Everything about Adrien De Gerlache totally explained
» "Gerlache" redirects here. For the saint of this name, see Saint Gerlache.
Adrien Victor Joseph de Gerlache de Gomery (
2 August 1866 –
4 December 1934) was an officer in the
Belgian Royal Navy who led the
Belgian Antarctic Expedition of 1897 to 1899.
His early years
Born in
Hasselt,
Belgium, de Gerlache was educated in
Brussels. He studied Engineering at the
Free University of Brussels (now split into the
Université Libre de Bruxelles and the
Vrije Universiteit Brussel), and spent his holidays as a cabin boy on board transatlantic ocean liners. After graduating in 1885, he joined the Belgian Navy on
19 January 1886.
After graduating from the nautical college of
Ostend as first lieutenant, he was assigned to the
Belgica, a
hydrography ship. It was while serving there that he came up with his plan to explore
Antarctica.
The first expedition
In 1896, de Gerlache purchased the
Norwegian-built whaling ship
Patria, which, following an extensive refit, he renamed the
Belgica. Together with a multinational crew which included
Roald Amundsen,
Frederick Cook,
Antoni Bolesław Dobrowolski,
Henryk Arctowski and
Emil Racovita, he set sail from Antwerp on
16 August 1897.
During January 1898, the
Belgica reached the coast of Graham Land. Sailing in between the Graham Land coast and a long string of islands to the west, de Gerlache named the passage Belgica Strait. Later, it was renamed
Gerlache Strait in his honor. After charting and naming several islands during some 20 separate landings, they crossed the
Antarctic Circle on
15 February 1898.
On
28 February 1898, de Gerlache's expedition became trapped in the ice of the
Bellinghausen Sea, near
Peter I Island. Despite efforts of the crew to free the ship, they quickly realised that they'd be forced to spend the winter on Antarctica. Several weeks later, on
17 May, total darkness set in, which lasted until
23 July. What followed were another 7 months of hardship trying to free the ship and its crew from the clutches of the ice. Several men lost their sanity, including one Belgian sailor who left the ship "announcing he was going back to Belgium". The party also suffered badly from
scurvy.
Finally, on
15 February 1899, they managed to slowly start down a channel they'd cleared during the weeks before. It took them nearly a month to cover 7 miles, and on
14 March they cleared the ice. The expedition returned to Antwerp on
5 November 1899.
In 1902, his book
Quinze Mois dans l'Antarctique (published in 1901) was awarded a prize by the
Académie Française.
Later life
Adrien de Gerlache participated in several other expeditions, including:
- a commercial and scientific expedition to the Persian Gulf in 1901
- the Antarctica expedition of Jean-Baptiste Charcot, which he abandoned before they reached Antarctica due to the bad atmosphere on board (1903)
- Expedition to the Greenland Sea on board the Belgica (1905)
- Expedition to the Barents Sea and Kara Sea (1907)
- Expedition to Greenland, Spitsbergen and the Frans-Jozef archipelago on board the Belgica (1909)
He had two children with his first wife,
Suzanne Poulet, whom he married in 1904: Philippe (born 1906) and Marie-Louise (born 1908).After this marriage ended in 1913, de Gerlache married
Elisabeth Höjer from
Sweden. With her, he'd another son,
Gaston de Gerlache in 1919. In the 1950s, Gaston followed in his father's footsteps, participating in a Belgian research station in Antarctica.
Adrien de Gerlache died in
Brussels in 1934, aged 68, from
paratyphoid.
Further Information
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