Sir Clements Robert Markham (20 July 1830 – 30 January 1916) was a British naval officer, geographer, and explorer whose career spanned Arctic voyages, the procurement of cinchona plants for quinine production in India, and leadership in geographical institutions.[1][2]
Markham entered the Royal Navy in 1844 and participated in the 1850–1851 expedition searching for the lost Franklin crew in the Arctic before resigning his commission.[1] In 1859–1860, he led an effort to transplant cinchona species from Peru to British India, enabling large-scale quinine bark production that reached 220,000 kilograms annually by 1880 and addressing malaria treatment needs.[2] Later serving as head of the geographical department at the India Office, he earned recognition including Companion of the Bath for contributions to the Abyssinian campaign.[1]
As honorary secretary of the Royal Geographical Society from 1863 to 1888 and president from 1893 to 1905, Markham advocated vigorously for polar expeditions, organizing the British National Antarctic Expedition of 1901–1904 aboard HMS Discovery under Robert Falcon Scott's command and supporting an 1875–1876 Arctic effort that attained 83°20′ N latitude.[2][1] His administrative influence and publications, including historical accounts of voyages and biographies, advanced geographical knowledge and naval historiography.[1]
Early Life and Education
Family Background and Childhood
Clements Robert Markham was born on 20 July 1830 at Stillingfleet Vicarage in the village of Stillingfleet, North Yorkshire, England.[3] He was the second son of the Reverend David Frederick Markham, who served as vicar of Stillingfleet and later as Canon of Windsor, and Catherine Markham (née Milner), daughter of Sir William Mordaunt Milner, 5th Baronet, of Nun Appleton Hall, Yorkshire.[3][4] The Markham family had longstanding ties to the clergy, with his father descending from a lineage that included multiple reverends, while his mother's aristocratic background provided connections to landed gentry in Yorkshire.[4]Markham's early childhood was spent in the rural parish of Stillingfleet, a small community centered around the church where his father officiated. In 1838, the family relocated to Great Horkesley in Essex after Rev. Markham accepted a new clerical position, exposing young Clements to varied English countryside settings during his formative years.[3] Limited records detail specific childhood experiences, but the clerical household emphasized education and discipline, fostering an environment that later aligned with his naval and exploratory pursuits.[1]
Formal Education and Early Influences
Markham attended Cheam School, a private preparatory institution in Surrey, from 1839 to 1842, where he first cultivated interests in geography and polar exploration.[5][2]In 1842, at age 12, he transferred to Westminster School, remaining until 1844; the school's emphasis on classical studies and broader intellectual pursuits reinforced his emerging fascination with geographical discovery.[5][2][1]Among his early influences, a family connection via his paternal aunt, Frederica Markham, Countess of Mansfield, proved pivotal; at a dinner party hosted by her, Markham encountered Rear-Admiral Sir George Seymour, whose accounts of naval service sparked his aspiration to join the Royal Navy.[2]These formative years, marked by academic diligence and exposure to exploratory narratives through relatives and schooling, laid the groundwork for Markham's lifelong commitment to geographical and polar endeavors, though his formal education concluded prior to naval entry in 1844.[2][1]
Royal Navy Career
Cadet Training and Early Service, 1844–1850
Clements Robert Markham entered the Royal Navy as a naval cadet on 28 June 1844, at the age of thirteen, through family connections that secured him a position on the flagship HMS Collingwood under Rear-Admiral Sir George Seymour at Portsmouth.[1] The 80-gun second-rate ship of the line was fitting out for an extended commission on the Pacific Station, emphasizing routine drills in seamanship, navigation, gunnery, and discipline typical of mid-nineteenth-century cadet training.[6] On 20 July 1844—Markham's fourteenth birthday—Collingwood sailed from Spithead, rounding Cape Horn and reaching Valparaíso, Chile, by October after a passage of three months.[2]The four-year commission (1844–1848) involved patrols along the west coast of South America, with stops at ports including Callao, Peru, and interactions with local populations that enabled Markham to learn Spanish fluently alongside his naval duties.[1] Midway through the voyage, on 28 June 1846, he was promoted to midshipman, marking the transition from cadet oversight to greater responsibility in watch-keeping and officer training.[7] This period fostered Markham's interest in geography and natural history, as he observed diverse terrains from Andean highlands to Pacific coasts, though his primary focus remained on acquiring practical naval skills amid the squadron's enforcement of British interests against regional instability.[6]Following the Collingwood's return to England in 1848, Markham transferred in 1849 to HMS Sidon, a steam-screw frigate serving in the Mediterranean, where he gained experience with emerging steam propulsion and continued midshipman duties amid fleet maneuvers.[1] This brief posting honed his technical proficiency until early 1850, bridging his foundational training to specialized expeditions.[6] Throughout, Markham's service adhered to the era's rigorous standards, with no recorded disciplinary issues, reflecting effective adaptation to naval life despite the physical demands on young officers.[4]
First Arctic Expedition, 1850–1851
