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C.E. Borchgrevink

Carsten Borchgrevink
Cabinet card image of Norway-born explorer Carsten Borchgrevink (1864-1934)(Cropped).jpg
Born Carsten Egeberg Borchgrevink
(1864-12-01)1 December 1864
Oslo, Norway
Died 21 April 1934(1934-04-21) (aged 69)
Oslo, Norway
Education Gjertsen College, Oslo, and Royal Forestry School, Tharandt, Saxony
Occupation Forester, surveyor, schoolmaster and Antarctic explorer
Spouse(s) Constance Prior Borchgrevink, née Standen
Children 2 sons, 2 daughters
Parent(s) Henrik Christian Borchgrevink and Annie, née Ridley

Carsten Egeberg Borchgrevink (1 December 1864 – 21 April 1934) was an Anglo-Norwegian polar explorer and a pioneer of modern Antarctic travel. He was the precursor of Robert Falcon Scott, Ernest Shackleton, Roald Amundsen and other more famous names associated with the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration. In 1898–1900 he led the British-financed Southern Cross Expedition, which established a new Farthest South record at 78°50'S. He is allegedly the only known person to be the first put his foot on a continent, when he in 1894 got onshore of the Antarctic mainland.

Borchgrevink began his exploring career in 1894 by joining a Norwegian whaling expedition, during which he became one of the first persons to set foot on the Antarctic mainland. This achievement helped him to obtain backing for his Southern Cross Expedition, which became the first to overwinter on the Antarctic mainland, and the first to visit the Great Ice Barrier since the expedition of Sir James Ross nearly sixty years previously. However, the expedition's successes, including the Farthest South, were received with only moderate interest by the public and by the British geographical establishment, whose attention was by then focused on Scott's upcoming National Antarctic Expedition. Some of Borchgrevink's colleagues were critical of his leadership, and his own accounts of the expedition were regarded as journalistic and unreliable.

After the Southern Cross Expedition, Borchgrevink was one of three scientists sent to the Caribbean in 1902 by the National Geographic Society, to report on the aftermath of the Mount Pelée disaster. Thereafter he settled in Oslo, leading a life mainly away from public attention. His pioneering work was subsequently recognised and honoured by several countries, and in 1912 he received a handsome tribute from Roald Amundsen, conqueror of the South Pole. In 1930, Britain's Royal Geographical Society finally acknowledged Borchgrevink's contribution to polar exploration and awarded him its Patron's Medal. The Society acknowledged in its citation that justice had not previously been done to the work of the Southern Cross Expedition.


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