Alfred Ritscher | |
---|---|
Born |
Bad Lauterberg |
May 23, 1879
Died | March 30, 1963 Hamburg |
(aged 83)
Allegiance |
German Empire Weimar Republic Nazi Germany |
Service/branch |
Kaiserliche Marine Reichsmarine Kriegsmarine |
Rank | Kapitän zur See |
Other work | led the Third German Antarctic Expedition |
Alfred Ritscher (23 May 1879 in Bad Lauterberg – 30 March 1963 in Hamburg) was a German polar explorer. A Kapitän zur See in the Kriegsmarine, he led the third German Antarctic Expedition in 1938-39, which mapped the New Swabia (German: Neuschwabenland) area of Queen Maud Land. Ritscher Peak and Ritscher Upland there are named for him.
1897 Alfred Ritscher made his first trip as a cabin boy on the Bremen ship "Emily". In 1903 he passed his helmsman exams and earned his master's certificate in 1907. At the beginning of 1912, Ritscher gained a place in the newly created Seehandbuchwerk of the Navy Office.
Alfred Ritscher was skipper of the "German Arctic Expedition" of 1912-1913, under the command of Herbert Schröder-Stranz, which departed from Tromsø in the motor vessel "Herzog Ernst" for a preliminary reconnaissance of a planned navigation of the Northeast Passage. He also took over the leadership of the airborne survey of the expedition and obtained a pilot licence. The expedition failed whislt attempting the crossing of the Nordaustlandet island in northeastern Spitsbergen archipelago, because of poor equipment, misjudged weather and starting too late in the year. Ritscher marched over 210 km in seven and a half days, to the settlement of Longyearbyen. Search expeditions were sent after his message about the fate of the Schroeder-Stranz expedition and saved six of the fourteen missing expedition members.
During the First World War, Ritscher made reconnaissance flights in support of Marine units in Flanders. After the war he worked as an independent businessman and in 1925 worked as a specialist in aerial navigation with Lufthansa.