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To download a PowerPoint Slideshow of The Explorers Club History, please click here (.pps 10MB)....
About
The Explorers Club

Scott's 1910-13 Antarctic hut |
The Explorers
Club is an international multidisciplinary, professional society
dedicated to the advancement of field research and scientific
exploration, and the ideal that it is vital to preserve the
instinct to explore. Since its inception in 1904 , the Club
has served as a meeting point and unifying force for explorers
and scientists worldwide. In addition to its headquarters building
at 46 East 70th Street in New York, the Club has some 30 regional
chapters in the United States and abroad.
Promoting
Exploration Since 1904
The Explorers Club promotes the scientific exploration of land, sea, air and
space by sponsoring, assisting and encouraging research and education in the
physical, natural and biological sciences. The Club offers a number of financial
grants and awards and offers assistance to members in expedition planning.
The Explorers Club actively encourages public interest in exploration and the
sciences through its public lectures program, publications, travel program,
and other events. The Club also maintains a library and map room to assist
those interested and engaged in exploration and scientific research.
Anthropologists
to Zoologists
The Explorers Club is characterized by the great diversity of its members'
backgrounds and interests. The seven founding members included two polar explorers,
the curator of birds and mammals at The American Museum of Natural History,
an archaeologist, a war correspondent and author, a professor of physics and
an ethnologist. Today the membership includes field scientists and explorers
from over 60 countries whose disciplines include: aeronautics, anthropology,
archaeology, astronomy, biology, ecology, entomology, mountaineering, marine
biology, oceanography, paleontology, physics, planetology, polar exploration,
and zoology. The Explorers Club has many chapters throughout the United States
and abroad. You can find out more about what our members are doing in the news & research
pages or by visiting members' web pages linked to this site.
History
of The Explorers Club
The
year was 1904. The spirit of exploration was running high.
Theodore Roosevelt, Americas premier adventurer President,
was still in the White House. The Wright Brothers flying
machine was barely off the ground; air travel was years away
from reducing the globe to an accessible sphere. A few explorers
determined to reach the North Pole had captured the imagination
of the Western world. Many geographic regions remained undiscovered.
Spurred by the challenges of reaching the unreachable and
the scientific desire to pry from the earth its long-held
secrets, a hardy band of gentleman-adventurers came together
to form The Explorers Club in New York City.
The
idea began with Henry Collins Walsh, an author and war correspondent
who had sailed with Frederick A. Cooks 1894 Arctic
expedition aboard the ill-fated SS Miranda. On their return
to New York, Walsh and his fellow survivors, eager to keep
green their friendship, organized the Arctic Club,
which came to embrace nearly every prominent polar explorer
in the United States and abroad. So successful was it that
a core of its members, together with friends who had explored
in other regions, decided to found the more inclusive Explorers
Club. The charter members were a diverse group representing
a myriad of interests and walks of life. Their stated mission: promote
exploration by all possible means.
Incorporated
in 1905, The Explorers Club in its earliest years met in
simple rented rooms. Its first four presidents were famed
Arctic explorers Adolphus W. Greely, Cook, Robert E. Peary
and David L. Brainard. Under Brainard in 1912, the Club found
a permanent home in a loft on Amsterdam Avenue. There, members
began holding regular meetings and gala dinners and assembling
the books, maps, trophies and memorabilia that would grow
into a remarkable library and museum of exploration and travel.
Returning explorers and visiting scientists were invited
to share their experiences in public and member lectures.
By the 1920s, the Club was aiding serious exploration and
field science.
In
1965, the Club purchased a Tudor-style mansion on East 70th
Street, in the historic Upper East Side. With its twin-arched
façade of brick and limestone, leaded glass windows
and carved oak interiors, the Lowell Thomas building, named
for the noted explorer and broadcaster, has become the physical
symbol of the Clubs high purposes, embodying the history
of exploration and the passionate quest for new knowledge.
Frey,
Joseph, Putting The World On The Map, Outpost:
Canadas Travel Magazine, March/April 2003
(View PDF)
Explorer's
Club Charter
Since
1904, our international, professional society has been a
meeting point and unifying force for explorers and scientists
worldwide. The Explorers Club is dedicated to the advancement
of field research, scientific exploration, and the ideal
that it is vital to preserve the instinct to explore. We
foster these goals by providing expedition planning assistance,
research grants, educational lectures and publications, and
exciting adventure travel programs.
Depuis
1904, notre société internationale et professionnelle
se veut un point de rencontre et une force unificatrice pour
les explorateurs et les scientifiques à l'échelle
internationale. Le Explorers Club se consacre au progrès
de l'étude sur le terrain, à l'exploration
scientifique et à la croyance selon laquelle il est
essentiel de préserver l'instinct d'exploration. Nous
promouvons l'atteinte de ces objectifs en fournissant du
soutien à la planification d'expéditions, en
octroyant des subventions, mais également au moyen
de conférences et de publications éducatives
ainsi que de programmes de tourisme d'aventure palpitants.
Explorers
Club Charter (PDF file)
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