Controversies surrounding Robert Falcon Scott

Captain Robert Falcon Scott, leader of the Terra Nova Expedition (1911-1913), in polar gear

In the closing decades of the 20th century, the British Antarctic explorer Robert Falcon Scott became the subject of controversy when, more than 60 years after his death on the return march from the South Pole in 1912, his achievements and character came under attack. Until that time the image of Scott, in Britain and in much of the world as an heroic endeavour had been uncontested, the cornerstone of his reputation being his "Message to the Public" written just before his death. Criticisms of his methods and character had generally failed to penetrate the public's consciousness. However, Roland Huntford's 1979 joint biography of Scott and his rival Roald Amundsen presented a contrasting view of Scott, not as hero but as heroic bungler. The book was reissued in the 1980s as The Last Place On Earth, and was the subject of a 1985 television docudrama miniseries.

Although Huntford's objectivity was questioned, and his hostility towards Scott revealed, the book and the related television docudrama temporarily changed the public's perception, the "bungler" tag quickly becoming the new orthodoxy. In the 1980s and 1990s Scott was depicted negatively in further books, was satirised and finally subjected to ridicule. Historians have argued that the changing attitudes toward Scott arose not merely from Huntford's analysis but from late 20th century cultural shifts which would have questioned the traditional forms of heroism represented by Scott.

The first decade of the 21st century has seen successful attempts to rescue Scott's reputation. Analysis of March 1912 meteorological data has proven that Scott and his party have been primarily the victims of unusually severe Antarctic weather rather than of bungling and incompetence. A 2003 Scott biography from polar explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes included a spirited defence of Scott, and was the first book to mount a serious attack on Huntford's thesis and credentials. Other biographical and historical works, television programmes and numerous articles have continued to appear, representing different areas of the controversy's spectrum. According to historian Stephanie Barczewski, the variations in Scott's reputation are the result of current cultural forces that have very little to do with Scott himself.

Finally, in 2012, Karen May at the Scott Polar Research Institute re-discovered the following facts. In 1921, 'Teddy' Evans revealed in his book South with Scott that Scott had left the following written orders at Cape Evans dated 20 October 1911 to secure Scott's speedy return from the pole using dogs. This order, rediscovered in 2012,[1] was not carried out, and Scott and his men died:

About the first week of February I should like you to start your third journey to the South, the object being to hasten the return of the third Southern unit [the polar party] and give it a chance to catch the ship. The date of your departure must depend on news received from returning units, the extent of the depot of dog food you have been able to leave at One Ton Camp, the state of the dogs, etc ... It looks at present as though you should aim at meeting the returning party about March 1 in Latitude 82 or 82.30 [2]

Expedition member Apsley Cherry-Garrard initially omitted mentioning Scott's order in his 1922 book The Worst Journey in the World. However, in the 1948 preface to his book, also rediscovered in 2012,[3] he admits to the existence of Scott's order, and explains that Scott's order could not have been carried out because insufficient dog food had been laid out by Cecil Meares, the dog-driver and the recipient of Scott's order and because one of the base camp team, Atkinson, was too exhausted at the specified time of departure.

Background

Robert Falcon Scott and four companions reached the South Pole on 17 January 1912, to find that they had been forestalled by a Norwegian party led by Roald Amundsen, who had arrived at the Pole five weeks earlier.[4] Scott's party perished during their return journey to base camp in McMurdo Sound, their bodies and records being recovered by a search party during the following season.[5] Scott's journals told the story of the march in terms which had a great public impact, elevating him to the role of iconic hero. Scott's assertion in his final Message to the Public, that his party's fate was the result of misfortune, not faulty organisation, was generally accepted without question;[6] accounts of Scott's last expedition contained only limited and muted criticisms.This broadly remained the case for the following sixty years.[7]

Reassessment

Early critics

Apsley Cherry-Garrard's 1922 book The Worst Journey in the World mentions mistakes, and includes descriptions of Scott's character as "weak" and "peevish",[8] but still praises his heroism and concludes that he was "the last of the great geographical explorers".[9] In 1927 historian John Gordon Hayes published Antarctica: A treatise on the Southern Continent, in which he concludes that Scott's over-complex transport arrangements had contributed to a disaster that could otherwise have been prevented, but this revelation had little public effect.[10] Subsequent books and films continued to reinforce Scott's heroic reputation, up to and beyond World War II.[7] Reginald Pound (1966) and Elspeth Huxley (1977), who each had access to original material including Scott's sledging journals, both produced full-length biographies which identify personal weaknesses but endorse Scott's heroism.[11] The first major book written from a perspective that clearly rejects the traditional reverential approach to Scott was David Thomson's Scott's Men (1977): "Scott does not strike me as a great man – at least, not until near the end".[12]