In April 1850, Clements Markham, aged 19, used family connections to secure an appointment as midshipman on HMS Assistance for the British naval search expedition for Sir John Franklin's lost 1845 expedition.[8] The ship, under Captain Erasmus Ommanney, formed part of a squadron led overall by Captain Horatio Thomas Austin, which departed from England on 4 May 1850.[9]The squadron navigated through Baffin Bay and Lancaster Sound, establishing winter quarters at Griffith Island in September 1850.[8] On 19 August 1850, Ommanney discovered the first physical evidence of Franklin's expedition at Cape Riley and Beechey Island, including three seamen's graves inscribed with death dates in 1846, indicating the ships Erebus and Terror had wintered there during 1845–1846.[8] Markham served alongside fellow junior officers such as Leopold McClintock, Sherard Osborn, and Vesey Hamilton, contributing to coastal surveys, topographic mapping, geological observations, faunal studies, and meteorological records amid the ongoing search efforts.[9]During the spring of 1851, extensive sledging parties using man-hauling techniques explored regions including Prince of Wales Island and the northwest coast of Devon Island, covering hundreds of miles but uncovering no further traces of Franklin's survivors.[8] The expedition returned to England in October 1851, with Markham documenting his experiences in the 1852 publication Franklin's Footsteps: A Sketch of Greenland Along the Shores of Which Franklin's Expedition Passed, which detailed the journey and discoveries.[9] This voyage ignited Markham's lifelong passion for polar exploration and scientific geography, though it marked his final active Royal Navy service before retiring in 1852.[8]
South American Expeditions
Initial Peruvian Exploration, 1852–1853
In 1852, at age 22, Clements Markham resigned his commission in the Royal Navy and undertook an independent journey to Peru, motivated by a longstanding interest in Inca civilization and funded by a £500 gift from his father.[2] His itinerary began with a voyage across the Atlantic, followed by transit over the Isthmus of Panama, and a coastal sail to Callao, where he arrived on 16 October.[10] From Callao, Markham proceeded to Lima, the Peruvian capital, establishing a base for initial acclimatization and local excursions to sites including the guano-rich Chincha Islands and coastal valleys such as Cañete.[11]On 7 December 1852, Markham departed Lima by mule train for the Andean interior, targeting Cuzco, the historic Inca capital some 550 kilometers southeast at an elevation exceeding 3,400 meters. The overland route traversed rugged sierras, high passes, and provincial towns like Jauja and Huancayo, involving hardships such as altitude sickness, variable weather, and reliance on indigenous guides and pack animals. He reached Cuzco in March 1853 after approximately three months of travel.[10][2]In Cuzco, Markham devoted several weeks to systematic exploration of Inca ruins, including the fortress of Sacsahuamán and the temple complex of Coricancha, while consulting colonial manuscripts and engaging with Quechua-speaking locals to study the Inca language (Quichua), history, and antiquities. His observations emphasized the engineering sophistication of Inca stonework and the continuity of indigenous customs amid Spanish colonial overlays. On 18 May 1853, he left Cuzco with a party of fellow travelers bound for Lima, completing the return via similar Andean paths and arriving back in the capital by mid-1853. This expedition, distinct from his later official cinchona missions, yielded primary materials for Markham's 1856 publication Cuzco: A Journey to the Ancient Capital of Peru; with an Account of the History, Language, Literature, and Antiquities of the Incas, and Lima: A Visit to the Capital and Provinces of Modern Peru.[12][5]
Cinchona Procurement Mission, 1859–1861
In 1859, Clements R. Markham, then a junior clerk at the India Office, proposed a mission to procure cinchona plants and seeds from South America for cultivation in British India, motivated by the escalating annual quinine expenditure of £12,000 by 1857 and prior suggestions from figures like Dr. Royle dating to 1839.[13] The scheme received authorization from Lord Stanley, Secretary of State for India, leading Markham to depart England on December 17, 1859, aboard the Shannon, arriving in Lima, Peru, on January 26, 1860, and landing at Islay on March 2, 1860.[13] Accompanied by his wife Minna, Markham coordinated with local agents and botanists, including Richard Spruce, Mr. Cross, Mr. Pritchett, and Weir, targeting high-yield varieties such as Cinchona calisaya (yellow bark) from regions in Peru and Bolivia.[2][13]Markham's itinerary focused on the eastern Andes, departing Puno for Caravaya on April 7, 1860, reaching Crucero by April 18, and collecting in the Tambopata valley from May 1 to 14, 1860, before leaving Sandia on May 17 and arriving in Arequipa on May 27.[13] Procurement involved gathering young plants, seedlings, root-shoots, and seeds from forests, initially packed in moss and matting, then transferred to Wardian cases for viability during transport.[13] In Caravaya, teams secured 529 plants, including 237 C. calisaya fina and 185 C. boliviana, alongside 436 plants from Tambopata; later efforts by agents like Cross yielded nearly 100,000 C. chahuarguera seeds from Loxa and smaller quantities of C. crispa.[13] Operations extended to Ecuadorian areas like Guayaquil, with collections continuing into September 1861.[13]The mission encountered significant obstacles, including local jealousy and opposition in Peru and Bolivia, where governments sought to protect the barkmonopoly through decrees like Peru's export ban of May 1, 1861, necessitating secretive smuggling tactics.