First flight over North Pole (disputed): On May 9, 1926, Americans
Richard E. Byrd and pilot
Floyd Bennett claimed a successful flight over the North Pole in a Fokker F-VII Tri-motor called the Josephine Ford. Byrd took off from
Spitsbergen and returned to the same airfield. His claim, widely accepted at first, has been challenged since.
First flight over North Pole (confirmed): On May 12, three days after the Byrd flight, Norwegian
Roald Amundsen, his American sponsor
Lincoln Ellsworth and the Italian aeronautic engineer
Umberto Nobile flew over the Pole in the
semi-rigid airshipNorge, designed and piloted by Nobile. The total crew was 16 men. The Norge began in
Spitsbergen and flew to
Alaska.
First landing at and first to stand on North Pole : three planes of Sever-2 expedition (Soviet Union) of 24 scientists and flight crew led by
Aleksandr Kuznetsov. Pilots: Ivan Cherevichnyy, Vitaly Maslennikov and Ilya Kotov. Cherevichnyy's plane was the first one to land[5] at 4:44pm (
Moscow Time,
UTC+04:00) on April 23, 1948.[6]
First to parachute onto North Pole: Vitaly Volovich and Andrei Medvedev (Soviet Union)[7] on May 9, 1949,[8][9] from
Douglas C-47 Skytrain, registered CCCP H-369.[10]
First vessel to reach North Pole: the submarine
USS Nautilus. August 3, 1958
First to reach North Pole by surface travel (on
Ski-Doo):
Ralph Plaisted. April 19, 1968
First to reach the North Pole by
dogsled: team led by Sir
Wally Herbert. 1968-69
First to ski from continent to North Pole:
Dmitry Shparo, Jury Khmelevsky, Vladimir Ledenev, Anatoly Melnikov, Vladimir Rakmanov, Vasily Shishkarev and Vadim Davydov (Soviet Union). March 16-May 31, 1979
First to reach North Pole on dogs without resupply (one-way trip, flew home from pole):
Will Steger International Polar Expedition. May 1, 1986. The team members were: Paul Schurke, Brent Boddy,
Richard Weber, Geoff Carroll,
Ann Bancroft,
Will Steger and a team of 21 dogs. Brent Boddy &
Richard Weber became the first Canadians to reach the North Pole on foot while
Ann Bancroft became the first woman to trek to the Pole.[11]
First helicopter flight: Australian
Dick Smith on 28 April 1987 in Bell Jetranger II VH-DIK.[12]
First surface crossing of the
Arctic Ocean on skis: Soviet-Canadian Polar Bridge expedition, 1988, from Northern
Siberia to
Ellesmere Island National Park Reserve in Canada, via the North Pole. Team members: 9 Soviets (Dmitry Shparo, Mikhail Malakhov, Vladimir Ledenov, Yury Khemeleski, Vasily Shishkariov, Alexandr Beliaev, Anatoly Melnikhov) and 4 Canadians (Richard Weber, Christopher Holloway, Max Buxton, Laurie Dexter).
Richard Weber (Canadian team leader) became the first person to reach the North Pole from both sides of the Arctic Ocean.
First command journey to North Pole unassisted: 1989 Vladimir Chukov «Arctica-89» Expedition. No dogs, air planes, or re-supplies. They departed
Arctic Cape on March 15 and only seven of 13 people reached the Pole on May 6. One died 150 km before Pole, five were deported halfway.[13]
First solo journey to North Pole unassisted: 1994
Børge Ousland expedition. No outside help, no dogs, air planes, or re-supplies. He departed
Arctic Cape on March 2 and reached the Pole skiing.[14][15]
First command journey to North Pole unassisted, successful (everyone reached): 1994 Vladimir Chukov «Arctica-94» Expedition. No outside help, no dogs, air planes, or re-supplies. They departed
Arctic Cape on March 15 and reached the Pole on May 17 by the same starting command of eight skiers.[14][15]
First journey to North Pole and return unassisted: 1995 Weber Malakhov Expedition.
Richard Weber and Mikhail Malakhov became the first to reach the North Pole and return to their starting point on land (
Ward Hunt, Canada), with no outside help, no dogs, air planes, or re-supplies. They departed Ward Hunt on February 14 and reached the Pole eighty one days later, on May 12. On June 15, they were back at Ward Hunt establishing a record of 108 days for the longest unsupported polar journey.
First
scuba dive at North Pole: Andrei Rozhkov (Russia) on April 22, 1998 (ended in fatality).[16]
First unsupported, unassisted, ski crossing of the Arctic Ocean from Russia to Canada through the North Pole. Russian - Slovak team; Peter Valušiak, Vladimir Čukov, Ivan Kuželivskij, Valerij Kochanov, (23 February - 20 June 1998). The documentary film 118 DAYS IN CAPTIVITY OF ICE[17] tells this story.
First unsupported ski crossing of the Arctic Ocean: Rune Gjeldnes and Torry Larsen, in 109 days; they passed through the North Pole on April 29, 2000.[18]
First unsupported solo trek from Canada to North Pole:
Pen Hadow reached the Pole May 19, 2003.[19]
First to reach North Pole during the Arctic winter:
Børge Ousland and
Mike Horn. March 23, 2006
First to reach North Pole on
snowshoes exclusively: April 26, 2006 North Pole Classic.
Richard Weber guided Conrad Dickinson to the North Pole with no re-supplies. This was Richard Weber's fifth full North Pole expedition. He has trekked to the North Pole more than anyone in history.
