Citizen historians have spent decades searching for the original text of Shackleton’s advertisement. Now, some say it might ...
As I embarked the Seabourn Venture in Ushuaia, Argentina, the southernmost city in the world, I knew my mission to play golf ...
It’s always a good day when Shackleton launches new gear. And today is extra special, as the outdoor brand teamed up with ...
On 3 June 1916, Stanley had ever seen so many people at the new Town Hall, to welcome Sir Ernest Shackleton who gave a brief account of his late expedition In March 1915 the Endurance was ...
National Geographic's new documentary on Disney+, Endurance, displays the search for the remains of the famed explorer, Ernest Shackleton's lost ship and offers insight into his involvement in two ...
Ernest Shackleton died on this day, January 5th, 1922. The Co Kildare man died having become one of Ireland's best-known explorers of the Polar Regions. When you ask people to name an explorer ...
A recently released deep-sea video by the Falklands Maritime Heritage Trust (FMHT) unveils remarkable finds aboard Sir Ernest Shackleton’s legendary ship Endurance, which sank over a century ago.
The fabled expedition of Ernest Shackleton, the Anglo-Irish explorer who led 27 men on a voyage to Antarctica in 1914 aboard the three-masted barquentine schooner Endurance, only to see his ship ...
It seems Ernest Shackleton’s legend has set sail again, this time courtesy of National Geographic and Disney+, which just released a new documentary on the discovery of the famed Anglo Irish ...
Shackleton returned to rescue the remaining crew, saving all 27 men in what has come to be known as the greatest survival story in history. Ernest Shackleton aboard the Endurance. (Credit ...
Ernest Shackleton’s lost ship, Endurance, has been found after 107 years. This 4k footage shows the preserved vessel 3008 metres below the ocean surface, discovered just four miles south of the ...
This boot was modelled on the the boots worn by Sir Ernest Shackleton during his Murman Coast Expedition in 1918. They were made in Northampton and follow Shackleton's pattern for Antartic use.