[13] Harsh environmental conditions—treacherous cordillera terrain, high altitudes, swollen rivers, floods, and unreliable mule transport—compounded risks, alongside threats of sabotage, theft, customs delays, and potential war between Peru and Bolivia.[13] Despite these, consignments were shipped from Islay on June 24, 1860, and other ports like Guayaquil, routed via Panama or Southampton with intermediate stops at Kew Gardens for propagation.[13][14]Plants reached India by early 1861, establishing nurseries in the Neilgherry Hills and other sites, with 13,700 planted by August 1862 from an initial total exceeding 72,000 viable specimens, demonstrating robust acclimatization and surpassing Dutch efforts in Java, which yielded only 40 valuable plants after three years.[13] Markham's initiative laid the groundwork for self-sufficient quinine production, averting dependency on volatile South American supplies and earning him a £500 grant from the Indian government.[2][13]
Civil Service and Additional Expeditions
India Office Roles, 1857–1867
In 1858, following the Government of India Act that transferred control of British India from the East India Company to the Crown and established the India Office, Markham transferred from his clerkship in the preceding Board of Control to the Revenue Department of the new office, where he served until 1862.[9] During this period, he organized and oversaw the procurement of cinchona plants from South America for cultivation in British India, a mission initiated in 1859 that successfully introduced quinine production and reduced costs from approximately 20 shillings per ounce to a few pence, thereby enhancing malaria treatment accessibility across the empire.[9] Markham documented these efforts in his 1862 publication Travels in Peru and India while Superintending the Collection of Chinchona for the Government of India, which detailed logistical challenges, botanical outcomes, and economic impacts.[9]From August 1861 to May 1863, Markham acted as private secretary to Francis Baring, Under-Secretary of State for India (later Lord Northbrook), handling administrative correspondence and policy matters related to revenue and colonial administration.[4] This role overlapped with his growing involvement in geographical affairs, as recommended by Colonel Henry Thuillier, Surveyor-General of India, who entrusted Markham with managing the India Office's geographical business around 1861.[9] By 1867, he was formally appointed Assistant Secretary for Surveys and Geography, building a dedicated department to address deficiencies in mapping and intelligence that had contributed to vulnerabilities during the 1857 Indian Mutiny.[4]Markham's early geographical contributions included preparing a comprehensive Memoir on the Indian Surveys, which cataloged triangulation, revenue, and topographical efforts and was later translated into French and Dutch for international dissemination.[9] He advocated for resuming marine surveys around India and establishing a central meteorological department, initiatives that received government sanction by the mid-1860s and improved navigational safety and agricultural forecasting.[9] These reforms emphasized empirical data collection and causal links between terrain knowledge, resource management, and imperialsecurity, reflecting Markham's firsthand experience from prior expeditions.[15]
Abyssinia Campaign Involvement, 1867–1868
In 1867, Clements Markham was appointed geographer to the British punitive expedition to Abyssinia under Lieutenant-General Sir Robert Napier, tasked with rescuing European hostages—including the British consul Charles Duncan Cameron and missionary Henry Stern—imprisoned by Emperor Tewodros II after failed diplomatic negotiations.[2][16] As head of the India Office's Geographical Department since 1867, Markham joined Napier's headquarters staff, leveraging his expertise in cartography and regional intelligence derived from prior surveys and reports.[1][15]Markham's primary contributions centered on survey operations to support the campaign's logistics across challenging terrain, including the construction of a 400-mile supply line from the Red Sea port of Zula, where British forces landed on 7 October 1867, to the highland fortress of Magdala.[2] He conducted field surveys of routes, elevations, and resources, producing maps that aided the advance of approximately 16,000 troops, 26,000 camp followers, and 40 elephants through semi-arid lowlands and steep escarpments rising to over 10,000 feet.[17] These efforts facilitated the expedition's culmination in the Battle of Magdala on 13 April 1868, where British artillery and infantry overwhelmed Tewodros's defenses; Markham accompanied the final storming party and entered the emperor's residence shortly after Tewodros's suicide by gunshot, aiding in the recovery of hostages and looted European artifacts.[2]Post-campaign, Markham documented the geographical outcomes, including barometric measurements confirming Abyssinia's elevations and notes on its hydrology, geology, and flora, which he presented to the Royal Geographical Society in sessions from 1868 onward.[17] His 1869 publication, A History of the Abyssinian Expedition, synthesized official dispatches with scientific observations on the traversed regions' physical features, geology, and botany, alongside an account of the hostages' captivity drawn from survivor testimonies.[18] For his service, Markham received the Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in May 1871, recognizing his role in enabling the expedition's success with minimal British casualties—fewer than 20 combat deaths—and subsequent withdrawal by June 1868.[1][3]
Second Arctic Expedition, 1875–1876
