South Georgia 17th to 19th centuries The island of South Georgia was first sighted and visited in April 1675 by
Anthony de la Roché, a London merchant and (despite his French name) an Englishman, who spent a fortnight in one of the island's bays. The island appeared as
Roche Island on early maps. The commercial Spanish ship
León, operating out of
Saint-Malo, sighted it on 28 June or 29 June 1756.
James Cook circumnavigated the island in 1775 and made the first landing. He claimed the territory for the
Kingdom of Great Britain, naming it the "Isle of Georgia" in honour of
King George III. British arrangements for the government of South Georgia were established under 1843 British
letters patent. In 1882–1883 a
German expedition for the first
International Polar Year set up its base at
Royal Bay on the southeast side of the island. The scientists of this group observed the
transit of Venus and recorded waves produced by the
1883 eruption of Krakatoa.
Seal hunting at South Georgia began in 1786 and continued throughout the 19th century. The waters proved treacherous and a number of vessels were wrecked there, such as , in late 1801.
20th and 21st centuries at
Grytviken, formerly the Norwegian Lutheran Church South Georgia became a base for
whaling beginning in the 20th century. A Norwegian,
Carl Anton Larsen, established the first land-based whaling station and first permanent habitation at
Grytviken in 1904. It operated through his
Argentine Fishing Company, which settled in Grytviken. The station operated until 1965.
Whaling stations operated under leases granted by the Governor of the
Falkland Islands. The seven stations, all on the north coast with its sheltered harbours, were, from the west to east: •
Prince Olav Harbour •
Leith Harbour •
Stromness •
Husvik •
Grytviken •
Godthul •
Ocean Harbour The whaling stations'
tryworks were unpleasant and dangerous places to work. One was called "a
charnel house boiling wholesale in Vaseline" by an early 20th-century visitor.
Tim Flannery wrote that its "putrid vapors [resembled] the pong of bad fish, manure, and a tanning works mixed together", and noted one bizarre peril: "A rotting whale could fill with gas to bursting, ejecting a fetus the size of a motor vehicle with sufficient force to kill a man." during the
Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition With the end of the whaling industry, the stations were abandoned. Apart from a few preserved buildings such as the
South Georgia Museum and
Norwegian Lutheran Church at Grytviken, only their decaying remains survive. From 1905, the Argentine Meteorological Office cooperated in maintaining a meteorological observatory at Grytviken under the British lease requirements of the whaling station until these changed in 1949. In 1908, the United Kingdom issued further
letters patent that established constitutional arrangements for its possessions in the South Atlantic. The letters covered South Georgia, the
South Orkneys, the
South Shetlands, the South Sandwich Islands, and
Graham Land. The claim was extended in 1917 to include a sector of Antarctica reaching to the
South Pole. In 1909, an administrative centre and residence were established at King Edward Point on South Georgia, near the whaling station of Grytviken. A permanent local British administration and resident magistrate exercised effective
possession, enforcement of
British law, and regulation of all economic, scientific, and other activities in the territory, which was then governed as the
Falkland Islands Dependencies. In about 1912, what is according to some accounts the largest whale ever caught, a
blue whale of , was landed at Grytviken. In April 1916,
Ernest Shackleton's
Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition became stranded on
Elephant Island, some southwest of South Georgia. Shackleton and five companions set out in a small boat to summon help, and on 10 May, after an epic voyage, they landed at
King Haakon Bay on South Georgia's south coast. While three stayed at the coast, Shackleton and the two others,
Tom Crean and
Frank Worsley, went on to cover over the spine of the mountainous island to reach help at
Stromness whaling station. The remaining 22 members of the expedition, who had stayed on Elephant Island, were subsequently rescued. In January 1922, during a
later expedition, Shackleton died on board ship while moored in King Edward Cove, South Georgia. He is buried at Grytviken. The ashes of another noted Antarctic explorer,
Frank Wild, who had been Shackleton's second-in-command on the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition, were interred next to Shackleton in 2011. Argentina claimed South Georgia in 1927. The basis of this claim and of a later claim in 1938 to the South Sandwich Islands has been questioned. During the
Second World War, the Royal Navy deployed an armed merchant vessel to patrol South Georgian and Antarctic waters against German raiders, along with two four-inch shore guns (still present) protecting Cumberland Bay and Stromness Bay, which were operated by volunteers from among the Norwegian whalers. The base at King Edward Point was expanded as a research facility in 1949–1950 by the
British Antarctic Survey, which until 1962 was called the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey. The
Falklands War was precipitated on 19 March 1982 when a group of Argentinians (most of them
Argentine Marines in
mufti), posing as scrap-metal merchants, occupied the abandoned whaling station at
Leith Harbour on South Georgia. On 3 April, Argentine troops
attacked and occupied Grytviken. Among the commanding officers of the Argentine garrison was
Alfredo Astiz, a captain in the
Argentine Navy who was convicted years later of crimes against humanity committed during the
Dirty War in Argentina. The island was recaptured by British forces on 25 April, in
Operation Paraquet. In 1985, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands ceased to be administered as a Falkland Islands Dependency and became a separate territory. The
King Edward Point base, which had become a small military garrison after the Falklands War, returned to civilian use in 2001 and is now operated by the
British Antarctic Survey.
South Sandwich Islands Captain
James Cook discovered the southern eight islands of the Sandwich Islands Group in 1775, although he lumped the southernmost three together, and their status as separate islands was not established until 1820 by
Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen. The northern three islands were discovered by Bellingshausen in 1819. The islands were tentatively named "Sandwich Land" by Cook, although he also commented that they might be a group of islands rather than a single body of land. The name was chosen in honour of
John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, who was First Lord of the Admiralty. The word "South" was later added to distinguish them from the "Sandwich Islands", now known as the
Hawaiian Islands.
Southern Thule, at the south end of the island chain, is the southernmost land on Earth outside the area covered by the
Antarctic Treaty. Argentina claimed the South Sandwich Islands in 1938, and challenged British sovereignty in the Islands on several occasions. From 25 January 1955 to mid-1956, Argentina maintained the summer station, "Teniente Esquivel" (
es) at
Ferguson Bay on the southeastern coast of
Thule Island. Argentina maintained a naval base (
Corbeta Uruguay) from 1976 to 1982, in the lee (southern east coast) of the same island. Although the British discovered the presence of the Argentine base in 1976, protested and tried to resolve the issue by diplomatic means, no effort was made to remove them by force until after the
Falklands War. The base was removed on 20 June 1982. == Languages ==