Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- 1952 - 1954 (Creation)
Level of description
Archive Collection
Extent and medium
746 manuscript radio message transcripts. 2 linear metres.
Context area
Name of creator
Administrative history
The British North Greenland Expedition was the first large scale British led expedition covering the Greenland Ice Sheet. Led by Commander James Simpson, between 1952 and 1954 the expedition had a wide range of aims and objectives including developing understanding of geological mapping, meteorology, polar medicine, and polar logistics.
Across the expedition 30 men participated. Most were members of the military, with the Royal Navy, Royal Air Force and Army all being represented, with the remainder, non-military scientists. Many of the participants involved went on to have notable careers in exploration, academia, after the expedition, several members participated in the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1955-1958. Some of the those figures included Captain Mike Banks who later wrote a book about the expedition and went on to participate in further expeditions and Peter John Whyllie, a geologist who went on to have a notable academic career in the field. Also involved was Hal (Harold) Lister who had a notable career as a glaciologist and academic including a career at Newcastle University and Stan Paterson who also went on to have a successful academic career in glaciology after the expedition.
The expedition established it's main base at Britannia Lake for the duration of the expedition with a field base at Northice. Two field teams traversed the ice undertaking work including measuring the ice sheet, gravimetry and meteorology. A mixture of dogs and sleds and Weasel tracked military vehicles were used for transportation around the ice sheet. As well as maintaining radio communications between the individual elements of the expedition, the expedition maintained radio communications with a base in London (known as PakIce) and staff at the Danish and US Air Force base at Thule. Resupply missions were carried out by parachute drop from airplane and overland from Thule. Overall the expedition acted as a test-bed and development opportunity for practices that would be used in later polar expeditions by Britain and other countries.
While the mission was largely successful in achieving it's many broad scientific aims, there were failures too. Perhaps the most notable was the crash of an aircraft onto the ice-sheet during an early re-supply mission in September 1952, which resulted in the loss of the craft and several injured crew who had to shelter in the wreckage until a successful rescue airlift attempt. There was one fatality amongst expedition staff, Captain Hans Jenson died in an accident while working in the field. Near misses included fires in the engine room of a base which was extinguished before it caused significant damage, and breakdowns and accidents involving the Weasel tracked vehicles which were used for travel on the ice sheet.
Archival history
The previous history of the archive is unclear. The archive came to the attention of a member of Geography teaching staff in 2013, having been stored in the department for many years. One member of the expedition, Harold Lister, was a former student at Newcastle University, and had a long career as an academic in the Geography Department at Newcastle University, suggesting he is the likely source of acquisition of the archive to the university.
Immediate source of acquisition or transfer
Transferred from the School of Geography in 2014.
Content and structure area
Scope and content
Manuscript transcripts of radio communications created by members of the British North Greenland Expedition (BNGE) while in Greenland. The messages cover communication between individual expedition members, units of the expedition, and external parties such as American and Danish military bases and the expedition's main external point of contact and control which was referred to as Pakice and located in London.
The expedition took place over two phases between 1952 and 1954 and undertook a range of work on the North Greenland Icecap including glaciology, seismology, geology, gravitometry, radio wave observations, and mapping of the ice sheet. The expedition also provided an important test bed for British polar research capabilities more broadly, including logistics, communication and medicine. Members of the expedition team were predominantly members of the military, but it included several members who would later have notable careers in academia and research, including Hal Lister, James Simpson, Stan Paterson and Peter Wyllie.
The communication include reports of progress and scientific measurements, discussions regarding expedition plans, records of incidents and their resolution, and communications between expedition members and family.
Transcripts cover most of the period of the expedition, and include messages sent and received. However, the archive is not a full and complete set of transcripts. There are no transcripts in the archive covering the first 2 months of the expedition, nor for between January and April 1953.
Appraisal, destruction and scheduling
Accruals
No further material is expected to be added to the collection
System of arrangement
Message transcripts have been arranged chronologically in order relative to the date and time they were sent. Former references reflect the arrangement of the forms at the time conservation work was carried out on the archive in 2014, the system of arrangement at this time is unclear.
Conditions of access and use area
Conditions governing access
Open with some restrictions: data protection researcher interview may be required. Special Collections staff will provide researchers with further details of these restrictions.
Conditions governing reproduction
Standard copyright restrictions apply
Language of material
- English
- Welsh
Script of material
Language and script notes
Physical characteristics and technical requirements
Paper documents, radio message transcript templates.
Finding aids
Allied materials area
Existence and location of originals
Existence and location of copies
Related units of description
Notes area
Alternative identifier(s)
Access points
Subject access points
Place access points
Name access points
- Lister, Harold, Dr. 1921-2010, Glaciologist (Subject)
- Simpson, Commander Cortlandt James Woore, 1911-2002, explorer and Navy officer, known as Jim (Subject)
- Banks, Captain Michael Edward Borg, 1922-2013, explorer and author (Subject)
- Brett-Knowles, Richard, 1924-2015, naval officer and electrical engineer (Subject)
- Slessor, Charles George Malcom, 1926-2007, explorer, scientist and author (Subject)
- Wyllie, Peter John, 1930-, physicist and academic (Subject)
- Bull, Colin Bruce Bradley, 1928-2010, geophysicist (Subject)
- Brooke, Francis Richard, 1927-2020, mountaineer and explorer (Subject)
- Erskine, Angus Bruce, 1929-2006, naval officer and explorer (Subject)
- Taylor, Kenneth Earl, 1923-, naval radio operator (Subject)
- Arnold, Keith Charles, 1931-2014, glaciologist (Subject)
- Homard, Desmond Edgar Lemuel, 1921-2015, army major and explorer, known as Roy (Subject)
- Masterton, John Potter, 1928-2015, surgeon, known as Jock (Subject)
Genre access points
Description control area
Description identifier
Institution identifier
Rules and/or conventions used
ISAD(G)
Status
Final
Level of detail
Full
Dates of creation revision deletion
Created by Graham Robson and Becky Sanderson, June 2024
Language(s)
- English