Clements Markham, as Secretary of the Royal Geographical Society, played a pivotal role in advocating for the renewal of British Arctic exploration following a hiatus since the 1850s Franklin search expeditions. From 1872 onward, he campaigned vigorously through lectures, publications, and lobbying efforts directed at the Admiralty and government officials, emphasizing the scientific and geographical benefits of probing the northern regions via Smith Sound. His persistence culminated in the authorization of the British Arctic Expedition in 1874, with funding secured partly through RGS influence and private subscriptions.[19]The expedition, commanded by Captain George Strong Nares, departed England on 29 May 1875 aboard HMS Alert and HMS Discovery, both reinforced steam-assisted sailing vessels designed for polar icenavigation. Markham influenced the selection of the Smith Sound route, based on earlier observations suggesting an open polar sea beyond, and prioritized objectives including attainment of the highest northern latitude, hydrographic surveys, and natural history collections. His cousin, Albert Hastings Markham, served as second-in-command on Alert, achieving a then-record latitude of 83°20′26″ N during a spring sledge journey in 1876, though the Pole remained unattained due to impassable ice barriers and exhaustion.[20]The venture encountered severe hardships, including an outbreak of scurvy that afflicted over half the crew by late 1875, attributed to inadequate fresh provisions and reliance on preserved lime juice, which Markham later critiqued in light of the expedition's experiences.[21] Despite these setbacks, the ships returned to Portsmouth on 2 November 1876, having mapped approximately 500 miles of previously uncharted coastline and gathered extensive meteorological, geological, and biological data. Markham defended Nares against criticisms of the scurvy incidents and failure to reach the Pole, arguing in his 1877 Royal Geographical Society address that the expedition's achievements in polar reconnaissance justified the risks and advanced knowledge of the Arctic's inhospitable barriers.[22]Markham's involvement extended to post-expedition analysis; he compiled the "Arctic Navy List," documenting officers' services including those from 1875, and incorporated the findings into RGS publications to sustain momentum for future explorations. The expedition's legacy included confirmation of the polar pack's extent, influencing subsequent strategies, though Markham's initial skepticism toward dog-sledging—favoring British man-hauling prowess—was partially reevaluated based on observed inefficiencies in hauling capacity over long distances.[23]
Royal Geographical Society Contributions
Honorary Secretary Period, 1863–1888
Clements Robert Markham was appointed Honorary Secretary of the Royal Geographical Society (RGS) in 1863, a position he held until 1888.[3] In this role, he managed the society's administrative affairs, including correspondence, the organization of lectures and meetings, and the editing of its publications, such as the Proceedings and Journal.[24] Markham became closely associated with prominent explorers of the era, supporting the RGS's backing of expeditions by figures including David Livingstone, Richard Burton, John Speke, James Grant, Verney Lovett Cameron, Samuel Baker, Joseph Thomson, Henry Morton Stanley, and Frederick Selous.[3]During his tenure, Markham advocated for renewed British polar exploration, leveraging his influence to press for Arctic ventures, including the British Arctic Expedition of 1875–1876 led by George Nares.[2] He also contributed to elevating geography's status in English education by promoting RGS initiatives, such as offering medals for examinations in the subject to encourage its inclusion in school curricula.[3] In 1881, Markham published The Fifty Years' Work of the Royal Geographical Society, a comprehensive account of the institution's achievements from its founding in 1830, highlighting expeditions, scientific advancements, and institutional growth under successive secretaries.Markham's secretaryship coincided with intensified exploration in central Africa and other regions, where the RGS provided funding, logistical support, and publicity for ventures that advanced geographical knowledge and mapped unknown territories.[3] Upon his resignation in 1888, amid reported disagreements over proposed changes to the society's charter that would enhance presidential authority, Markham was awarded the RGS's Founder's Gold Medal in recognition of his 25 years of service.[2][3]
Presidency and Institutional Reforms, 1893–1905
Markham was elected president of the Royal Geographical Society on 29 May 1893, amid a dispute over the admission of women as fellows; the society's vote rejected women's membership, aligning with Markham's opposition and bolstering his candidacy among conservatives.[1] His twelve-year tenure until 22 May 1905 emphasized revitalizing the institution's core activities.[2]A key focus was transforming the society's publications and meetings to enhance engagement and scientific rigor, building on his prior 25 years as honorary secretary where he had edited the Geographical Journal.[5] Markham delivered annual presidential addresses that reviewed progress in exploration and geography, such as his 1905 valedictory outlining six sections of the society's work: expeditions, awards, education, publications, library, and maps.[25]He advanced geographical education by promoting examinations and offering medals to elevate the subject's status in English schools, countering its marginal position in curricula.[9] Under his leadership, the society hosted the Sixth International Geographical Congress in London in 1895, fostering international collaboration and passing resolutions on priority areas like polar research.[2] These efforts maintained the RGS's influence amid growing competition from specialized bodies, though membership policies, including exclusion of women, persisted without reform.[1]
