TWO YEARS BELOW THE HORN - JUST PUBLISHED BY THE ERSKINE PRESS!


TWO YEARS BELOW THE HORN: A Personal Memoir of Operation Tabarin by ANDREW TAYLOR (with an introduction & notes by Stephen Haddelsey)

Andrew Taylor, the field commander of Operation Tabarin was one of the forgotten heroes of Antarctic exploration. Early in 1944 nine men landed on a tiny, barren island off the west coast of the Graham Land Peninsula in Antarctica. Armed with only a small assortment of rifles and pistols and with an obsolete 12-pounder mounted on the bows of their decrepit supply vessel, their official purpose was to prevent German U-boats and surface raiders from using Antarctic and sub-Antarctic harbours for refuelling and resupply. Unofficially, they were tasked with reasserting British territorial rights in the face of increasingly confident incursions by neutral Argentina.
This two-year expedition, code-named Operation Tabarin, was the precursor to the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey and the present-day British Antarctic Survey, and the arrival of the nine British and Commonwealth soldiers, sailors and scientists marked both the beginning of Britain’s permanent presence on the Antarctic continent and the commencement of a complex programme of scientific research and exploration which continues to this day. Written in 1947 by the man who ultimately became Operation Tabarin’s commander-in-the-field, this is the only contemporary account to cover the expedition’s entire two-year history. Never before published, it provides a unique perspective on events that are vital to our understanding of both the history of Antarctic exploration and the complex geopolitics of the region.

Hardback, jacketed, 376pp, approx.; lavishly illustrated with 4pp colour and 12pp b&w plates. Over 80 pictures in total, plus drawings and maps. Price: £37.50
“Haddelsey approaches Taylor's narrative from an historical perspective, and draws on his broad and deep understanding of Operation Tabarin to provide a rounded overall assessment, and to add lots of helpful footnotes which reflect later knowledge.” 
BAS Club Magazine, December 2017


ICY GRAVES - LAID TO REST

The manuscript of Icy Graves: Exploration and Death in the Antarctic is now with my publisher, The History Press, and is due for release as a hardback in June 2018.

It's been a fascinating book to research and write, combining as it does, a range of stories from all periods of Antarctic exploration, the earliest being from Carsten Borchgrevink's Southern Cross Expedition of 1898-1900, and the most recent from 1982, the year of the Falklands War. I've also sought to represent the experiences of explorers from as many nations as possible, including Argentina, Australia, Brazil, France, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, South Africa, the Soviet Union, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Some of the challenges of inclusion were expected - most obviously those of language and physical access - but others were totally unanticipated. I was astonished, for instance, to be told by the South African National Antarctic Programme that they retain very few expedition records for longer than five years! The complex history of US exploration - with ownership being divided between private individuals, the US Navy, and, more recently, the US Antarctic Program - has also resulted in a wide dispersal of records. Indeed, this dispersal has been so comprehensive that, when I asked USAP for a list of all US casualties, with dates of death, causes and locations, I was told that they held no list - and that they would be grateful if I could provide them with one once my research was complete.

Despite these challenges, I'm delighted with the range of the stories that have come to light. Inevitably, given that my focus has been on Antarctic fatalities, many of the episodes I've researched are tragic - but there are also tales of extraordinary heroism, determination, and survival as well. Just as importantly, many are almost entirely unknown - and I shall be delighted if the book helps to bring them to wider public notice. The stories are arranged thematically, with chapters on cold, fire, sea ice, motor vehicles accidents, air disasters, and mental illness and suicide. In the introduction, I also examine the reasons for the surprising obscurity of some of the accidents. Why are they so little known given their intrinsic drama?
 

ICY GRAVES: EXPLORATION & DEATH IN THE ANTARCTIC

Ever since Captain Cook first sailed into the Great Southern Ocean in 1773, mankind has sought to push back the boundaries of Antarctic exploration. The first expeditions tried to demark Antarctica’s coastline, but then the Sixth International Geographical Conference of 1895 posed a new challenge: conquest of the South Pole. Following Amundsen’s success in 1911, yet more objectives were defined, some geographical, some scientific, and some territorial.  
Though the loss of Captain Scott’s Polar Party remains the most famous, many of these expeditions suffered fatalities. Men drowned when the sea ice beneath their feet disintegrated; others fell into bottomless crevasses; yet more froze to death. The advent of new technologies did much to speed the pace of exploration, but aeroplanes and motor vehicles introduced new dangers, with whole groups of men killed in a single event.
Each of the fatalities described in this book is dramatic and its background story compelling, from the suicide of Arthur Farrant on Deception Island in 1953 to the drowning of an international party of explorers whose tracked vehicle plunged over the edge of the ice face during a blinding ‘whiteout’; from the deaths of Scott’s polar party from malnutrition and cold to the catastrophic crash of a US Navy flying boat on Thurston Island in December 1946; from the death by fire of eight soviet scientists when their base burned to the ground to the loss of three British sledgers when a storm smashed the sea ice on which they were travelling.
 For the first time, Icy Graves uses a selection of these tragic losses to plot the forward progress of Antarctic exploration and to tell, often in their own words, the stories of the men and women who have fallen in what Sir Ernest Shackleton called the ‘White Warfare of the South’.
ICY GRAVES will be published by The History Press in June 2018


Operation Tabarin: Britain's Secret Wartime Expedition to Antarctica, 1944-46

In 1943 Winston Churchill's War Cabinet met to discuss the opening of a new front, fought not on the beaches of Normandy or in the jungles of Burma but amid the blizzards and glaciers of the Antarctic.

As well as setting in train a sequence of events that would eventually culminate in the Falklands War, the British bases secretly established in 1944 and 1945 would go on to lay the foundations for one of the most important and enduring government-sponsored programmes of scientific research in the polar regions: the British Antarctic Survey.

Operation Tabarin tells the story of the only Antarctic expedition to be launched by any of the combatant nations during the Second World War and one of the most curious episodes in what Ernest Shackleton called 'the white warfare of the south'.

Available from The History Press, priced £16.99 ISBN 978-0-7509-6746-4