visit and learn
 
Home
About the Project
Terms of Use
Contact Us
Frequently Asked Questions
Maps
Weather
Meet the Crew
Ship's Diary
Metlink
Polar Quest
Pole to Pole Challenge
Recipes from the Ice
Maths with Endurance
Films of Endurance
Films of Antarctica
Antarctic Treaty
Jackspeak
Portsmouth -
Madeira -
Brazil -
Uruguay -
The Falkland Islands -
South Georgia -
Patagonia -
Amazing Antarctica -
Argentina -
Portugal -
Southern Ocean Life
Glaciers & Glaciation
Polar Exploration – Now and Then
British Antarctic Survey
Whales & Whaling
Tropical Rainforests
Oceans and Water
Islands
Earthquakes
Volcanoes
Antarctica's Future
Antarctic Diet
Ice, Ice & More Ice
Polar Clothing
Discovery & Exploration
Weather
Energy & Resources
Seasons
Latitude & Longitude
Ecosystems
About Endurance
Ernest Shackleton
Endurance Obituaries
Letter from St Ippolyts Primary
Letter from Anchor and Reckless #7
Anchor and Reckless on HMS Endurance
Polar Explorer Wordsearch
Letter from Anchor #6
Letter from Reckless #6
Worksheet 4
Worksheet 3
Antarctic Wildlife Wordsearch
Letter from Anchor #5
Letter from Reckless #5
Letter from Anchor #4
Letter from Reckless #4
Worksheet 2
Christmas Letter From Reckless
Christmas Letter From Anchor
Crofton Hammond Junior School
Manor Field Infant School
Letter from Anchor #3
Letter from Reckless #3
Worksheet 1
Letter from Anchor #2
Letter from Reckless #2
True or False ?
Letter from Anchor
Letter from Reckless
Links


Hantsweb Awards Runner-Up


Royal Navy


Royal Meteorological Society


Approved by Schoolzone's team of independent education reviewers






HMS Endurance Factfile 
HMS Endurance

The History

The British tradition of Antarctic exploration began in 1773 when Captain James Cook first crossed the Antarctic Polar Circle. Although he believed that 'there is a tract of land near the Pole' he did not sight it. The Antarctic Peninsula was first sighted in 1820 by Edward Bransfield of the Royal Navy.

HMS Endurance is named after the vessel in which the explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton sailed for the Antarctic in 1914. The following year she was trapped in the ice and eventually sank. Sir Ernest and his ships company made their way to Elephant Island from where he made his epic crossing of the Drake Passage in an open boat and across the Island if South Georgia on foot.

The present HMS Endurance has been commissioned to continue the work of her predecessor of the same name.
HMS Endurances predecessor
Photograph courtesy of The Royal Navy
That vessel maintained a British presence in Antarctica and the Falkland Island Dependencies since 1968, earning the Wilkinson sword of Peace for the Royal Navy for her work supporting the British Antarctic Survey and contributing to community relations in the islands. She took a full part in the 1982 Falklands conflict from the outset of the campaign through to the eventual victory.
<< Back Next >>
  
HMS Endurance Contents
Quick Facts
The Work
The Specifications
>> The History<<
Useful Links
Did you know ?
HMS Endurance is 91m long and has a top speed of 15 knots