Antarctic Exploration Promotion
Advocacy and Planning for the National Antarctic Expedition, 1895–1904
In 1895, following the Sixth International Geographical Congress hosted by the Royal Geographical Society (RGS), Markham leveraged the event's resolution—endorsing Antarctic exploration as the era's premier geographical priority—to advance planning for a British national effort.[2] He had initiated these preparations earlier, upon his 1893 election as RGS president, by declaring an Antarctic expedition as a core objective at the society's first council meeting and framing it as an "Antarctic crusade" to restore British polar primacy after decades of dormancy.[7][26] Markham's advocacy emphasized magnetic observations, geographical discovery, and the deployment of naval officers to ensure disciplined command, drawing from his Arctic experiences to argue that such ventures demanded military rigor over civilian scientific oversight.[7]By 1894, Markham had secured collaboration with the Royal Society, forming a joint committee to lobby government and scientific bodies for support, amid tensions between his preference for naval leadership and proponents of scientist-led missions.[27][7] Persistent promotion through RGS lectures, publications, and appeals from 1895 to 1899 gradually built momentum, countering skepticism over costs and risks; he highlighted potential advances in oceanography, meteorology, and territorial claims to justify the endeavor.[28] This culminated in 1898 government approval, with initial funding of £45,000 secured via parliamentary grants and RGS-orchestrated public subscriptions, eventually totaling around £90,000 including private donations like Llewellyn Longstaff's £25,000 contribution.[29][7]Planning specifics included commissioning the wooden-hulled steam whaler Discovery, designed by naval architect William Henry White for ice endurance and equipped for extended voyages, with construction beginning in 1900 at a Dundee yard.[30] Markham insisted on a hybrid program balancing sledge journeys for polar penetration with on-board scientific instruments for magnetic and biological data, while resolving internal disputes—such as geologist John Walter Gregory's 1901 resignation over command structure—by prioritizing naval authority.[7] In June 1900, he selected Royal Navy torpedo lieutenant Robert Falcon Scott as commander, citing his seamanship and potential despite limited polar experience, thereby launching Scott's Antarctic career.[8] The expedition departed Lyttelton, New Zealand, on 21 December 1901, after final outfitting, though Markham continued oversight into 1904, coordinating relief efforts like the 1902 Morning dispatch when Discovery became icebound.[7]
Leader Selection and Organizational Conflicts
In June 1899, Clements Markham, as president of the Royal Geographical Society (RGS), encountered Lieutenant Robert Falcon Scott while Scott was on leave in London and promptly identified him as a suitable candidate to command the proposed National Antarctic Expedition due to Scott's perceived intelligence, enthusiasm, and leadership potential, despite Scott's lack of polar experience.[31] Markham, drawing from his own naval background and prior Arctic involvement, advocated for a naval officer to maintain strict discipline and hierarchical command structure akin to Royal Navy operations, rejecting alternatives like dog-sledging in favor of man-hauling based on his 1875–1876 Nares expedition experiences.[32]Selection of the expedition leader became a focal point of contention within the Joint Antarctic Committee, formed by the RGS and the Royal Society (RS) in 1899 to oversee planning and funding, which totaled approximately £90,000 raised through public appeals led by Markham.[29] The RS, emphasizing scientific objectives such as magnetism and oceanography studies, favored a civilian scientist like geologist John W. Gregory for overall command to prioritize research over geographical discovery.[27][32] Markham firmly opposed this, insisting on Scott's appointment to ensure naval authority superseded scientific staff, whom he viewed as subordinate; this stance reflected broader institutional divides, with the RGS prioritizing exploration and the RS scientific autonomy.[33]Tensions escalated as Gregory and allies, including hydrographers, lobbied to diminish Scott's role post-initial appointment in 1900, prompting Markham to intervene decisively through correspondence and committee influence.[27] By May 1901, Scott was confirmed as commander and captain of the expedition ship Discovery, leading Gregory to resign publicly in protest, highlighting the triumph of Markham's naval-centric vision but also sowing seeds of ongoing friction over authority during the voyage.[32] These disputes underscored Markham's paternalistic patronage of Scott, whom he treated as a protégé, providing detailed instructions on sledge travel and equipment while sidelining RS preferences for a more collaborative structure.[32]
Expedition Outcomes and Associated Criticisms
