Monday 9 January 2012

Rock the boat

On this day in 1909 Ernest Shackleton, leading the Nimrod Expedition to the South Pole, planted the British flag 97 nautical miles from the South Pole, the furthest South anyone had ever reached at that time.

It was on a later Shackleton expedition to Antarctica, in 1921, that Orcadian Norman Erland Mooney was appointed as cabin boy on board the Quest. Norman was one of two boy scouts chosen from over 1000 to accompany the expedition, the other boy coming from Aberdeen. Unfortunately the ship did not have an easy voyage, encountering heavy gales as they left England which continued throughout the first leg of the journey through the Bay of Biscay to Lisbon. Suffering severely from seasickness the initial word was that 16 year old Mooney would leave the ship there and return home but the plucky (some might say completely crazy!) youngster stayed on board for the next leg to Madeira. But the seas got worse and on reaching Madeira the doctor decided that enough was enough and sent Norman home. Shackleton himself sent Norman's parents a telegram declaring "regret necessary action solely in boys interest, he was always willing".

D49/1/3 - Telegram from Sir Ernest Shackleton to Mr. and Mrs. John Mooney, Kirkwall

This wasn't the end of Norman Mooney's adventurous ways. In 1929 he passed the Colonial Survey examination and received an appointment in Nigeria as a mining surveyor.

6 comments:

  1. Our project is recreating the experience of Mooney and Marr (Shackleton's two scouts) and has also created two commemorative plaques of Scottish Caithness stone to be unveiled in 2021 on the 100th Anniversary of the original Quest Expedition. (See www.request2021.org.uk)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for this information. It looks like a worthwhile project.

      Delete
  2. Would you be kind enough to provide a full transcript of the telegram above?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. As it is a telegram you have to add in your own punctuation, so this is my transcription of it: Prefix [initials illegible]; Handed in at 8.31; Office of Origin and Service Instructions: Funchal 19 10.0am; Words 35; Received here at 8.54am; Kirkwall Office Stamp 20 Oct 21. "Mooney Kirkwall answering yours to Consul Mooney left in charge Mason also invalid steamer Avon arriving Southampton Saturday being met my secretary stop Regret necessary action solely in Boys interest he was always willing Shackleton"

      Delete
    2. Within the folder where the telegram is kept, there is a whole series of telegrams about Scout Mooney, also newspaper cuttings and a poem written about him. Email us at archives@orkney.gov.uk if you want to know more.

      Delete
  3. Thanks just seen this - will email now. Best Regards, Alan

    ReplyDelete

Are you delighted by what you have just read? Are you revulsed and appalled? Do let us know, we'd love to hear from you.