Den
norske barken Patria ble i 1896 kjøpt av løytnant Adrien
de Gerlache de Gomery fra Belgia, og med sponsing fra Geographical Royal
Society i Brussel ble det satt igang en ekspedisjon for å utforske
polarområdene rundt Atarctis. En av de 19 besetningsmedlemmene
var Roald Amundsen. Ekspedisjonen endte nesten i en katastrofe da de
frøs fast i isen 10. Mars 1898. Etter en lang og hard vinter
klarte de å frigjøre skipet etter å ha jobbet med
en kanal gjennom isen ut til det åpne havet, og satte deretter
kursen hjemover. Vitenskapelig sett var dette en suksessfull ekspedisjon,
og man fikk kartlagt mye av kystlinjen i Antarktis. Hva som skjedde
med Belgica etter at hun kom tilbake til Norge er dessverre uklart,
men i April 1940 er det litt opplysninger tilgjengelig.
Da
tyskerne invaderte Norge i April 1940,
ble Belgica rekvirert av Britiske styrker , og ble lagt for anker i
Brurvika utenfor Harstad og brukt som ammunisjonslekter. Mens hun lå
for anker der lastet med ammunisjon, ble Harstad angrepet av tyske fly.
Belgica ble skadet av bombene som ble sluppet over området, og
selv om hun ikke ble truffet direkte, begynte hun å ta inn vann
og sank noe senere. Belgica er idag dårlig forfatning, men vrakrestene
er verdt et besøk. Vraket står på kjølen med
slagside mot babord på en dybde tolv til tyve meter. Vraket er
vanligvis merket med en bøye, og Brurvika kan lett nås
fra land...
The Norwegian barque Patria was in 1896
bought by the lieutenant Adrien
de Gerlache de Gomery from Belgium, and with sponsoring
by Geographical
Royal Society in Brussel an expedition was launched to explore
the polar areas around Antarctic. One of the 19
crew members was Roald Amundsen. The expedition almost ended in
a catastrophe when they were stuck after the ice locked them up
10. March 1898. After a long and hard winter they managed to liberate
the ship after working on a channel through the ice to the open
water, and then set course back home. Scientifically this was
a success expedition, and they manage to map a lot of the coastline
in Antarctic. What became of Belgica after the return to Norway
is unfortunately unclear, but in April 1940 some information is
available. When the Germans invaded Norway in April 1940, Belgica
was requisitioned by the British forces, and was laid down at
anchor in Brurvika outside the city of Harstad and used as an
ammunition barge. While she laid at anchor there, loaded with
ammunition, Harstad city were attacked by German airplanes. Belgica
was damaged by the bombs that were dropped over the area, and
even through she was not hit directly, she started to take in
water and sank a while later. Belgica is today in a poor condition,
but the remains are worth a visit. The wreck stands on her keel
with a listing towards port side on a depth of twelve to twenty
meters. The wreck is usually marked with a buoy, and Brurvika
can be easily accessed from land...
Name: |
Former names: |
Material: |
Dimensions: |
Belgica |
Patria |
Wood |
32,0x 6,5x ? m. |
| |
|
|
|
| Tons: |
Built: |
Homeport: |
Cargo: |
| 336 grt |
( ? ) 18?? |
( N ) |
Ammunition |

Information
from the Belgium embasy in Oslo, Norway;
Adrien de Gerlache, a lieutenant in the Belgian navy, wanted to organize
his own expedition of scientific exploration in the South Pole. He
contacted the Geographic Society of Brussels in order to collect the
necessary funds and acquired in Norway a three-masted ship that was
equipped for seal hunting. This ship called PATRIC was deeply renovated
and was renamed BELGICA. On 29 July 1896, de Gerlache received a letter
from a young Norwegian of 25 years old, Roald Amundsen who wanted
to be part of the expedition, something that was accepted. He was
to become the second-lieutenant. The Belgica left Antwerp on 16 August
1897 and reached the Antarctic waters on the following 20 January.
Among the 19 members of the crew, six were Norwegians. Adrien de Gerlache
and his crew were the first to spend a winter in the Antarctic and
to bring back essential data for the knowledge of these regions. After
having spent a forced wintering in the ice of the ice floe, the ship
found finally, on 28 February 1898, a passage to the free waters.
Repurchased by a Norwegian firm in the beginning of the century, the
Belgica sank during the second world war off Harstad. Its anchor is
today exhibited in the polar museum of Tromsø, For Amundsen
it was the beginning of a long career of explorer. In 1911, he became
together with three companions the first man to reach the South Pole.
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