The British National Antarctic Expedition, aboard the RRS Discovery, achieved several key geographical milestones, including reaching a furthest south latitude of 82°17′S on 30 December 1902 by Robert Falcon Scott, Ernest Shackleton, and Edward Wilson during a sledging journey that covered approximately 960 miles round trip.[34] The party also charted extensive sections of the Ross Ice Shelf, confirming its nature as a floating ice barrier, and discovered King Edward VII Land to the east via shipboard observations in January 1902.[30] Additional discoveries encompassed the first sighting of an Emperor penguin rookery at Cape Crozier, yielding the initial egg specimen for scientific study, alongside mappings of hundreds of miles of previously unknown coastline.[30]Scientifically, the expedition amassed substantial data across disciplines, including biological collections from marine and terrestrial life, geological samples revealing ice-free valleys in the McMurdo region (later known as the McMurdo Dry Valleys), and meteorological records from winter quarters at Hut Point established in February 1902.[29] The Discovery served as a magnetic observatory, though subsequent analysis revealed limitations in the terrestrial magnetism program due to instrumental inaccuracies and insufficient calibration amid the ship's ice entrapment from February 1902 until its release on 16 February 1904 by the relief vessels Morning and Terra Nova.[35] Other innovations included the first Antarctic balloon ascent on 4 February 1903 for aerial reconnaissance, reaching 700 feet.[36] One fatality occurred when seaman George Vince fell through thin ice on 14 February 1903.[36]Upon return to Spithead on 10 September 1904, the expedition was publicly acclaimed for its contributions to Antarctic knowledge, with Markham proclaiming evidence of a vast underlying continent based on ice shelf soundings exceeding 1,500 feet.[37] However, critics, including some Royal Society members, faulted the prioritization of naval command and geographical reconnaissance over rigorous scientific protocols, arguing that Markham's advocacy for Scott—a relatively inexperienced polar leader—marginalized experts like second-in-command Albert Armitage in western exploration efforts. The magnetic observations, intended as the core scientific endeavor, suffered from management shortcomings, yielding data of limited precision despite extensive effort.[38]Interpersonal tensions further drew scrutiny, notably Scott's decision to repatriate Shackleton in August 1903 citing health concerns—supported by Markham—which exacerbated rivalries and prompted Shackleton's later independent ventures.[33] Financial overruns, particularly the £40,000 expended on relief operations to free the icebound vessel, prompted Treasury inquiries into expedition economics, though these did not derail the overall positive reception.[33] In retrospective assessments, while the expedition laid foundational data for future polar science, detractors contend Markham's emphasis on imperial prestige over adaptive logistics foreshadowed challenges in subsequent British efforts, including underutilization of dogs for man-hauling reliant sledges.[39]
Later Life and Personal Reflections
Engagements with Scott and Shackleton
Clements Markham encountered Robert Falcon Scott during the latter's time as a midshipman aboard a vessel commanded by Markham's cousin, Admiral Markham, where he noted Scott's potential.[40] In June 1899, Markham, as president of the Royal Geographical Society, selected the then-lieutenant Scott to command the British National Antarctic Expedition, later known as the Discovery expedition (1901–1904), impressed by Scott's intelligence, enthusiasm, and naval competence during a chance meeting.[41] Markham played a central role in organizing the expedition, raising funds exceeding £90,000, commissioning the purpose-built ship Discovery, and insisting on naval command structure with Scott in overall leadership.[29] He viewed Scott as his protégé, providing ongoing guidance and defending his decisions against scientific objections, such as prioritizing sledge travel over other methods.[42]Markham's engagement extended to Ernest Shackleton, whom he approved for inclusion on the Discovery expedition as third officer after a recommendation highlighted Shackleton's keenness.[24] Initially supportive, Markham provided Shackleton with a testimonial letter endorsing his capabilities following the expedition's return in 1904, amid Shackleton's health-related dismissal by Scott.[8]Relations with Shackleton deteriorated after the latter's independent Nimrod expedition (1907–1909). Markham expressed doubts about Shackleton's claims of nearing the South Pole, privately confiding concerns to Scott and prioritizing his loyalty to the latter as the established British polar leader.[43] He was particularly angered by Shackleton's 1907 Times article promoting the Nimrod venture as involving the "biggest polar journey ever attempted," viewing it as presumptuous and competitive with Scott's planned return.[43] Markham's favoritism toward Scott persisted; in the preface to Scott's Last Expedition (published 1913), he lauded Scott's character and achievements while implicitly contrasting them with rivals' approaches, underscoring his enduring mentorship until Scott's death in 1912.[42] This partiality reflected Markham's vision of orderly, state-backed British exploration under trusted naval figures rather than individualistic efforts.[24]
Retirement and Final Years
Following his resignation from the presidency of the Royal Geographical Society on 22 May 1905, Markham continued his scholarly pursuits, serving as president of the Hakluyt Society until 1909, during which he edited over 20 volumes of historical travel narratives.[44] He remained engaged in geographical and historical writing, publishing works such as The Incas of Peru in 1910, which drew on his earlier experiences in South America and emphasized ethnological and historical analysis.[44]Markham resided in London with his wife, Minna (née Chichester), whom he had married in 1857 and who collaborated with him on linguistic and literary projects; the couple had one daughter. His interests in polar exploration and geography persisted, though his active promotion shifted toward supportive roles in expeditions like Robert Falcon Scott's 1910–1913 Terra Nova venture.On 29 January 1916, Markham suffered severe burns in a bedroom fire at his home in London, likely caused by a fallen candle while reading; he succumbed to his injuries the following day, 30 January, at the age of 85.[44] He was buried on 3 February 1916 at Kensal Green Cemetery after a service at St. Michael's Church, Chester Square.[44]
