Verner Duncan Carse (28 July 1913 – 2 May 2004) was an English explorer and actor known for surveying South Georgia and for the portrayal of Special Agent Dick Barton on BBC Radio.
19-431: Cooper Island is a small island, 2 miles (3.2 km) long, which lies at the north side of the entrance to Drygalski Fjord , off the southeast end of South Georgia . It was discovered by a British expedition under James Cook in 1775, and named for Lieutenant Robert Palliser Cooper , an officer aboard HMS Resolution . A navigable channel, Cooper Sound , nearly 1 mile (1.6 km) wide, separates Cooper Island from
38-613: A long interest in the expeditions of Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton and wrote the Introduction and Notes to the 1974 Folio Society Edition of Shackleton's Boat Journey by Frank Worsley A second Polar Medal clasp was awarded in 1982 for his leadership of the later Survey work – this mapping being of particular value in the period of conflict in the Falklands. After his return from the Antarctic, Carse began working in radio for
57-466: A modern day Robinson Crusoe , and lived as a hermit in a remote part of South Georgia. Carse built a house at Ducloz Head on the southern coast of the island, intending to live there through the winter. However, in May, three months into the experiment, surge waves destroyed his camp. He managed to salvage enough gear to survive the winter until making contact with a ship 116 days later. Carse maintained
76-600: A presenter through the mid-1980s, and participated in producing BBC documentaries about South Georgia and the Antarctic. Proud Canvas (BBC, 1947) Narrator: Duncan Carse The Goshawk ( David Cobham /BBC, 1968) Lead role (Falconer): Duncan Carse Survival in Limbo ( David Cobham /BBC, 1976) The BFI Filmography record for Carse lists over 140 roles from Presenter/Commentator/Narrator to scriptwriting, music and acting through his near-50-year career. The listing suggests an alternative name J.York Scarlett or Yorke Scarlett
95-770: A son with his second wife Elizabeth Wilen - Peter Carse. Carse married Venetia Kempe, his third wife, in December 1962. They lived in Fittleworth , West Sussex, and the marriage lasted until Carse's death on 2 May 2004, aged 90. Carse joined the Merchant Navy and sailed for the Southern Ocean aboard the RRS Discovery II in 1933. While in Port Stanley , Falkland Islands, Carse encountered
114-576: Is a cove on the south side of the fjord, 1 nautical mile (2 km) north of the head of Larsen Harbour . It was surveyed by the South Georgia Survey in the period 1951–57, and named by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee for American economist Karl Brandt . Mount Mair sits south of Brandt Cove, separating it from Larsen Harbour. Trendall Crag is a mountain crag overlooking the north side of
133-478: Is covered in tussock grass . This South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Drygalski Fjord Drygalski Fjord is a bay 1 mile (1.6 km) wide which recedes northwestwards 7 miles (11 km), entered immediately north of Nattriss Head along the southeast coast of South Georgia . It was charted by
152-709: The British Graham Land Expedition , which was on its way to Antarctica on the yacht Penola . Carse secured permission to transfer to the expedition, serving as a seaman and wireless operator and helping to lay depots on the Antarctic Peninsula. Carse returned to England in 1937, and in 1939 he was awarded the silver Polar Medal and Clasp for his part in the Graham Land expedition. After the Second World War , Carse
171-544: The National Portrait Gallery by Howard Coster . Duncan Carse died shortly after finally agreeing to a portrait sitting but in discussion with his wife Venetia, it was agreed that it would be fitting to work on the sculpture with reference to visual memories, a photographic archive of 60 years of images and with her help. Bronze portrait busts of Carse by sculptor Jon Edgar are now held in public collections at South Georgia Museum , South Atlantic and
190-654: The Second German Antarctic Expedition , 1911–12, under Wilhelm Filchner , and named for Professor Erich von Drygalski , the leader of the First German Antarctica Expedition , 1901–03. According to L. Harrison Matthews , Drygalski Fjord might have been the place where Anthony de la Roché spent two weeks during his stay in the island in April 1675. Nattriss Head, a small but prominent rock headland , marks
209-683: The United States Geological Survey . 54°49′S 36°0′W / 54.817°S 36.000°W / -54.817; -36.000 Duncan Carse Carse was born on 28 July 1913 in Fulham , London, the son of the artist A. Duncan Carse . He attended school at Sherborne School in Dorset , England and in Lausanne, Switzerland. Carse married Bertha Sylvia Hadfield in 1938, with whom he had two daughters. He had
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#1732773114999228-673: The BBC. He was a presenter and announcer from 1939 to 1942, when he joined the Royal Navy for service in the Second World War. After the end of the war, he returned to radio, and in 1949 secured his best-known role: he was the voice of Special Agent Dick Barton for 265 of the 711 episodes of the very popular BBC Radio serial. He continued in this role until leaving for the South Georgia Survey in 1951. Carse worked as
247-417: The coast of the main island of South Georgia. There is a small bay , Known as Cooper Bay , 1.3 miles (2.1 km) southwest of Cape Vahsel on the mainland, and 1 mile (1.6 km) northwest of Cooper Island, indenting the southeast end of South Georgia, which derives its name from Cooper Island. The island reaches 416 metres (1,365 ft) at its highest point, and the upper parts of the island are above
266-481: The fjord at the southeast end of South Georgia . Surveyed by the South Georgia Survey (SGS) from 1951 to 1957 by a research group led by English explorer Duncan Carse , it was named after Alec Trendall , an English geologist who took part in the SGS expedition. The crag has an elevation of 1,005 metres (1.005 km). [REDACTED] This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of
285-563: The island. Mount Carse and Carse Point are named after him. The comprehensive survey of the island resulted in the classic 1:200000 topographic map of South Georgia, occasionally updated but never superseded since its first publication by the British Directorate of Overseas Surveys in 1958. A full account of the four South Georgia Survey expeditions led by Duncan Carse was written by the geologist on 1951–52 and 1953–54 Surveys, Alec Trendall . In 1961, he decided to become
304-426: The snow line. As one of a handful of rat -free islands, Cooper Island is South Georgia's only Special Protection Area ; it has large numbers of sea birds, including snow petrels , Antarctic prions , 12,000 pairs of black-browed albatross , chinstrap penguins , and 20,000 macaroni penguins . There are also a number of fur seals , and this is one of the few places where they were not hunted by humans. The island
323-567: The south side of the entrance to Drygalski Fjord. Like the fjord, it was charted by Filchner's expedition. It was originally named Nattriss Point for E.A. Nattriss , shipping officer to the Discovery Committee , following survey by Discovery Investigations personnel in 1927. It was later renamed Nattriss Head to avoid confusion with Nattriss Point on Saunders Island in the South Sandwich Islands . Brandt Cove
342-627: Was determined to resume exploration of the far south. At the suggestion of the Royal Geographical Society and the Scott Polar Institute , he decided to focus his attention on the subantarctic island of South Georgia . His efforts over the next several decades won him a preeminent place in South Georgia's history. He organised and led the South Georgia Survey of 1951–57, surveying much of the interior of
361-689: Was used for Sound Recording work. Between 1981 and 1983 Carse presented three series of the programme "Travellers in Time" on BBC2. These presented archive films from the early 20th century, including those from Antarctic expeditions and early attempts to climb Mount Everest. A number of expedition images of Carse from 1934 to 1937 are now in the Scott Polar Research Institute on line archive, Freeze Frame. The Falkland Islands Philatelic bureau issued postage stamps to commemorate Carse's life. One photographic portrait exists in
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