scott and his immediate companions perished while attempting to return from the South Pole. [5]
More fortunate than Scott, Browning and his fellow members of the Northern Party were on a coastline with some animal life that could be killed and eaten. Although the sledging rations that they had brought with them ran out, they were able to carve an emergency ice cave for themselves and hunt meat to survive. [4] Browning won the plaudits of his comrades for killing a predator seal whose stomach contained 36 edible fish. The fresh seal meat contained vitamin C and, unlike Scott's polar party, the Northern Party did not come down with scurvy. [6] With an inadequate but survival-level diet, the members of the Northern Party suffered intensely from other symptoms, including ptomaine poisoning. Under near-lethal conditions, the members of the Northern Party managed to trek towards their expedition's main base during the spring of the 1912–1913 sledging season, and Browning and his comrades were rescued. [6]
Mount Browning, a 762m-high mountain on the coast of Victoria Land, and Browning Pass, a mountain gap through which ice flows and feeds the Campbell Glacier, are named in honor of Petty Officer Frank V. Browning.
Captain Robert Falcon Scott was a British Royal Navy officer and explorer who led two expeditions to the Antarctic regions: the Discovery expedition of 1901–04 and the Terra Nova expedition of 1910–13.
Edward Adrian Wilson was an English polar explorer, ornithologist, natural historian, physician and artist.
Terra Nova Bay is a bay which is often ice free, about 40 nautical miles long, lying between Cape Washington and the Drygalski Ice Tongue along the coast of Victoria Land, Antarctica. It was discovered by the British National Antarctic Expedition under Robert Falcon Scott, 1901–1904, and named by him after Terra Nova, one of the relief ships for the expedition.
Thomas Crean was an Irish seaman and Antarctic explorer who was awarded the Albert Medal for Lifesaving (AM).
Petty Officer Edgar Evans was a Welsh Royal Navy petty officer and member of the "Polar Party" in Robert Falcon Scott's ill-fated Terra Nova Expedition to the South Pole in 1911–1912. This group of five men, personally selected for the final expedition push, attained the Pole on 17 January 1912. The party perished as they attempted to return to the base camp.
Admiral Edward Ratcliffe Garth Russell Evans, 1st Baron Mountevans, was a Royal Navy officer and Antarctic explorer.
William Lashly was a Royal Navy seaman who served as lead stoker on both the Discovery expedition and the Terra Nova expedition to Antarctica, for which he was awarded the Polar Medal. Lashly was also recognised with the Albert Medal for playing a key role in saving the life of a comrade on the second of the two expeditions.
Scott's Hut is a building located on the north shore of Cape Evans on Ross Island in Antarctica. It was erected in 1911 by the British Antarctic Expedition of 1910–1913 led by Robert Falcon Scott.
The Terra NovaExpedition, officially the British Antarctic Expedition, was an expedition to Antarctica which took place between 1910 and 1913. Led by Captain Robert Falcon Scott, the expedition had various scientific and geographical objectives. Scott wished to continue the scientific work that he had begun when leading the Discovery Expedition from 1901 to 1904, and wanted to be the first to reach the geographic South Pole.
Herbert George Ponting, FRGS was a professional photographer. He is best known as the expedition photographer and cinematographer for Robert Falcon Scott's Terra Nova Expedition to the Ross Sea and South Pole (1910–1913). In this role, he captured some of the most enduring images of the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration.
The Worst Journey in the World is a 1922 memoir by Apsley Cherry-Garrard of Robert Falcon Scott's Terra Nova expedition to the South Pole in 1910–1913. It has earned wide praise for its frank treatment of the difficulties of the expedition, the causes of its disastrous outcome, and the meaning of human suffering under extreme conditions.
Victor Lindsey Arbuthnot Campbell was an English Royal Navy officer and Antarctic explorer.
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Sir Raymond Edward Priestley was an English geologist and early Antarctic explorer. He was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Birmingham, where he helped found The Raymond Priestley Centre on the shores of Coniston Water in the Lake District National Park.
Robert Forde was an Antarctic explorer and member of the Terra Nova Expedition under Captain Robert Falcon Scott from 1910–1912.
Cecil Henry Meares was a British military officer, interpreter, adventurer, and explorer.
Patrick Keohane was an Irish member of Robert Falcon Scott's Antarctic expedition of 1910–1913, the Terra Nova expedition.
Northern Foothills is a line of coastal hills on the west side of Terra Nova Bay, Victoria Land, Antarctica, lying southward of Browning Pass and forming a peninsular continuation of the Deep Freeze Range. It was named by the Northern Party of the British Antarctic Expedition, 1910–13 (BrAE), because during field operations Inexpressible Island, close southward, was originally referred to as the "Southern Foothills."
Denis Gascoigne Lillie was a British biologist who participated in the Terra Nova Expedition (1910–1913) to the Antarctic. He collected numerous marine animals as well as plants and fossils–many of which were new to science–and published scientific papers on whales, fossils, and medicine. He received the Polar Medal along with other Terra Nova members in 1913. He was also a noted caricaturist who made cartoons of professors, colleagues, and friends: some of his caricatures are collected in the National Portrait Gallery. He worked as a government bacteriologist during World War I and then suffered a severe mental breakdown, spending three years at Bethlem Royal Hospital and never fully recovering. He is commemorated in the names of several marine organisms as well as Lillie Glacier in Antarctica.
George Percy Abbott was a Royal Navy petty officer, Royal Naval Air Service pilot officer, and Antarctic explorer.