This blog post is part of the Frozen Friday Series, an A-Z journey of the Polar Archives.  Each week, we will feature some aspect of the history of polar exploration with a blog post written by our student authors.

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The South Pole in 1969.

The year is 1969. It is winter in the northern hemisphere. It has been a year since the assassination of Doctor Martin Luther King Junior and the fight for civil rights still rages. Feminist groups have fought for a nearly a decade to expand the role of women in American society. Only a few short months ago, Neil Armstrong took his giant leap for mankind. However, in Antarctica, an almost forgotten history is being made. Four women, pioneers and explorers in their own right, step off a United States helicopter and onto the cold, frozen earth at the South Pole. One of these women was Lois Jones, leader of the first all-woman expedition to Antarctica.

 

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Young Terry Tickhill takes a swing at a boulder for a
sample while smiling for a picture.

 

 

 

Man has been exploring Antarctica for centuries or, to put it another way, men have been exploring the southern continent for centuries. While there had been women on the continent before Jones, the women in Antarctica had been few in number and always under the leadership of men[1]. Indeed, Antarctica has been referenced as the ‘last bastion of male supremacy’[2]. The National Science Foundation had been prepared to bring women into field for at least a decade. However, the United States Navy, and thus its logistical support, felt that women were best kept in the ‘cold’ (so-to-speak)[3]. Colin Bull, the director of what was then the Institute of Polar Studies at The Ohio State University (now the Byrd Polar and Climate  Research Center), had been trying for years to get an all-female team sent to Antarctica[4]. “‘The Navy refused adamantly. They wouldn’t even contemplate the possibility. I couldn’t see any reason at all for this,’” he later said on the issue[5]. In the Navy’s view, Antarctic bases were like their ships, and they did not let women on ships[6]. Fortunately, mounting pressures managed to convince the Navy to change policy, if only for one experimental expedition[7].

 

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Kay Lindsay in the process of
preparing the night’s meal: steak.

Though the Navy seemed willing to test the presence of women in Antarctica, Jones and her crew of three women received a very short leash. Terry Tickhill, who served as cook and field assistant on Jones’ team, visited the Ohio State University in 2015 and recalled the experience. The women were required to be out in the field[8]. They had to be at least two hundred miles away from McMurdo, the main American base in Antarctica[9]. The severity of the difference between the Navy’s treatment of men and its treatment of women can perhaps most easily be seen in the medical examinations required by the Navy before one could go to Antarctica. According to Tickhill, the all-woman team had to be “sent to Bethesda Naval Hospital, probed, sampled” and examined by “a clinical psychologist for an entire day” whereas a subsequent male colleague’s “physical consisted of going to his local doctor and talking about dive watches for thirty minutes.”[10]

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Lois M. Jones (center) stands in front of the South
Pole.

Sexism did not stop once the team reached Antarctica. Tickhill can remember one instance where, as the women prepared to go out into the field, supplies they had selected had been “replaced with holey tents and defective sleeping bags”[11]. Tickhill also recalls how “there were a large number of people who were very happy to see us… On the other hand, there were a few people who were not happy to see us.”[12] Navy officers harshly punished enlisted men who used poor language around the women. Many men saw the women as delicate in mind and body. When one man proved unable to lift a heavy container of rock samples that had been carried by Terry Tickhill, he had to be transferred out of Antarctica because of the ridicule he faced from the other men for having been ‘bested’ by a ‘girl’[13]. Sexist stereotyping that women were somehow less suited to the work had also been present in news media regarding the expedition, such as the head line “‘Powderpuff explorers to invade South Pole’” and questions such as “‘Will you wear lipstick while you work’” by reporters[14].

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This landscape was taken on the way to the South
Pole from McMurdo Station in Antarctica.

Despite the skeptics, Jones and her team succeeded in not only their scientific mission, but also in proving once and for all that women are no less able to weather the conditions of the frozen continent. According to Bull, “‘It was a highly successful little expedition.’”[15] The efforts and dedication of Jones have opened up Antarctica to women. Today, about one third of the American population of Antarctica are women.[16] Pam Hill, a field support coordinator for the United States Antarctic Program, recently stated “‘as equal opportunity has become the norm versus the exception in America, the same is true for here on the Ice’”[17]. Though the issue of gender equality is still an issue discussed in American politics, what cannot be dismissed is the universal beauty of Antarctica. Terry Tickhill described Antarctica and its McMurdo Dry Valleys as “‘a beautiful, wild place. There aren’t enough adjectives for beautiful.’”[18]. Luckily, Jones and her team took a great number of photographs during their time there. The groundbreaking Jones expedition is very well documented and an extensive collection of 35mm slides is held by the Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center Archives. We are currently in the process of digitizing the slides for public viewing. Check them out!

Written by John Hooton.

[1] Peter Rejcek, “Breaking The Ice,” The Antarctic Sun, November 13, 2013, https://antarcticsun.usap.gov/features/contentHandler.cfm?id=1946.

[2] Peter Rejcek, “Breaking The Ice.”

[3] Terry Tickhill, “OMG We’re Not in Ohio Anymore,” Vimeo, 01:03:06, Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center, 2015, https://vimeo.com/147969386.

[4] Peter Rejcek, “Breaking The Ice.”

[5] Peter Rejcek, “Breaking The Ice.”

[6] Marlene Cimons, “Forty Years of Women Researchers in Antarctica,” U.S. News, December 2, 2009, http://www.usnews.com/science/articles/2009/12/02/forty-years-of-women-researchers-in-antarctica.

[7] Terry Tickhill, “OMG We’re Not in Ohio Anymore.”

[8] Terry Tickhill, “OMG We’re Not in Ohio Anymore.”

[9] Terry Tickhill, “OMG We’re Not in Ohio Anymore.”

[10] Terry Tickhill, “OMG We’re Not in Ohio Anymore.”

[11] Terry Tickhill, “OMG We’re Not in Ohio Anymore.”

[12] Terry Tickhill, “OMG We’re Not in Ohio Anymore.”

[13] Terry Tickhill, “OMG We’re Not in Ohio Anymore.”

[14] Peter Rejcek, “Breaking The Ice.”

[15] Peter Rejcek, “Breaking The Ice.”

[16] Peter Rejcek, “Breaking The Ice.”

[17] Peter Rejcek, “Breaking The Ice.”

[18] Peter Rejcek, “Breaking The Ice.”