Sir George Hubert Wilkins
- Born:
- October 31, 1888, Mount Bryan East, South Australia, Australia
- Died:
- December 1, 1958, Framingham, Massachusetts, U.S. (aged 70)
Sir George Hubert Wilkins (born October 31, 1888, Mount Bryan East, South Australia, Australia—died December 1, 1958, Framingham, Massachusetts, U.S.) was an Australian-born British explorer who advanced the use of the airplane and pioneered the use of the submarine for polar research. He, along with American aviator Carl Ben Eielson, are noted for having made the first transpolar flight across the Arctic by airplane as well as the first airplane flight over a portion of Antarctica, both occurring in 1928.
Wilkins studied engineering and photography in Australia before leaving for Britain in 1908. He learned to fly in 1910–12. In 1913–16 he accompanied the overland expedition of explorer-ethnologist Vilhjalmur Stefansson in the Canadian Arctic as official photographer. Following military service as a photographer during and after World War I, he served as second in command of the British Antarctic expedition to Graham Land on the Antarctic Peninsula (1920–21), and he also was a naturalist on Sir Ernest Shackleton’s last Antarctic expedition (1921–22). His polar explorations were interrupted when he led a British Museum biological expedition to tropical Australia in 1923–25.
In 1926 Wilkins and Eielson began a series of trial flights to test the feasibility of air exploration of the then-unknown Arctic region north of Point Barrow, Alaska. On April 15–16, 1928, he and Eielson flew over unknown seas from Point Barrow to the Svalbard (Spitsbergen) archipelago north of Norway, completing the 2,200-mile (3,550-km) journey in about 20 1/2 hours. For this feat he was knighted two months later. In the Antarctic (December 20, 1928), he and Eielson flew some 600 miles (970 km) south from Deception Island in the South Shetland Islands and across Graham Land, in the process discovering several new islands.
In 1931 he took the U.S. submarine Nautilus and navigated it under the Arctic Ocean to latitude 82°15′ N, thus demonstrating that submarines could operate under the polar ice cap. He was the manager of Lincoln Ellsworth’s U.S. Antarctic expeditions in 1933–39 and subsequently acted as consultant and geographer to the U.S. armed services. In accordance with his wishes, after his death his ashes were scattered at the North Pole in March 1959 by the crew of the the USS Skate, when it became the first submarine to surface there.