Death and Comprehensive Legacy
Circumstances of Death
Sir Clements Robert Markham died on 30 January 1916 at his home in London, at the age of 85. [45]The incident occurred while Markham was bedridden due to a recurrent attack of gout, during which he chose to read by candlelight despite electricity being available in his room.[46] The candle ignited the bedclothes, causing a fire that Markham attempted to extinguish himself.[33][45] Although the flames were subdued, he sustained burns, and the resulting shock proved fatal, leading to his death that evening.[45][46]
Achievements in Exploration and Science
Markham participated in the 1850–1851 Arctic expedition aboard HMS Assistance as part of the search for Sir John Franklin's lost expedition, reaching a latitude of 81°27' N and contributing to the discovery of Franklin's winter quarters on Beechey Island.[2] His observations during this voyage, detailed in his 1853 publication Franklin's Footsteps, provided early insights into Arcticnavigation and sledge travel techniques that influenced later polar efforts.[7]In 1860, Markham led a British expedition to Peru and Bolivia to procure cinchona plants and seeds for cultivation in India, successfully transporting thousands of specimens despite logistical challenges, including smuggling to evade export bans.[13] This initiative resulted in the establishment of cinchona plantations in regions like Darjeeling and the Nilgiris by 1862, enabling large-scale quinine production that combated malaria and reduced reliance on South American supplies.[14] His prior independent travels to Peru in 1852 had laid the groundwork for understanding cinchona ecology, marking a significant botanical and medical advancement.[2]As geographer to the 1867–1868 Abyssinian Expedition under Sir Robert Napier, Markham mapped routes and terrains during the campaign against Emperor Tewodros II, producing detailed geographical surveys that aided military operations and enhanced knowledge of Ethiopian highlands.[47] His 1869 account, A History of the Abyssinian Expedition, integrated these findings with historical analysis, contributing to British imperial cartography.[48] Through such field work and his extensive writings on exploration history, Markham advanced geographical science by emphasizing empirical observation and the integration of travel narratives with scientific data.[49]
Criticisms and Balanced Reassessments
Markham's leadership of the Royal Geographical Society from 1893 to 1905 drew criticism for its dictatorial nature and intolerance of dissent, with contemporaries describing him as pugnacious, acerbic, and prone to making permanent enemies through outspoken attacks on opponents.[33] His clashes with the Royal Society during planning for the National Antarctic Expedition (1901–1904) exemplified this, as he aggressively prioritized naval command and geographical exploration over scientific priorities, weakening joint proposals and fostering resentment among members who viewed his alterations as overreach.[33] In selecting Robert Falcon Scott—a 32-year-old torpedo lieutenant with no prior polar experience—as expedition leader, Markham favored personal impressions from observing Scott as a midshipman over more seasoned candidates like Albert Armitage, a decision later faulted for prioritizing tenacity and naval tradition amid risks of inexperience.[39][50] The expedition's entrapment of HMS Discovery in ice from 1902 to 1904 necessitated a £45,000 government bailout for relief ships, prompting accusations of financial mismanagement and his resignation from oversight committees amid public and institutional backlash.[33] Further scrutiny has targeted his role in the 1868 Abyssinia campaign, where he participated in storming Emperor Tewodros II's palace at Magdala, contributing to the looting of thousands of artifacts now subject to repatriation demands from Ethiopia.[2] Modern analyses also critique his involvement in Arctic expeditions, including the 1850–1851 Franklin search, where he helped abduct Inughuit individuals like Kallihirua for transport to England under the guise of education, reflecting colonial extraction of indigenous knowledge and labor that disregarded native agency and resulted in Kallihirua's early death in 1857.[51][52]Balanced reassessments acknowledge these flaws as products of Markham's era and personality but emphasize his instrumental drive in reviving British polar ambitions after a half-century lull since James Clark Ross's 1839–1843 voyages, personally raising £40,000 in private funds to launch the Discovery expedition, which mapped 500 miles of Antarctic coastline, collected extensive meteorological and magnetic data, and advanced oceanographic understanding despite setbacks.[33] His 1860 mission to Peru successfully smuggled 100,000 cinchona seeds and plants, establishing plantations in India that produced 220,000 kg of quinine bark by the 1880s, drastically cutting malaria deaths among British forces and civilians in tropical colonies.[2] Under his RGS stewardship, membership doubled to over 6,000, the library expanded with 50,000 volumes, and he authored or edited some 50 books on geography, history, and exploration, embedding first-hand empirical insights from his naval and civil service career.[33] While his adversarial tactics alienated collaborators, they reflected causal determination to prioritize national scientific prestige over consensus, yielding enduring institutional and knowledge gains that outweighed interpersonal costs in historical impact.[33]
