English Guernsey Cattle Society 
 
 News
 
 History
 
 Herd of the Month
 
 Shows
 
 A2 Milk
 
 Breeding
 
 Guernsey Business
 Cheese
 Beef
 Ice Cream
 Herd Sales
 Semen Sales
 
 Animal Information
 
 Links
 
 Membership & Registration
 
 Council Members & Contacts
Search

History Last Updated: Nov 25, 2008 - 10:00:12 AM


Brrrr, Those Are Some Really Cold Cows
By Teresa Steer
Aug 18, 2004 - 10:20:00 PM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
 Discuss this story
 Page Hits: 47

The American Guernsey Cattle Club was an important feature in Peterborough, New Hampshire for eighty-eight years of service. The American Guernsey Cattle Club was founded to keep registers of the breed to protect the purity of the Guernsey cows. The popularity of the breed and rapid growth caused the Cattle Club to move several times to keep up with the ever-expanding records. In 1950 the Guernsey Building was constructed on the old Phoenix Mill property. By 1952, the Club reached its maximum employment of nearly two hundred. The American Guernsey Cattle Club was moved in 1982 to Columbus, Ohio. Although the Cattle Club is long gone signs of its existence still mark the town from the names of the buildings to the stone carving of a cows face.

Throughout its history The American Guernsey Cattle Club continued to make headlines but when headlines read "Three Guernsey Cows Go to the Antarctic With Admiral Byrd" the world had to do a double take to make sure they heard right. Yes, cows were going on an expedition that very few men had gone before. On October 7, 1933, Admiral Richard E. Byrd asked for three Guernsey cows to go with him in order that they might have fresh milk. Admiral Byrd thought it would be a novelty if one of the cows was fairly well along in motherhood, so the calf might be born on the ice.

The cows from Deerfoot Farm, Massachusetts, Emmadine Farm, New York and Klondike Farm, North Carolina, were loaded on the Jacob Ruppert and set sail for the Antarctic on October 11, 1933 from Boston. Along with the cows were provisions of sand and straw for bedding, twenty tons of hay, twelve tons of beet pulp and two tons of bran for the two years in the Antarctic. The three Guernsey cows affectionately named Deerfoot, Emmadine, and Klondike made the voyage to the Antarctic having gotten their sea legs long before any of the crew. A baby bull calf, named Iceberg, was born 275 miles north of the Antarctic Circle on December 19th; Admiral Byrd had hoped that the birth would truly be an Antarctic event but it was not meant to be. The four cows made it to the Antarctic site where a cow barn was made out of blocks of ice complete with an electric milking machine awaited them.

Sadly, Klondike contracted frostbite and had to be destroyed. The crew's attachment to the cows was apparent when Cox (the crew that carried out the deed) is quoted in Admiral Byrds book, The Discovery, "I've put away a lot of 'em, Admiral, but it never got me before. I guess I got pretty fond of that cow." The three remaining cows returned from the Antarctic after 22,000 miles of travel in 1935 to their original owners. Going down in history as the first cows to travel to the Antarctic.

--Teresa Steer, Peterborough Historical Society Staff, 2003

(c) Peterborough Historical Society 2003. Reprinted with kind permission. Please scroll down for additional photographs.


The party present at the time of delivery of two of the cows at the Charleston Navy Yard, Boston.  Left to right:  Frank Moore, Boston; Mrs. J. E. Dodge, Hopewell Junction, New York; Edward Cunningham, Peterboro, New Hampshire; J. E. Dodge, Hopewell Junction, New York; Hersman, Emmadine Farm, Hopewell Junction, New York; Commodore H. F. Gjertson, Oslo, Norway; Elsworth Bunce, Peterboro, New Hampshire; Leroy Clark, Commissary Officer, secretary to Admiral Byrd, Cambridge, Massachusetts; Mrs. Elsworth Bunce, Peterboro, New Hampshire; James E. O'Leary, Southboro, Massachusetts; John Lee Musser, Peterboro, New Hampshire; and S. F. Mason, Southboro, Massachusetts.

J. E. Dodge of Emmadine Farm, Hopewell Junction, New York, with Foremost Southern Girl, ans S. F. Mason, of Deerfoot Farms, Southboro, Massachusetts, with Deerfoot's Guernsey Maid.  These two Guernseys were loaded at Boston and will be met by Nira Polar Guernsey, of Klondike Farm, Elkin, North Carolina, at Norfolk, Virigina.

Comments

No comments yet
*Name:
Email:
Notify me about new comments on this page
Hide my email
*Text:
Security Image:

Visual CAPTCHA


 

Copyright 1998-2008 English Guernsey Cattle Society
Scotsbridge House, Scots Hill, Rickmansworth, Herts. United Kingdom Tel 44-1923-695-204 Fax 44-1923-695-215. Registered in England No. 225962

Top of Page

Latest Headlines
News
Christmas 2008 Guernsey News
Classified Advertisements - For Sale and Wants
In Memory of Belinda
History
The World's Largest Guernsey Cow
Usefulness Of The Old Scrapbook?
The Great Guernsey Cow Give-Away
Herd of the Month
The Skeel Herd -- June Herd of the Month
The St. Senara Herd
The Carne Herd
Shows
South West Dairy Show 2008
South West Guernsey Cattle Breeders Association 2008 Stockjudging Competition
South West All Breeds Calf Show - 2008
A2 Milk
Suppliers of Guernsey Milk
Mount Prosperous Herd Tested for A2 Status
New Zealand Clarifies Research on A2 Milk
Breeding
Guernseys improve on all measures
Lies, and Statistics
Has the GGBP been a success?
Guernsey Business
Coopers Court Guernseys to 2,800 Guineas
Dispersal of the Golden Valley Herd - Peter Burton
The Bickfield Draft Sale Results - March 29 2008
Animal Information
Guernsey Animal Information
Top Males by GMI
Top Females by GMI
Links
Gold Top Milk -- Exclusively Channel Islands Milk
Links Library
Current Links Worth Visiting
Membership & Registration
EGCS E-Mail Mailing List
Report on the 2008 Annual General Meeting
Join The Guernsey Cattle Society - Now Online
Council Members & Contacts
EGCS Council Members 2008-2009