
By 1910, the Antarctic was the last place on earth that had never been explored, & British naval officer Robert Scott was obsessed that an Englishman
- specifically himself
- should conquer the pole. Despite being under-funded, under-equipped & unprepared, Scott sailed south in the antiquated whaling ship, Terra Nova, in what everyone assumed would be a cracking good adventure. The expedition was made up entirely of British adventurers, gadabouts & scientists, the exception being one Canadian, Charles Seymour (Silas) Wright. Born 1887 in Toronto, Charles Wright was studying physics in Cambridge when he heard Scott was looking for a physicist to join the expedition to the pole. By the time Wright inquired, Scott had chosen a physicist for the team but was short a glaciologist. Who else but a Canadian would know about glaciers? Wright became the expedition`s glaciologist. Halfway through the rough passage to the Antarctic, Scott got word that a rival explorer, Norwegian Roald Amundsen, was also making a run for the pole & was close on their heels. What started out as a stroll to the South Pole became a race between two very determined & different men. Arriving at their base camp on Cape Evans in January 1911, Scott`s team soon discovered they were unprepared for the Antarctic, while equipment failures & food shortages compounded the hardship. For the final race to the pole, Scott stripped the team down to four men, & Wright did not make the cut. Scott reached the geographic South Pole only to find that Amundsen had beaten them by days. Bitterly disappointed, Scott & his companions returned to base camp, but were caught in a fierce Antarctic blizzard that raged for days. Too weak to pull their sleds & out of food & fuel, they froze to death. Ironically, as if to underscore the litany of errors that dogged the expedition, they perished only a few miles from a cache of food & fuel. Next spring Wright led a search party to look for the remains of Scott & his party, & it was the sharp-eyed Wright who spotted a small patch of green on a snowy landscape
- the tent containing Scott & his companions` frozen bodies. Wright returned to England & went on to do even more extraordinary things, including inventing trench wireless in WWI, & working closely with Winston Churchill, developing the technology to assist in the allied invasion of Europe in WWII which included developing the first radar installations & inventing the technology that neutralized German magnetic sea mines After a stint as naval attache to Washington, D.C., & Director of Scripps Oceanographic institute in La Jolla, California, he retired to Salt Spring Isl&, BC, passing away in 1975. Typically Canadian, Wright was modest about his accomplishments, with few Canadians aware of his amazing life & the extraordinary impact he had on the 20th century.