COMMANDER WILD DEAD
Famous Antarctic Explorer LIFE ENDED IN PENURY IN ZULULAND (UNITED PBESS ASSOCIATION—COPTE.IGHT.) (Received August 21, 2 p.m.) LONDON, August 20. The death has occurred at Klerksdorp. South Africa, of Commander Frank Wild, hitherto the only living descendant of Captain James Cook and a famous Antarctic explorer. He lived in penury in South Africa for many years. Commander Wild was born at Skelton, Yorkshire, in 1874. He went to Australia at the age of 15. In 1901 he was selected by Scott as a member of his expedition to the Antarctic in the Discovery, and for the next 21 years his life was chiefly devoted to Antarctic exploration. He was in five expeditions and spent more than 10 years in frozen 3*as —a record unequalled by Scott. Evans. Shackleton, or Amundsen. The Discovery mained in the Polar regions till February, I£o4, and Wild took part in much of the exploration work. By 1907 he was back on the Antarctic ice as a member of the Shackleton Nimrod expedition, which in the nexi two years reached a point about 100 miles from the South Pole. In 1911 Wild joined the Australian party under Dr, Mawson in the Aurora, which spent two years in investigating the coastal areas of Gaussberg and Cape Adare, and in 1914 he was a member of the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition. ' _ . After serving in the Great War Wild went to Central Africa. There he heard that Shackleton was going south again and at once started to join him by the quickest possible route, involving the swimming pi rapid twers and walking about 100 miles through flooded areas. Shackleton made him second in command of the Quest ihe expedition’s vessel. After the death of his leader in January. 1922. Wild took the Quest back to England, where he was received by the King at Buckingham Palace and the Patron’s Medal of the Royal Geographical Society was presented to him. This has been conferred on only 10 persons since its institution. In 1923 he wrote “Shackleton’s Last Voyage.” , He was the pnly person m the world to have the Sbuth Pole Medal with four bars. He discovered a”d named Queen Mary Land, was on a mission to Russia when the revolution broke out. and was sent by the Government to discover iron deposits in the Arctic. In 1922 he had married Mrs Granville Altman, whom he had rescued from Russia after her former husband, a Borneo tea-planter, had been killed' in the war. ... , ... - Returning to Africa, he settled in Zululand and took up cotton-growing. -At the end of four years, however, his capital was exhausted because of a succession of droughts, and in July 1929. he became a porter at an hotel e-t Goltel. the most northerlv point of the railway in Zululand. white awaiting the means to get down to the coast.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19390822.2.60
Bibliographic details
Press, Volume LXXV, Issue 22795, 22 August 1939, Page 9
Word Count
475COMMANDER WILD DEAD Press, Volume LXXV, Issue 22795, 22 August 1939, Page 9
Using This Item
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Press. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0 New Zealand licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.
Acknowledgements
This newspaper was digitised in partnership with Christchurch City Libraries.