In September of 1914, Anglo-Irish explorer Ernest Shackleton set out on
the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition with the goal of being the first
man to traverse the Antarctic continent. Aboard what would become his
aptly-named ship, the Endurance, he and 27 men set sail for the South
Pole. But along the way, the ship became trapped in ice, setting off a
series of events that would lead him away from his original goal and yet
test him as a man and enshrine him as a hero far more than the
attainment of it would have. While he did not complete the
transcontinental journey he had hoped for, he brought back all 27 of his
men alive, a feat of magnificent leadership without parallel.