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Isobel Wylie Hutchison

Botanist, Arctic explorer and documentor of Inuit life.

Plaque Inscription

Isobel Wylie Hutchison
1889–1982
Arctic explorer, botanist, writer and artist lived at Carlowrie Castle for 92 years

Black and white photo of a person standing with legs apart in deep snow, with one arm resting on a shoulder-high stone obelisk. They are wearing period-era Arctic clothing, possibly made from sealskin, and a big hat.
Isobel Wylie Hutchison photographed in 1933 at Demarcation Point monument, with one foot in USA (Alaska) and one in Canada - © Royal Scottish Geographical Society. Licensor SCRAN.

Location

Carlowrie Castle, Bridge Rd, Kirkliston, Edinburgh

Category

Exploration, Science

Year

2020

Isobel Hutchison risked life and limb collecting and recording plants for the Royal Botanic Gardens and Kew and documenting the Inuit people.

Born into a life of privilege, the Gaelic-speaker grew up at Carlowrie Castle where she was given extraordinary freedom by the standards of the day, leaving home for days at a time to trek through Scotland.

Hutchison’s spirit of adventure soon led her abroad, first to Iceland and then to Greenland in order to walk through uncharted regions by herself. She was fascinated with the Inuit people she stayed with along the way and the film footage that she took of them is some of the earliest documentary footage ever taken.

Penniless on her return home, she began to write about her travels and the articles and poems that she published brought her a modest income. Hutchison became something of a sensation, appearing on radio and in the press and carrying out a lecture tour.

Within months she returned to Greenland where she continued to collect botanic specimens, sending thousands back to Britain by ship. In 1934, in recognition of her, ‘contribution to geographic knowledge through exploration or adventure in potentially hazardous physical or social environments’, she became the third person, and first woman, to be awarded the Royal Scottish Geographical Society’s Mungo Park Medal.

The approach to life of this remarkable woman is best summed up in her own poetic words, ‘Take up your bed. Go! Walk again! Oh man! Your days are few, And lo! The earth is very wide, her treasure waits for you.’

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