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Wunderkind British explorer鈥檚 life demonstrates ice-hard resolve

The young British explorer Henry Watkins pursued impossible expeditions, leading men 鈥淚nto the Great Emptiness鈥 of Greenland鈥檚 ice cap. His leadership got them all home 鈥 eventually. 

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Capt. Alvin Ahrenberg (far right) with his crew receives a hero鈥檚 welcome in Stockholm on May 26, 1931, after helping rescue Augustine Courtauld, lost member of the British Arctic Air Route expedition. The expedition鈥檚 leader, Henry Watkins, and his crew tried several times to retrieve Courtauld but failed because of weather conditions.

In March 1931, a young Englishman sat alone, buried alive inside a tiny makeshift weather station under nearly 10 feet of snow, at the very center of Greenland鈥檚 massive ice cap. For Augustine Courtauld, whose wealthy family had financed the expedition, food was running out. His fellow crew members, led by wunderkind explorer Henry 鈥淕ino鈥 Watkins, were two months late in retrieving him.聽

鈥淚nto the Great Emptiness: Peril and Survival on the Greenland Ice Cap鈥 by David Roberts is both a biography of Watkins and an account of his year-long expedition to Greenland. Roberts admits that his subject was a bit of an enigma. Even men who had spent months alone with Watkins in the wilderness described him as a person who 鈥渁lways dwelt apart somehow, and underneath was as cold and unemotional as ice.鈥 聽

In 1926, Watkins, a 鈥渇eckless student, flamboyant climber and skier, thrill-seeker, lover of dancing, jazz, and parties鈥 was suddenly transformed after attending a lecture by Raymond Priestley, the famed Antarctic explorer who鈥檇 been with both Ernest Shackleton and Robert Falcon Scott on the southernmost continent. That lecture gave Watkins his calling in life, and, coincidentally, offered him a golden opportunity: a spot on the crew of an expedition to the east coast of Greenland. Unfortunately, the expedition fell through, but as Roberts writes, 鈥淎t age twenty, with no expedition experience of his own more daring than a couple of trips to tourist-thronged Chamonix, almost any budding explorer would have bitten his knuckles and accepted fate. Gino chose a different course. ... He would lead an expedition of his own.鈥 So Watkins went to Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago in the Arctic Sea.

That such a young man could put together crew members and raise money from private sources was one thing, but most amazing was, Roberts writes, 鈥渉ow ... a twenty-year-old on his first expedition [could] mold the efforts of eight companions, all older than himself ... into a coherent team.鈥 On Svalbard, Watkins鈥 group discovered its center was 鈥渘ot sheathed in uniform ice cap, but rather in patches and lobes of thick ice interspersed with small open basins,鈥 a geographical oddity, noteworthy even to this day. The expedition was a grand success.聽

"Into The Great Emptiness: Peril and Survival on the Greenland Ice Cap," by David Roberts, Norton, 368 pp.

Next, he was commissioned to map the new border between Quebec and Labrador, the subject of dispute between Canada and Britain. It was a difficult expedition, full of peril, but he managed to survive. While many men would have been discouraged by such a dangerous adventure, it proved to be the training ground for Watkins鈥 magnum opus 鈥 Greenland.

Financially supported by the Courtauld family (whose son would need to be rescued from the weather station), the British Arctic Air Route Expedition was created to establish a year-round weather station on the Greenland ice cap to evaluate the possibility of a future air route. Over the course of a year, the BAARE crew took turns manning the weather station, while investigating and mapping the interior of the world鈥檚 largest island.聽

Roberts writes in a smooth narrative style, peppered with white-knuckle zones. We follow the dauntless men as they plow 鈥 without the aid of radio communication 鈥 through blizzards and around crevasses, navigating calving glaciers, fighting off polar bears, hunting seals, living with Indigenous people, and, yes, getting buried alive under snow. Roberts is at times critical of Watkins鈥 and the crew鈥檚 lack of cultural sensitivity, which exists alongside their admiration for Native hunting skills and craftsmanship. Eventually, all make it back to England in one piece, but just barely.

鈥淚nto the Great Emptiness鈥 might be misread as a tale of audacious and expensive misadventures, but there is an underlying message to it all 鈥 that leadership, combined with a little good fortune and love, can get you through, no matter the odds. This book will be a treat for those who 鈥渃herish the memory of England鈥檚 lost genius of Arctic exploration.鈥

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