Admiral Richard E. Byrd: The Hero
Born
in 1888 to one of the oldest and most distinguished families in the history of
Virginia, Richard Byrd seemed destined for fame. First, Byrd sought a career in
the U.S. Navy and graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy. However, a series of injuries made it difficult for Byrd to serve as a
naval officer at sea, where long watches were required. In 1916, Byrd retired from the Navy, but the advent of World War I
returned him into active service.
Byrd was particularly interested in the new technology of airplanes and earned his wings as a pilot at Pensacola. When World War I ended, Byrd maintained his interest in aviation and helped to navigate and plan the Navy team who achieved a transatlantic crossing by means of sea planes in 1919.
After commanding the U.S. Navy pilots assisting Donald MacMillan’s expedition to Greenland in 1925, Byrd raised funds for his own expedition to fly across the North Pole in 1926, an accomplishment he announced on May 9, 1926. In recognition, the U.S. Congress awarded him the Medal of Honor and promoted him to commander. New York City threw a ticker tape parade. Byrd himself referred to his new status with both pride --and sometimes exasperation-- as “the hero business.” Soon after, in 1927, Byrd added to his fame by leading a team that flew an airplane across the Atlantic Ocean, the third since Charles Lindbergh in that year.
Antarctica,
however, would become the major theater of Byrd’s career. Byrd led or participated in five expeditions to Antarctica, commencing in
1928. After the first expedition
returned in 1930, Byrd received another ticker-tape parade in New York City, the
others following the North Pole and the transatlantic flights. By the time of his death in 1957, Byrd was so closely affiliated with
exploration and scientific investigation of Antarctica that some referred to him
as the “Mayor of Antarctica.”
Admiral Richard E. Byrd: Tools of the Expedition
Historians claim that Byrd transformed polar exploration from the “Heroic Age” to the “Mechanical Age.” Certainly, Byrd made use of the older techniques of polar exploration that had been used by others. Dog sleds, snowshoes, and skis continued to be important modes of transportation for Byrd.
However,
Byrd’s most important accomplishment was in testing Twentieth Century
technologies, which would expand the range of exploration and scientific
investigation in Antarctica. His
expeditions made extensive use of airplanes, both to map the continent and to
deliver supplies to parties in the field. Trucks
on skis and tracks made it possible to transport more equipment and supplies
further into Antarctica. Radio
enabled communication from Byrd’s base at Little America with field parties on
the ice and with pilots in the air. As
each expedition improved upon the technologies of the previous ones, the entire
continent of Antarctica became available for science.
Admiral Richard E. Byrd: In His Own Words
Traditionally,
polar explorers--then and now--maintain a diary in order to record one’s
experiences in this extraordinary environment. Many expected to publish their accounts, either as articles in newspapers
or popular books or tomes of science.
Admiral Richard Byrd was no different. In fact, publication and the publicity associated with selling a new book were fundamental to Byrd’s career for two reasons. Revenue from the sale of books and stories paid the costs of the previous expeditions and also provided money to buy supplies and equipment for the next. Byrd himself raised money for his expedition to the North Pole in 1926 and his first two expeditions to Antarctica.
Of course, the length of Byrd’s career as a public hero and as a polar explorer (1926 to 1957) occasioned an immense number of books and articles by him and about him. The first two expeditions to Antarctica resulted in three books credited to Byrd, with assistance from Byrd’s publicist, Charles Murphy.
Byrd’s papers at The Ohio State University, which include letters, expeditionary records, diaries, photographs, audio recordings, and films, are extraordinary both in research value and in physical extent. The collection is housed in approximately 500 boxes, probably the largest collection of documentation about any single polar explorer.
Return to the Exhibits Page or visit the Papers of Admiral Richard E. Byrd at The Ohio State University Archives