Jack Bursey
Jacob Bursey | |
---|---|
Personal details | |
Born |
St. Lunaire, Newfoundland, Canada | September 20, 1903
Died |
March 1, 1980 76) Montague, Michigan | (aged
Spouse(s) | Ada DeGraff |
Military service | |
Service/branch | United States Coast Guard |
Rank | Commander |
Cmdr Jack (Jacob) Bursey (1903-1980) was a polar explorer, a US Coast Guard officer, and a lecturer. He was born in Newfoundland prior to its becoming a Canadian province.
Biography
Early Years
Born in 1903 in a small village called St. Lunaire in Newfoundland, Bursey was 5’7” tall, a husky vibrant man who seemed bigger than life. He grew up fishing on the Grand Banks from his father’s schooner, driving dog teams across the frozen land and bay, skinning seals for food and clothing. The seafaring family from which he came worked hard six days a week, gardening in the rocky soil and fishing in the summer and mending nets, dogsledding, and catching seals in the winter. Bursey’s family was a little better off than many of his cousins, aunts, and uncles because of their schooner and their family-owned store where the fisher folk traded. They also bought and sold all the fish in the village. With two brothers and three sisters, everyone had to work to survive. Men did not dare to fear, for then they would fear life itself.
Bursey wanted an education and asked the doctor in St. Anthony, a neighboring community, if he could help. He did, and when 21, Bursey left home and enrolled at a Boston institute in the United States.
Explorer[1]
In 1927 he read in a newspaper that Cmdr. Richard E. Byrd was planning an expedition to the Antarctic and needed dog drivers and skiers. He made up his mind to go and applied. So did 50,000 other adventurous American males.
Bursey took a job in New York to be more available. But when the selections were made the next spring, his name was not among them. With a letter of recommendation from his employer and even plans to become a stowaway if necessary, he went to the expedition office and appealed to one of Byrd’s men who promised to do his best. The departure was scheduled in less than two weeks.
In two days Bursey was granted an interview with Byrd. “I was disappointed when I first saw Commander Byrd,” he recalled in an interview in 1979 in the Grand Rapids Press. “I had pictured him as a 7-foot giant with fire in his eyes. Instead, he was a slight man. Looking at me from across the desk, he seemed humble and friendly. It was probably the shortest interview on record.”
“So you come from Newfoundland.” “Yes sir.” “And you are a dog driver?” “Yes sir.” “Have you got adventure in you?” “Yes sir. I’m full of it.” “I suppose you can skin a seal.” “Yes, I can do that, too.”
Byrd then told him that all his men were hired, but that he would see what he could do.
Luck and experienced were with Bursey. He was signed on as a seaman on the barque, the SS City of New York, one of two ships Byrd was taking on the expedition to the Bay of Whales, Antarctica. The City of New York, a sailing vessel, was probably one of the last of her kind in the world. Built of wood in Norway in 1882 for the Greenland sealing trade, with sides 34 inches thick, she was made to withstand much of the pressure of shifting ice. Roald Amundsen, as a young man, had sailed on her during one of her first voyages.
Byrd’s other ship was the Eleanor Bolling, a steam vessel. On it were the parts of the plane the Floyd Bennett which, when assembled, was to carry Byrd over the pole.
Bursey was on the barque when it left New York August 25, where the hardy crew traveled through the Panama Canal and across the Pacific Ocean reaching New Zealand in 91 days. The Bolling, a faster ship, had left a month later.
With the Antarctic spring approaching, the two ships left New Zealand December 2 on the final 1,200 mile lap to the frozen continent. The Bolling took the City of New York in tow to save coal. “Seven days out we ran into a gale in the Antarctic ocean. We had that wire cable attached to the Bolling by way of a bridle. The ship was rolling heavily and taking seas over her sides, for she was heavily loaded. She was so deep in the water that one sailor of some distinction said she would never reach the Bay of Whales.
“We had only the foresail and the two lower topsails set on the fore and main masts to help out the Bolling, but were gradually running up on her as the wind was fair and we were making good time. The order was given to clew down (haul) the lower topsails. One of the ordinary seamen who knew little about sailing ships ran and released the lines before the sail was clewed and the sail tore in two. Just then the towline snapped and there were some harsh words.”
According to Bursey, a whaler, the C. A. Larsen, which worked the area every summer, met the City of New York and towed it through the pack ice while the Bolling returned to New Zealand for more supplies.
“It took us seven days to force our way through 200 miles of Antarctic pack ice before we broke through into the Ross Sea.” On Christmas Day the Great Ice Barrier was sighted, and two days later, the City of New York was tied to ice in the Bay of Whales. A base camp, Little America, was set up 10 miles away. Each day the dog teams hauled the supplies to camp. After the Bolling arrived from New Zealand with more cargo, the bay ice became unsafe and the two ships tied up to the towering ice barrier. On one trip to camp with supplies, Bursey heard the ships’ whistles blowing in alarm. The ice barrier had suddenly cracked, plunging tons of ice on the decks, partly capsizing the Bolling and throwing one man in the water.
“This all but ended the expedition right there,” he remembered. “The success of this million-dollar expedition depended on the polar flight. The fuselage of the Ford plan had been landed on top of the barrier, but the wings were on large pieces of ice floating by the ships. Through the quick action of the crew, everything was rescued.” The men worked hard in the weeks ahead and before the sun went down and the long winter night set in, the camp was ready. In his diary Bursey wrote, “The temperature has dropped to 172 degrees below, our record for the year so far.”
Finally on August 20, 1929, he wrote: “Today is the day of the beautiful morning ... we saw the sun for the first time since April 19.”
