William Lashly
{{Short description|English sailor}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2022}}
{{Infobox military person
|width_style = person
|name = William Lashly
|image = William Lashly, November 1911.jpg
|caption = Lashly in November 1911
|birth_date = {{birth date|1867|12|25|df=y}}
|birth_place = {{nowr|Hambledon, Hampshire, England}}
|death_date = {{death date and age|1940|06|12|1867|12|25|df=y}}
|death_place = Hambledon, Hampshire, England
|branch_label = Branch
|branch = {{navy|United Kingdom|size=20px}}
|serviceyears_label = Service years
|serviceyears = 1889–1918
|battles_label = Conflict
|battles = World War I
|awards = Albert Medal, Polar Medal
}}
William Lashly (25 December 1867 – 12 June 1940) was a Royal Navy seaman who served as lead stoker on both the Discovery expedition and the Terra Nova expedition to Antarctica, for which he was awarded the Polar Medal. Lashly was also recognised with the Albert Medal for playing a key role in saving the life of a comrade on the second of the two expeditions.
Career
= ''Discovery'' expedition =
The son of a farm worker, Lashly was born in Hambledon, Hampshire, a village near Portsmouth, England. At the time he joined Scott's Discovery expedition in 1901, he was a 33-year-old leading stoker in the Royal Navy, serving on {{HMS|Duke of Wellington|1852|6}}. On this expedition, Lashly proved a success and was a member of Scott's "Farthest West" party exploring Victoria Land in 1903.
A teetotaller and non-smoker, he was quiet and strong, good-natured, dependable and acknowledged by Reginald Skelton as 'the best man far and away in the ship'. Before joining Scott's next Antarctic expedition in 1910, he served as an instructor at the Royal Naval College, Osborne, on the Isle of Wight.
= ''Terra Nova'' expedition =
On Scott's second expedition in 1911–1913, Lashly was initially in charge of one of the expedition's two motor sledges which were to haul supplies southward in support of the polar party. However, the sledges quickly broke down, and the motor party had to switch to man-hauling the supplies.
On 4 January 1912, along with Lieutenant Edward Evans and Tom Crean, he was a member of the last support party to be sent back by Scott on his way to the pole. During the {{convert|730|mi|km|-1|adj=on}} return journey, Evans became seriously ill with scurvy, and on 11 February, collapsed, unable to walk any further. Still {{convert|100|mi|-1}} from Hut Point camp and safety, he tried to persuade Lashly and Crean to leave him to save themselves, but they refused.
Strapping him onto the sledge, they pulled him for days until with only one to two days' food rations left, but still four or five days' sledge pulling to do, they had to stop. Lashly then stayed with Evans in the tent to nurse him while Crean walked the remaining {{convert|35|mi|-1}} alone in 18 hours to reach Hut Point camp, where he was able to fetch help. Extracts from Lashly's polar journals, chronicling his tribulations with the motor sledges and the return journey with Evans, were included in Apsley Cherry-Garrard's book, The Worst Journey in the World. Both Lashly and Crean received the Albert Medal for saving Evans' life.
= Royal Navy =
After returning from the Antarctic, Lashly retired from the Royal Navy with a pension, but promptly joined the reserves and served in World War I on {{HMS|Irresistible|1898|6}} and {{HMS|Amethyst|1903|6}}. Later he served as a customs officer in Cardiff. Upon his retirement in 1932, he returned to Hambledon where he lived in a house he called "Minna Bluff", after one of the landmarks on the road to the South Pole. Lashly died on 12 June 1940.
Antarctic diaries
In 1969, Lashly's diaries were edited and published by A. R. Ellis as Under Scott's Command: Lashly's Antarctic Diaries. It provides insight into both the Discovery and Terra Nova expeditions from the perspective of one of the men rather than the more common accounts published by officers.
In popular culture
Lashly was portrayed by Norman Williams in the 1948 film Scott of the Antarctic,{{cite web |url=https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0040761/fullcredits/?ref_=tt_cst_sm |title=Scott of the Antarctic - Full cast and crew |author= |date= |work=IMDb |access-date=26 April 2025}} and by Tom Georgeson in the 1985 television serial The Last Place on Earth.{{cite web |url=https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0088551/fullcredits/?ref_=tt_cst_sm |title=The Last Place on Earth - Full cast and crew |author= |date= |work=IMDb |access-date=26 April 2025}}
References
= Footnotes =
{{reflist}}
= Bibliography =
- {{cite book|last = Cherry-Garrard|first = A.|date = 1989|title = The worst journey in the world|title-link = The Worst Journey in the World|location = London|publisher = Carroll & Graf|isbn = 9780881844788}}
- {{cite book|editor-last = Ellis|editor-first = A. R.|date = 1969|title = Under Scott's command: Lashly's Antarctic diaries|location = New York|publisher = Taplinger|oclc = 768016364}}
- {{cite book|last = Huntford|first = R.|date = 2002|title = The last place on earth: Scott and Amundsen's race to the South Pole|location = London|publisher = Abacus|isbn = 9780349113951}}
- {{cite book|last = Preston|first = D.|date = 1999|title = A first rate tragedy: Robert Falcon Scott and the race to the South Pole|location = Boston|publisher = Houghton Mifflin|isbn = 9780618002016|url-access = registration|url = https://archive.org/details/firstratetragedy00dian}}
External links
{{Polar exploration}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lashly, William}}
Category:British explorers of Antarctica
Category:People from Hambledon, Hampshire
Category:Recipients of the Albert Medal (lifesaving)
Category:Recipients of the Polar Medal