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For daring adventurers in both North and South Polar
regions, books seem to have been as essential as pemmican,
primus stoves, fuel, and furs. Exploration ships had large
libraries, and sledging journeys often included a few books
for idle times. They were routinely hauled to the far
reaches of cold regions, and were even found with the frozen
bodies of those unlucky enough not to return. For the coming
winter season the Grolier Club has planned a major
exhibition providing a selective history of polar
exploration through the medium of print and the role of
printing in high latitudes. The show is curated by David H.
Stam, University Librarian Emeritus at Syracuse University,
and Deirdre C. Stam, Director, New York Center for the
Book.
In the exhibit is the copy of Tennyson In Memoriam Maud
and Other Poems (1906) found with the bodies of Robert
Falcon Scott and Edward Wilson in Antarctica in 1912
(University of Rochester); a prayer book found with the
skeletal remains of Sir John Franklin's ill-fated party
seeking the Northwest Passage (National Maritime Museum);
and a book of Arctic voyages from the library of HMS
Resolute, one of the Franklin Search vessels. Books,
magazines, and posters were also printed in the cold, both
ashore and on shipboard presses; a copy of Aurora
Australis, the first book printed in Antarctica in 1908
under the supervision of Sir Robert Shackleton, is included
here (Dartmouth College Library). There is also a theatrical
broadside celebrating a Guy Faux Night Grand Ball aboard HMS
Plover, and printed aboard that ship at Point Barrow for the
November 5, 1853 event (Duke University Library).
First editions and association copies of explorers' accounts
make up the bulk of this bibliographic iceberg, which also
includes printed or inscribed ephemera such as commemorative
cigarette cards depicting major explorers from the early
twentieth century, a can of pemmican with printed label from
Admiral Peary's expedition to the North Pole in 1909, Roald
Amundson's inscribed binoculars from the South Pole, and a
commemorative wall plaque with mounted penguin head from the
Lincoln Ellsworth Collection at the American Museum of
Natural History.
Talks associated with the exhibition include Sian Flynn of
the National Maritime Museum speaking about Scott,
Shackleton, and Amundsen (Dec. 7); oral historian Fred
Calabretta of Mystic Seaport Museum (Dec. 13); Professor
Michael Bravo of the Scott Polar Research Institute,
Cambridge, on "Narrating the Poles" (Dec. 19); and David H.
Stam on the exhibition itself (Jan. 10, 2006). Click
here for more details.
LOCATION AND TIMES: "Books on Ice: the British and American
Literature of Polar Exploration" will be on public view at
the Grolier Club from December 7, 2005 through February 4,
2006, with the exception of December 23-27 (Christmas
holiday), and December 31-January 2 (New Year holiday).
Hours: Monday-Saturday 10 AM - 5 PM. Open to the public free
of charge. An
illustrated catalogue (6 x 9 in. 192 pp. 40 illustrations, some in
color) will be available.
For more information e-mail Megan
Smith at the Grolier Club.
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