Writings and Intellectual Output
Major Geographical and Historical Works
Markham's major geographical works emphasized empirical accounts of exploration, resource procurement, and advocacy for polar ventures, drawing from his direct experiences in Peru, the Arctic searches, and administrative roles in scientific societies. His writings often integrated firsthand observations with historical context to promote British imperial interests in scientific discovery and economic utility, such as quinine production from cinchona bark.[53]A foundational text was Travels in Peru and India while Superintending the Collection of Chinchona Plants and Seeds in South America, and Their Introduction into India (1862), which detailed his 1860–1861 expedition to procure cinchona species from the Andes for cultivation in India to combat malaria, including descriptions of Peruvian geography, indigenous practices, and transport challenges over 3,000 miles.[54] The book highlighted the economic value of quinine, estimating annual yields sufficient for global needs, and critiqued administrative hurdles in colonial botany.[55]In The Threshold of the Unknown Regions (1875), Markham synthesized oceanographic data, magnetic observations, and prior voyages to argue for systematic Antarctic exploration, proposing a British expedition to claim territory and advance hydrography, with specific routes via the Falklands and estimated ice barriers at 60–70°S latitude.[56] This 432-page volume influenced the Royal Geographical Society's push for polar initiatives, emphasizing causal links between southern ocean currents and global climate patterns based on Admiralty charts.The Lands of Silence: A History of Arctic and Antarctic Exploration (1921) provided a chronological synthesis of over 400 years of polar efforts, from Norse sagas to contemporary sledging records, attributing advances to navigational precision and steam technology while critiquing failed strategies like open-water searches.[57] Spanning expeditions involving 20+ ships and distances exceeding 1,000 miles on foot, it underscored Markham's view of polar geography as key to imperial prestige and scientific realism, with appendices on sledge rations sustaining parties for 80–100 days.[58]On the historical front, Markham's works included biographical studies of figures pivotal to geographical knowledge. Major James Rennell and the Rise of Modern English Geography (1895) examined Rennell's 18th-century surveys of Bengal, covering 130,000 square miles with triangulation methods accurate to 1 mile in 100, crediting him with foundational hydrographic mapping that informed Napoleonic campaigns. Similarly, The Incas of Peru (1910) reconstructed pre-Columbian Andean society using Spanish chronicles and Quechua linguistics, estimating Inca road networks at 25,000 miles and agricultural terraces supporting populations of millions through hydraulic engineering.[59]These publications, often exceeding 300 pages with maps and appendices, reflected Markham's commitment to archival rigor, though some contemporaries noted his bias toward British achievements over continental rivals.[24]
Other Publications and Translations
Markham's contributions to historical scholarship extended beyond his primary geographical and biographical writings through extensive editorial and translational work for the Hakluyt Society, where he served as secretary from 1858 to 1886 and president from 1889 to 1909, producing translations and editions of approximately 22 volumes focused on early voyages and chronicles, often from Spanish originals detailing New World and Pacific explorations.[60] Notable among these are his 1893 translation of The Journal of Christopher Columbus (during His First Voyage, 1492-93) with accompanying documents on related voyages, his 1895 translation and edition of Narratives of the Voyages of Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa to the Straits of Magellan, and his 1904 translation of The Voyages of Pedro Fernandez de Quiros, 1595 to 1606.[61][62] Other key Hakluyt translations include The Second Part of the Chronicle of Peru (1883), History of the Incas by Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa (1907), and Early Spanish Voyages to the Strait of Magellan (1911), each accompanied by his notes, introductions, and contextual analysis to aid scholarly understanding of pre-modern navigation and conquests.[61][62]In linguistic scholarship, Markham published Contributions Towards a Grammar and Dictionary of Quichua, the Language of the Yncas of Peru in 1864, compiling vocabulary, grammar rules, and phrases from his fieldwork in Peru during the 1850s to preserve and analyze the indigenous Quechua language spoken by Inca descendants.[63] This work, based on direct interactions with native speakers, included over 2,000 Quichua terms with English equivalents and etymological notes, serving as an early systematic reference for non-Iberian scholars despite limitations in phonetic transcription standards of the era.[63]Markham also translated the ancient Inca drama Ollanta from its original Quichua text in 1871, presenting parallel Quichua and English versions of this pre-colonial theatrical work preserved through oral tradition until the 18th century, which depicts a romantic rebellion against Inca authority.[64] Complementing his Peruvian expertise, he authored The War Between Peru and Chile, 1879-1882 in 1882, a 306-page account drawing on official dispatches, eyewitness reports, and his prior regional knowledge to chronicle the Pacific War's military engagements, naval battles, and diplomatic maneuvers, including the Chilean capture of Lima on January 17, 1881.[65]