With Scott Before The Mast. Francis H. Davies

With Scott Before The Mast - Francis H. Davies


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      Published by

       Reardon Publishing

      PO Box 919, Cheltenham, UK, GL50 9AN

       www.reardon.biz

      ISBN 9781901037555 (Hardback Edition)

      ISBN 9781901037692 (Special Limited Edition)

      Written by Francis Davies

      Copyright 2020

      Edited by Joy Watts

      With thanks to everyone who has helped in this enjoyable endeavour to bring Chippy's journal to life.

      Book Design by Nicholas Reardon

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       Endpaper Front:

      Seamen crew of the Terra Nova 1910

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      Back rows : Horton, Brissenden, Parsons, Heald, Neale, Balson, McCarthy

      Centre rows: A.McDonald, W.McDonald, Burton, McGillon, McKenzie, Omenchelco, Clissold, Mather, Davies

      Front rows: Skelton, McLoed, Bailey, Forde, Leese

       Endpaper Back:

      Meares and Oates at the blubber stove in the stables.

       Contents

       Foreword by David Wilson

       Preface by Joy Watts great niece of Francis Davies

       Prologue

       Chapter I. Signing on

       Chapter II. Getting Ready to Leave

       Chapter III. Setting Sail

       Chapter IV. Heading South

       Chapter V. Crossing the Line

       Chapter VI. Hospitality at Simonstown

       Chapter VII. The Roaring Forties

       Chapter VIII. Disaster Narrowly Averted

       Chapter IX. Christmas Day in the Pack-Ice

       Chapter X. New Land Sighted

       Chapter XI. Surveying the Three Kings

       Chapter XII. Preparing for the Second Voyage South

       Chapter XIII. The Polar Party Sets Off

       Chapter XIV. Horse Racing at Christchurch

       Chapter XV. Hydrographic Survey of Admiralty Bay

       Chapter XVI. Last Voyage South

       Chapter XVII. Return to Cardiff

       Foreword by David Wilson

      The geographic and scientific accomplishments of Captain Scott’s two Antarctic expeditions changed the face of the Twentieth Century in ways that are still not widely appreciated over a hundred years later. The fact of accomplishment has tended to be lost in speculative argument as to how Scott should have done this instead of that, supposedly to achieve the extra few yards per day to save the lives of the South Pole Party in 1912. Also lost to a generation overwhelmed with information, however, is the sublime sense of adventure into the unknown, which Scott’s expeditions represented to his generation. We have forgotten what it is to take the awesome life-gambling risk of sailing beyond the edge of the map into nothingness and rendering it known. We send robot explorers instead. As a result, after two millennia of maritime and exploration history, we have become detached from the sea which surrounds our island and the tradition of exploration which it represents.

      With Scott: Before the Mast is a unique account that serves as an antidote to this disconectedness. It is no fictional ‘Hornblower’, although it may seem so at times. This is a true story. It presents one man’s account of his part in a great act of derring-do, the assault on the South Pole in 1912. Most records of Captain Scott’s British Antarctic Expedition aboard Terra Nova (1910-1913) are the accounts of officers. With Scott: Before the Mast is the story of Francis Davies, Shipwright RN and Carpenter. The title says it all but may be lost on landlubbers. Before the Mast means ‘to serve as an ordinary seaman in a sailing ship’. This makes it a rare and hugely important account, presenting a viewpoint from the lower ranks. Such insight is rarely available and the long overdue publication of this account is greatly to be welcomed.

      When I first read this manuscript some years ago, I was hugely excited by the refreshing perspective that it gave to a well-aired story. Although an autobiographical period piece, written with an eye to publication many years after the events that it recalls, it is still of great interest. It tells the often forgotten story of the vast majority of Scott’s men, the sailors of Terra Nova; the supporting cast, if you like, to the Shore Parties of officers and scientists. Through a kaleidoscope of memories, this book gets to the heart of the huge logistic effort that was the British Antarctic Expedition. Through the eyes of the sailors who were its backbone, the heroism of derring-do seems to become all the more human, humdrum and every-day. To me, this makes the accomplishments all the more real and remarkable.

      I commend this book to collectors, enthusiasts, historians and to those looking for a casual read on Captain Scott, in equal measure.

      David M. Wilson

      Polar Historian and Gt. Nephew, Edward Wilson of the Antarctic

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       Preface by Joy Watts great niece of Francis Davies

      When I was


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