THE HEART OF THE ANTARCTIC 



Sir Philip Lee Brocklehurst, Bart., born at 

 Swythamley Park, Staffordshire, in 1887, educated 

 at Eton and Trinity Hall, Cambridge. Holds a 

 commission in the Derbyshire Yeomanry, represented 

 Cambridge in the light weight boxing competitions for 

 1905 and 1906. Unmarried. 



Thomas W. Edge worth David, F.R.S., Professor 

 of Geology at the Sydney University, is a Welsh- 

 man by birth, and is fifty years of age. He was 

 educated at New College, Oxford, and afterwards 

 studied geology at the Royal College of Science. He 

 went to Australia to take up the post of Geological 

 Surveyor to the New South Wales Government, and 

 for the past eighteen years has held his present appoint- 

 ment. He is an authority on dynamical geology and 

 glaciation, and has made a study of Australian coal- 

 fields. Married. 



Bernard C. Day, born at Wymondham, Leicester- 

 shire, in August 1884; educated at Wellingborough 

 Grammar School. He was connected with engineer- 

 ing from 1903 until September 1907, when he left 

 the service of the New Arroll Johnston Motor- 

 Car Company in order to join the expedition. Un- 

 married. 



Ernest Joyce, born in 1875, entered the Navy 

 from the Greenwich Royal Hospital School in 1891, 

 became a first-class petty officer, and served in South 

 Africa with the Naval Brigade (medal and clasp). 

 Joined the Discovery expedition from the Cape, and 

 served in the Antarctic (polar medal and ■ clasp, 

 Geographical Society's silver medal). Served in the 

 Whale Island Gunnery School. Left the Navy in 

 December 1905, rejoined in August 1906, and left 

 by purchase in order to join the expedition in May 1907. 

 Unmarried. 



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