Huntford

Two years later Roland Huntford published Scott and Amundsen, claiming that his primary motive was the righting of an historic wrong – the elevation of Scott to heroic status despite his failures, and the neglect of the successful Amundsen.[13] The book, a sustained attack on Scott, has been described as "devastating" and "at best one-sided, at worst as wholly malicious"; in general it was an "anti-historical" approach to the debate.[14] It did, however, become a best-seller on both sides of the Atlantic, having an immediate negative impact on public perceptions of Scott, described by Huntford as "one of the worst of polar explorers".[15][16] The new orthodoxy was that Scott, far from being a hero, was a "heroic bungler".[17][18] The ready acceptance of this view of Scott has been attributed to the unavoidable reality of Britain's national decline,[18] and recognition of Scott as "an emblem of the amateurism and incompetence which ... had encumbered Britain through the twentieth century."[19]

Grounds for criticism

Among the main criticisms levelled by Huntford and others against Scott are:

Counter-revision

In 1997 Diana Preston published A First-Rate Tragedy: Robert Falcon Scott and the Race to the South Pole, a documentation of Scott's expeditions. While she admits some of Scott's weaknesses such as his short temper and jumpy style of decision-making, she also gives mitigating aspects to every questionable event. The book however received little attention and has gone out of print.[20]

In the first decade of the 21st century attempts to rescue Scott's reputation were led by polar explorer and adventurer Sir Ranulph Fiennes, with his 2003 biography Captain Scott. The book has been noted not only for its defence of Scott but for the stridency of its attacks on Huntford, which Fiennes claimed would have gone considerably further, had the laws of libel allowed.[21] Fiennes, who has apparently studied how the great explorers of his own generation came to be sidelined, later described Scott as "a great historic hero whose name has been dragged through the dirt."[21][22] Susan Solomon's summary of meteorological data for the Ross Ice Shelf during February and March 1912 advances the theory that the death of Scott's party was due to the extreme weather conditions that prevailed at that time, rather than to organisational failure.[23] This conclusion is generally supported by David Crane in his 2005 biography, although faults are acknowledged.[24]

Manchester historian Max Jones argues that the fall in Scott's public standing arose primarily from Huntford's successful depiction of Scott as "an emblem for the amateurism and incompetence which ... had encumbered Britain through the twentieth century."[25] He concludes, however, that "raising Scott as an emblem of decline reveals more about current concerns than about past history."[25] Jones further notes the "rediscovery" of Ernest Shackleton during the 1990s and that "Scott has been sacrificed on the altar of Shackleton worship",[25] themes which are the main substance of Stephanie Barczewski's 2008 book Antarctic Destinies. Barczewski also advances the view that late 20th century cultural shifts would inevitably have caused reassessment of the traditional forms of heroism represented by Scott.[26]

Notes and references

  1. Karen May 2012, Could Captain Scott have been saved? Revisiting Scott's last expedition, Polar Record, p. 1-19.
  2. Evans, E.R.G.R. 1949, South with Scott, London: Collins, p. 187-188.
  3. Gray, Richard (31 December 2012). "Scott of the Antarctic could have been saved if his orders had been followed, say scientists". The Telegraph. Retrieved 27 March 2013.
  4. L. Huxley, Vol I p. 544
  5. L. Huxley, Vol II, pp. 345–48
  6. Jones p. 101
  7. 1 2 Jones, pp. 286–87
  8. Cherry-Garrard, p. 248
  9. Cherry-Garrard, p. 659
  10. Jones, p. 266
  11. Baczewski, p. 240 and p. 244
  12. Thomson, Preface pp. xiii–xiv
  13. Barczewski, p. 252
  14. Barczewski, p. 261. See also the review by Jon Latimer.
  15. Barczewski p. 259.
  16. Huntford p. 523.
  17. Huntford, p. 527
  18. 1 2 Barczewski, p. 260
  19. Jones, p. 288.
  20. Diana Preston, A first rate tragedy, ISBN 0-09-476380-1
  21. 1 2 Barczewski, p. 306
  22. Fiennes, p. 122.
  23. Solomon, pp. 309–27
  24. Crane, pp.576–81
  25. 1 2 3 Jones, pp. 288–89
  26. Barczewski, p. 282

Sources

Books


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