SOUTHERN CROSS 1889 Borchgrevink

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shipstamps
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SOUTHERN CROSS 1889 Borchgrevink

Post by shipstamps » Thu Jan 01, 2009 12:20 am


Built as wooden cargo or whaler by A. Herlofson at Arendal, Norway for Colin Archer?.
September 1886 launched as the POLLUX.
Tonnage 522 gross, 276 net, dim. 146.5 x 20.7 x 17.6ft.
One triple expansion steam engine 90 rhp. , speed with nice weather under steam around 9 mile.
Barque rigged.
January 1889 completed.

Most probably used under Norway flag as a sealer.
1898 Bought by the Norwegian Antarctic explorer Carsten Egeberg Borchgrevink for a voyage to the Antarctic. Renamed in SOUTHERN CROSS, under British flag and registry. (most probably Sir George Newnes a wealthy British publisher and his sponsor for this voyage was the owner of the ship.)
30 July 1898 she sailed from Christiania (Oslo) for London

30 August 1898 the SOUTHERN CROSS under command of the Norwegian Capt. Bernhard Jensen and with on board 27 persons and 90 dogs and provisions for three years sailed from London and via Madeira, Santa Cruz and St Vincent, passed 23 September the equator and arrived at Hobart, Tasmania on 28 November 1898.
17 December 1898 sailed from Hobart and headed for the Antarctic waters.
31 December she met the first pack-ice, 12 January passed Ballenyøyene, and she anchored off Cape Adare on 17 February.
After the overwintering party of 10 men was landed and a base camp was erected and all the needed equipment and stores were discharged the SOUTHERN CROSS headed north again on 2 March.
Borchgrevink named the camp after his mothers maiden name “Camp Ridley”.

16 March the SOUTHERN CROSS arrived in Port Chalmers, New Zealand from where she sailed to Wellington.
The SOUTHERN CROSS sailed the next year back to the Antarctic and when all men of the overwintering party were embarked she sailed on 2 February 1900 for the return voyage.
They sailed first south to the Ross Ice Shelf where some men landed and made a ski and sled walk for some 10 miles land inwards.
18 February everybody was safe on board again and course was set to the north, arriving 21 March in Auckland, then via Hobart where Borchgrevink left she sailed to London where she arrived on 29 October.

After arrival she was sold to Daniel Murray and Thomas Crawford of Glasgow, she was fitted out by Baine Johnston as a sealer.
Under command of Capt. Darius Blandford it sailed to Newfoundland, thereafter used for the seal hunt from 1901. She was that season the first ship which returned in port with a full load of 26.563 pelts.

31 March 1914 under command of Capt. George Clarke from Brigus and with on board 173 men and 17.000 to 20.000 seal pelts underway from the hunting ground in the St Lawrence to her homeport St Johns, during the voyage she met bad weather with heavy snowfall, on 31 March she was sighted by the steamer PORTIA during very bad visibility in a position of about 5 miles west-south-west from Cape Pine, New Foundland.
Thereafter not anything more was heard of the SOUTHERN CROSS, a search was made by other vessels but noting was found of her and on 3 April the SOUTHERN CROSS was officially declared lost with her 173 men.

The only sighting was made on board of the BLOODHOUND when she reported after arrival in port that she sighted quantities of wreckage near Cape Race as a number of seal pelts, but the crew was unaware of the disaster.

Her loss was the greatest loss of life in any Newfoundland sealing disaster.

Source: http://www.miramarshipindex.org Dictionary of Disasters at Sea during the age of steam 1824-1962 by Hocking. Many web-sites.

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aukepalmhof
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Re: SOUTHERN CROSS 1889 Borchgrevink

Post by aukepalmhof » Mon Jan 21, 2019 7:14 pm

Norway issued in 2019 two stamps for the Antartica, of which one stamps shows the port side and part of the stern of a ship in the polar ice. Near the ship is standing on the ice Carsten Egeberg Borchgrevink using a theodolite instrument.
The vessel depict is the British vessel SOUTHERN CROSS.

By the stamp the Norway Post gives:
About Antartica
Queen Maud Land, which was annexed by Norway in 1939, is almost seven times larger than Norway – and constitutes one-sixth of the total area of Antarctica.
James Cook was the first person to offer a detailed description of the waters around the frozen land mass called “Terra Autralis” from his travels in 1772and the years that followed. It was not until 1819, though, that the first real expedition took place when Russian czar Aleksander Isent an expedition under the leadership of Admiral Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen. Later, a number of expeditions were made to Antarctica. It is said that William S.Bruce from Scotland was the first person to set foot on Queen Maud Land, but it was the Norwegians who would be the first to actively map the area.
The objective of the Norwegian annexation of Queen Maud Land was not to exclude other states but rather to prevent the Norwegian whaling industry from being excluded or treated disproportionately as a result of the activity of the other countries.
Several Norwegians have been prominent in the exploration of Antarctica. Polar researcher and explorer Carsten Egeberg Borchgrevink was a pioneer – and he established much of the basis for later expeditions led by Robert F.Scott, Ernest Shackletonand Roald Amundsen. Borchgrevink’s career in Antarctica started in 1894 as a member of a Norwegian whaling expedition, and he was one of the first to gather samples of living, organic material south of the southern Arctic circle.

https://www.wopa-plus.com/en/stamps/product/&pgid=51803
Norway 2019 42Kr. sg?, scott?
Attachments
SOUTHERN CROSS borchgrevinck-with-theodolite.jpg
2019 Southern Cross.jpg

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aukepalmhof
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Re: SOUTHERN CROSS 1889 Borchgrevink

Post by aukepalmhof » Wed Oct 09, 2019 8:24 pm

Before the world had heard of Scott and Shackleton, a group of 10 young men from Norway, England and Australia spent a year at Cape Adare. They paved the way for the more famous explorers who followed, and the latest stamps from the Ross Dependency recount their rarely-told story.
The Cape Adare base centred around two prefabricated wooden huts and was used just twice. After 1912, it was abandoned for more than a century to the harsh extremes of the Antarctic climate and a babble of the penguins. But the original huts stood firm, sheltering the food, clothing and equipment left behind by Antarctica’s earliest residents. The latest Ross Dependency stamp issue tells the story of these huts through five key artefacts recently collected by the Antarctic Heritage Trust (AHT).
Individual Stamps

$1.30 Carsten Borchgrevink
Borchgrevink oversaw the Southern Cross expedition. Despite the expedition being plagued by controversy, in 1930, the British Royal Geographical Society awarded him its Patron’s Medal.
(The vessel depict is the SOUTHERN CROSS see viewtopic.php?f=2&t=6179 )

$1.30 Fruitcake: Cape Adare
This perfectly preserved Huntley & Palmers fruitcake was a surprise find among hundreds of food tins temporarily removed from the huts at Cape Adare.

$2.60 Toothbrush: Cape Adare
Although soap was somehow omitted from the supplies taken on the Southern Cross, this bone-handled toothbrush found in one of the huts suggests that the men did look after their teeth.

$3.30 Primus: Cape Adare
Borchgrevink’s team was the first to use a Primus stove in Antarctica. Lightweight and reliable, the Primus became a cornerstone of Antarctic exploration.

$4.00 Watercolour: Cape Adare
This delicate watercolour of a Northern Hemisphere bird known as a tree creeper was unearthed from a pile of mould-covered papers found on a bunk in the Cape Adare accommodation hut in 2016.

https://stamps.nzpost.co.nz/ross-depend ... cape-adare
New Zealand 2019 NZ$1.30/4.00 sg? Scott? and MS
Attachments
Image (28).jpg
Image (29).jpg

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