Bursey and several others traveled into the heartland by dog team on two missions. One was to mark a safe trail and leave caches of supplies over the 200 miles of treacherous crevasses and open chasms between the main base and the Queen Maud mountain range where the geological party would make camp and conduct their studies. The other was to provide ground support for Byrd by erecting beacons every 50 miles and depositing emergency supplies at them in case Byrd’s plane crashed when he attempted to fly over the pole. Bursey’s lead dog, St. Lunaire, blazed the trail. Byrd sent them off with: “Boys I would rather never fly over the South Pole than to lose one of you. Always take the course of safety; your lives are precious to me.”
November 29, 1929 is the day that now lives in the world’s memory. Bursey described it. “The day before Bill Haynes the weatherman came into the mess hall all out of breath looking for the commander. ‘This is your day Commander. The best day of the whole year! To the north over the Ross Sea the sky is dark, but to the south it is beautiful and clear. The farther south you go, the clearer it will be.’ The whole camp came to life. The mechanics made their last checks. The oil had to be heated to boiling before it was poured into the engines. The tanks had to be topped off with gas. The plane had to be loaded with all the equipment: the aerial camera for Capt. Ashley McKinley, the photographer, and the navigation instruments and the radio gear.
“Bernt Balchen, the pilot, was sitting in the cockpit warming up the engines. Copilot and radio man Harold June was busy testing the radio. Commander Byrd was the last man to climb into the plane. It taxied to the end of the field and turned for the takeoff. Every man in camp stood silent, watching. When she finally took off we all let out a roar. It was 3;29 p.m. The plane had 1,600 miles to go to the pole. The men left behind gathered in the radio shack to listen to the sounds of the engines over the loudspeaker. The temperature was 15 degrees above zero. Finally at 1:32 a.m. June’s voice relayed this message from Byrd: ‘My calculations indicate that we have reached the vicinity of the South Pole.’ The camp went wild with joy. The expedition was a success. It was 18 hours and 39 minutes from the time the plane left until it returned. Then the celebration started. We were a happy lot, “ said Bursey.
But the danger was not yet over. Early in 1930, the City of New York was to return to the Antarctic to bring home the 42 men who had wintered at Little America. It was the worst spring ice in memory and the whaling vessels that usually went through the pack in December were unable to get through without damage. Into this mass of roaring ice the gallant City of New York hurled herself, forcing a way through. But there came the day when the ship labored, groaning under 200 tons of ice, the deck nearly awash. It was decided that if the Great Ice Barrier were not sighted in a few hours, the ship must turn north or sink. It was not unlike the possibility of trying to reach the moon in later years if the astronauts had had to be rescued. If the ship could not make it, there was no way to rescue these men until the ice thawed. There would be no long range aircraft manufactured for many years.
Then according to Russell Owen, a special correspondent for the New York Times who was on board, “As the men were ready to drop from weariness, the clouds opened and ahead of them was the magnificent peak of Mount Erebus, the living volcano of the Antarctic.”
When the men returned to New York, they were greeted by Mayor Jimmy Walker who led them on a famed ticker tape parade. Bursey and his mates each received a gold medal of honor authorized by a special act of Congress. It is inscribed: Presented to the officers and men of the Byrd Antarctic Expedition l (for) their heroic and undaunted service in connection with scientific investigations and extraordinary aerial exploration of the Antarctic Continent.”
Bursey missed Byrd’s second Antarctic expedition in the early thirties. While conducting tours of the City of New York at the Chicago World Fair he met and subsequently married Ada DeGraff from Grand Rapids, MI. She, too was an adventurer at heart being one of the first women to fly in west Michigan. They had one daughter, Gloria.
Jack Bursey went on to accompany Byrd on his third Antarctic Expedition in 1939-41 during which he and two other men made one of the longest dog-team trips ever recorded. They sledged into Marie Byrd Land over the Great Ross Iceshelf, the first known men to step on this land, traveling more than 1,200 miles in 83 days. Today there are mountains in the Hal Flood Range named after them: Mt. Bursey (76 05' S 133 35' W), Mt. Moulton and Mt. Berlin. Again each of the men on the expedition received a special Congressional gold medal.
During WWII he joined the U.S. Coast Guard and was captain of a F&S ship in the Philippines. Then in 1955, now a Lieutenant Commander, Bursey was assigned to Operation Deep Freeze for the International Geophysical Year.[2] On this expedition he led a party of Seabees a distance of 996 miles toward Byrd Station at latitude 80 degrees south, traveling in two vehicle-type Sno-Cats and one tractor-type Weasel. But for the first time the deadly bottomless crevasses defeated him and his party. Unable to get through, he was ordered back to the base. On the way home in 1957, Bursey received word that his old friend and leader, Admiral Byrd, had died.
Byrd’s historic Ford Trimotor airplane, The Floyd Bennett now rests at The Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, MI, named after Byrd’s copilot, Floyd Bennett, when Byrd became he first to fly over the North Pole on 9 May 1926. The SS City of NewYork surrendered to an angry sea on a rocky shoal at Yarmouth, Nova Scotia.
Author and Lecturer
Between the later expeditions and for years afterward, he lectured across the U.S. and at schools, often showing original 16mm films taken during the expeditions.
Jack Bursey is the author of two books:
- Antarctic Night (Chicago: Rand McNally, 1957)
- St Lunaire, Antarctic Lead Dog (Glory Publishing Co, 1974)
References
- ↑ Quotes and material for this section were provided by Jack Bursey's daughter, Gloria, who interviewed him for articles, including one in the Grand Rapids Press.
- ↑ http://www.history.navy.mil/ac/exploration/deepfreeze/deepfreeze1.html