< HMS Endurance Tracking Project
visit and learn
 
Home
About the Project
2003/2004 Deployment
Terms of Use
Contact Us
Frequently Asked Questions
Maps
Weather
Ship's Diary
BSES Expedition
Shackletons Footsteps
Base Visits
Antarctic Treaty
Volcanoes
Ice Sheet History
Portsmouth -
Uruguay -
Falkland Islands -
South Georgia -
Amazing Antarctica -
Argentina -
Tristan da Cunha -
South Africa -
St Helena and Ascension Island -
Hurricanes
Now and Then
Global Warming
Ecosystems
Volcanoes
Water and Oceans
Antarctica's Future
Antarctic Diet
Hydrographic Surveying
Polar Clothing
Ice, Ice & more Ice
Discovery & Exploration
Ernest Shackleton
Poles Apart
Southern Ocean Life
Latitude and Longitude
Seasons
About Endurance
Endurance Obituaries
Weather
Goldie Bear
2002/2003 Deployment
Links


Royal Navy


Royal Meteorological Society








Approved by Schoolzone's team of independent education reviewers
Endurance Obituaries 
Endurance Obituaries

ROBERT SELBIE . CLARK

(11/09/1882 - 29/09/1950 )
BORN :ABERDEEN SCOTLAND
DIED : MURTLE, ABERDEEN. SCOTLAND
NICKNAME : BOB
DUTY : BIOLOGIST
clarke

CLARK, SHORTLY BEFORE HIS DEATH IN 1950
Awarded Silver Polar Medal (with clasp)
PHOTO FROM NATIONAL LIBRARY OF SCOTLAND
Robert Clark was born in Aberdeen, Scotland, in 1882 and was the son of William Clark. He was educated at Aberdeen Grammar School and graduated as an M.A. at Aberdeen University in 1908.Three years later in 1911 he attained a further degree B.Sc. (Batchelor of Science) and held the post of Zoologist to the Scottish Oceanographical Laboratory, Edinburgh.

He excelled at sport and was a keen golfer and enjoyed fishing.

In 1912 he was chosen to play cricket for the Scottish National Team. In 1913 he was appointed naturalist in the Plymouth Marine Biological Association

Clark was the Biologist on the expedition. Worlsey, shortly after the Endurance was abandoned wrote:

“I felt sorry for Clark, as I lay there that night and realised that he had been obliged to leave on the Endurance the whole of his valuable collection that he had been at such pains to classify and study. “

One of the crew wrote about Clark not being the politest of men and always had trouble with the word “please”. One of the many ditty’s composed by the men on Elephant Island went:

“ If I was Mr. Clark,
I would, I would,
I’d give up collecting fleas,
And not forget my Please! “


In 1916 on his return from the expedition, he married one Christine Ferguson.

Clark served on Minesweepers during WW1 as Lt, in the R.N.V.R. Quite a few of the Endurance crew were to serve on Minesweepers during the war.

In 1919 he returned once more to Plymouth.

In 1924 he was again selected to play for the Scottish National Cricket team. He was a batsman and his Cricket career statistics read:

Matches: 2 Innings: 4 Runs: 19 Catches : 2

In 1925 he returned to his academic studies and gained a D.Sc. (Doctor of Science).

He eventually became a biologist and director of the Fisheries Research station in Torry, Aberdeen. And in 1934 was appointed Superintendent of Scientific Investigations under the Fishery Board. During the course of his scientific work he wrote a number of papers on fish and fisheries.

He retired in 1948 and died 2 years later in 1950 at his home where he and his wife had lived for many years: The Cottage. Murtle, Aberdeenshire. Scotland.

Clark
Clark returns to the Endurance after a skiing session on the Weddell Sea Ice. 1915.

<< Back Next >>
  
Obituary Contents
Introduction
Summary
Bakewell
Blackborow
Cheetham
>> Clark<<
Crean
Gooch
Green
Greenstreet
Holness
How
Hudson
Hurley
Hussey
James
Kerr
Macklin
Marston
McCarthy
Mcilroy
Mcleod
Mcnish
Orde-Lees
Rickinson
Shackleton
Stephenson
Vincent
Wild
Wordie
Worsley
SS Yelcho
Elephant Island