
Confectionary and baked beans are a little-known facet of the story behind the centenary of Captain Scott's arrival at the South Pole next week (January 17).
Scott and his Terra Nova team struggled to raise money for their life-risking jaunt, persuading Fry's chocolate, Heinz beans and biscuit business Huntly and Palmer to offer sponsorship.

Public tributes to the Terra Nova team feature in the display
They may have been pipped to the pole by a month – they were met by a Norwegian flag, triumphantly planted by Roald Amunden's rival team – but their legend lives on.
"The teams led by Amundsen and Scott ventured beyond the edge of the known world to get to the South Pole," says curator Paula Williams.
"This is one of the great stories of human endeavour and endurance, triumph and tragedy.
"Our display celebrates their achievement and, we hope, provides an insight into how it was planned and conducted and how it has been viewed both by people at the time and in succeeding decades."
The display also reveals how breaching the icebergs became a global obsession after the Sixth International Geographic Congress in 1895, where exploring the Antarctic regions was declared "the greatest piece of geographical exploration still to be undertaken."
- Open 9.30am-8.30pm (10am-8.30pm Wednesday, 9.30am-1pm Saturday, closed Sunday). Admission free.







