What does the suit consist of?

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Edward Wilson tries on his officers furs for the forthcoming expedition.

Antarctic Clothing

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Two young relatives playing at dressing up in the garden of Westal, the Wilson’s home in Cheltenham

Struggles with fur clothing

The idea of using animal skins for clothing during the Discovery expedition was adopted from the Inuit, the indigenous people of the Arctic. Scott’s men were not used to managing fur and they found it heavy and difficult to handle. In particular they struggled with the skins once they were wet.

In 1902 Wilson wrote in his diary that ‘One is in a chaotic state of dampness at night when one gets warm. In the morning one puts on frozen socks, frozen mitts, and frozen boots stuffed with frozen damp grass and rime, and one suffers a good deal from painfully cold feet until everything is packed up again and strapped on the sledges ….   The Burberry suit of overalls which one wears from crown to heel is wet and frozen so that every movement makes it crackle like a suit of armour, and one must stand rigidly still to hear one’s neighbour speak.’ It wasn’t just the British who had trouble with furs during Antarctic sledging. Amundsen, the Norwegian explorer, who reached the South Pole before Scott in 1912 found his furs hot and there are records of him skiing in his undergarments

Roald-Amundsen

Amundsen skiing in fur clothing Publicity photograph of Roald

How the fur suit came into the museum

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The Wilson Fur Suit on display.

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