User:David Kernow/Hjalmar Riiser-Larsen

File:Hjalmar Riiser-Larsen (1890-1965), Norwegian aviator, explorer and businessman -small-.jpg

Hjalmar Riiser-Larsen (June 7, 1890June 3, 1965) was a Norwegian aviation pioneer, polar explorer and businessman. Among his many achievements, he is generally regarded as the founder of the Norwegian Air Force.

Riiser-Larsen was born in Oslo, Norway, in 1890. In 1909, aged nineteen, he joined the Norwegian Naval Academy and in 1915 the newly-formed Naval Air Force. After World War I, he served as the acting head of the Naval Air Force's factory until a more senior officer was appointed. In 1921, he joined the Aviation Council, then part of the Norwegian Ministry of Defence, as a secretary. There he took the opportunity to learn about the fledgling military and civil aviation infrastructure for which the Council was responsible. He also became a frequent pilot on the air routes used by the new aviation companies.

Polar exploration edit

Flying over the North Pole edit

Riiser-Larsen's years of polar exploration began in 1925 when his compatriot Roald Amundsen, the famed polar explorer, asked him to be his deputy and pilot for an expedition to fly over the North Pole. Riiser-Larsen agreed and secured the use of two Dornier Do J seaplanes. The expedition, however, was forced to land close to the Pole, damaging one of the planes. After twenty-six days on an ice shelf, shovelling six hundred tons of snow to create an airstrip, the expedition's six members squeezed themselves into the remaining plane. Riiser-Larsen somehow managed to coax the overloaded plane into the air and the expedition flew home safely.

The following year, Riiser-Larsen re joined Amundsen for another attempt to fly over the Pole, this time with Italian aeronautical engineer Umberto Nobile in his airship Norge. Leaving Spitsbergen on May 11, 1926, the Norge completed the crossing two days later, landing near Teller, Alaska. The flight is considered by many to be the first successful flight over the North Pole, as the other claimants, Frederick Cook, Robert Peary and Richard Byrd, were unable to verify their attempts in full.

In 1928, Riiser-Larsen became involved in searching the Arctic for Nobile after he had crashed while leading an Italian attempt to fly over the Pole. He also became involved in a search for Amundsen, when Amundsen's seaplane went missing while he was en route to join the search for Nobile. Eventually Nobile and his team were found, but Amundsen was not.

The Norvegia expeditions edit

The Norvegia expeditions were a sequence of Antarctic expeditions financed by the Norwegian shipowner and whaling merchant Lars Christensen during the late 1920s and 1930s. Ostensibly their goal was scientific research and the discovery of new whaling grounds, but Christensen also requested permission from the Norwegian Foreign Office to claim for Norway any unchartered territory that was found. By the end of the second expedition, two small islands in the Southern Ocean, Bouvet Island and Peter I Island had been annexed.

In 1929 Christensen decided to include aeroplanes in the next expedition and appointed Riiser-Larsen its leader. Riiser-Larsen then supervised and took part in mapping most of the Antarctic in this and three further expeditions. More territory was also annexed, this time the large proportion of the continent known as Queen Maud Land.

Commerce and war edit

In 1933, the Norwegian military was downsized and Riiser-Larssen was among those officers finding themselves out of work. However, he was quickly offered a new job by the shipping company Fred. Olsen & Co. as manager of its newly-formed airline, DNL. He invited some former naval pilots to join the airline and soon made it the most successful in Norway. In 1946, DNL would be one of the four Scandinavian airlines merged to create the present-day Scandinavian Airlines System (SAS).

When Nazi Germany invaded Norway in 1940, Riiser-Larsen rejoined the Norwegian Naval Air Force. However, both the Norwegian Army and Naval Air Forces were quickly overwhelmed by the Wehrmacht before he saw combat. Instead, he accompanied the Norwegian cabinet and military leaders into exile in London, before moving on to Toronto, Canada, to become the first commander of the Norwegian air forces' training camp, "Little Norway".

At the beginning of 1941, Riiser-Larsen returned to London to take up the post of Commander in Chief of the Naval Air Force; then of the Combined Arms Air Force; and finally, in 1944, of the fully-amalgamated Royal Norwegian Air Force. By the end of the war, however, many of the pilots under his command had become critical of his leadership, prompting his bitter resignation from the Air Force in 1946.

Return to business edit

In 1947, Riiser-Larsen again became the head of DNL, a few months before it merged with DDL, SIL and ABA to create SAS. He then became an advisor to the SAS executive and a regional manager with responsibility for transcontinental air routes. One of these routes, although established after his retirement in 1955, represented the "fulfilment of a vision" : the route to North America over the North Pole.

Riiser-Larsen died on June 3, 1965, four days before his seventy-fifth birthday.

Bibliography edit

  • Hjalmar Riiser-Larsen, Femti År for Kongen (Fifty Years for the King, Riiser-Larsen's autobiography), Oslo: Gyldendal Norsk Forlag, 1958.