First woman pilot to command a Boeing 777 on the world's longest flight over North Pole:
Zoya Agarwal with an all women flight crew.[20][21][22][23]
First Qatari woman to reach North Pole was
Asma Al Thani on 21 April 2018.[24]
Section for magnetic North Pole firsts (note that the magnetic North Pole does move over time):
First to drive an
automobile to the North Pole was
Jeremy Clarkson with
James May, with
Richard Hammond and a crew of 7 others tasked to assist and document the journey. They drove a
Toyota Hilux modified by
Arctic Trucks and completed the trip faster than a dog sled they were racing. This journey was documented in an episode of
Top Gear called the Polar Special which was first broadcast on 25 July 2007.
^
abChukov, Vladimir (May 1995).
"Снова на полюс". Vokrug Sveta. Retrieved 2015-01-30.
^Cormick, Brett (February 2000).
"Diving the top of the world". Diver. Archived from the original on 2012-03-24. Retrieved 2012-01-09.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (
link)
First flight over North Pole (disputed): On May 9, 1926, Americans
Richard E. Byrd and pilot
Floyd Bennett claimed a successful flight over the North Pole in a Fokker F-VII Tri-motor called the Josephine Ford. Byrd took off from
Spitsbergen and returned to the same airfield. His claim, widely accepted at first, has been challenged since.
First flight over North Pole (confirmed): On May 12, three days after the Byrd flight, Norwegian
Roald Amundsen, his American sponsor
Lincoln Ellsworth and the Italian aeronautic engineer
Umberto Nobile flew over the Pole in the
semi-rigid airshipNorge, designed and piloted by Nobile. The total crew was 16 men. The Norge began in
Spitsbergen and flew to
Alaska.
First landing at and first to stand on North Pole : three planes of Sever-2 expedition (Soviet Union) of 24 scientists and flight crew led by
Aleksandr Kuznetsov. Pilots: Ivan Cherevichnyy, Vitaly Maslennikov and Ilya Kotov. Cherevichnyy's plane was the first one to land[5] at 4:44pm (
Moscow Time,
UTC+04:00) on April 23, 1948.[6]
First to parachute onto North Pole: Vitaly Volovich and Andrei Medvedev (Soviet Union)[7] on May 9, 1949,[8][9] from
Douglas C-47 Skytrain, registered CCCP H-369.[10]
First vessel to reach North Pole: the submarine
USS Nautilus. August 3, 1958
First to reach North Pole by surface travel (on
Ski-Doo):
Ralph Plaisted. April 19, 1968
First to reach the North Pole by
dogsled: team led by Sir
Wally Herbert. 1968-69
First to ski from continent to North Pole:
Dmitry Shparo, Jury Khmelevsky, Vladimir Ledenev, Anatoly Melnikov, Vladimir Rakmanov, Vasily Shishkarev and Vadim Davydov (Soviet Union). March 16-May 31, 1979
First to reach North Pole on dogs without resupply (one-way trip, flew home from pole):
Will Steger International Polar Expedition. May 1, 1986. The team members were: Paul Schurke, Brent Boddy,
Richard Weber, Geoff Carroll,
Ann Bancroft,
Will Steger and a team of 21 dogs. Brent Boddy &
Richard Weber became the first Canadians to reach the North Pole on foot while
Ann Bancroft became the first woman to trek to the Pole.[11]
First helicopter flight: Australian
Dick Smith on 28 April 1987 in Bell Jetranger II VH-DIK.[12]
First surface crossing of the
Arctic Ocean on skis: Soviet-Canadian Polar Bridge expedition, 1988, from Northern
Siberia to
Ellesmere Island National Park Reserve in Canada, via the North Pole. Team members: 9 Soviets (Dmitry Shparo, Mikhail Malakhov, Vladimir Ledenov, Yury Khemeleski, Vasily Shishkariov, Alexandr Beliaev, Anatoly Melnikhov) and 4 Canadians (Richard Weber, Christopher Holloway, Max Buxton, Laurie Dexter).
Richard Weber (Canadian team leader) became the first person to reach the North Pole from both sides of the Arctic Ocean.
First command journey to North Pole unassisted: 1989 Vladimir Chukov «Arctica-89» Expedition. No dogs, air planes, or re-supplies. They departed
Arctic Cape on March 15 and only seven of 13 people reached the Pole on May 6. One died 150 km before Pole, five were deported halfway.[13]
First solo journey to North Pole unassisted: 1994
Børge Ousland expedition. No outside help, no dogs, air planes, or re-supplies. He departed
Arctic Cape on March 2 and reached the Pole skiing.[14][15]
First command journey to North Pole unassisted, successful (everyone reached): 1994 Vladimir Chukov «Arctica-94» Expedition. No outside help, no dogs, air planes, or re-supplies. They departed
Arctic Cape on March 15 and reached the Pole on May 17 by the same starting command of eight skiers.[14][15]
First journey to North Pole and return unassisted: 1995 Weber Malakhov Expedition.
Richard Weber and Mikhail Malakhov became the first to reach the North Pole and return to their starting point on land (
Ward Hunt, Canada), with no outside help, no dogs, air planes, or re-supplies. They departed Ward Hunt on February 14 and reached the Pole eighty one days later, on May 12. On June 15, they were back at Ward Hunt establishing a record of 108 days for the longest unsupported polar journey.
First
scuba dive at North Pole: Andrei Rozhkov (Russia) on April 22, 1998 (ended in fatality).[16]
First unsupported, unassisted, ski crossing of the Arctic Ocean from Russia to Canada through the North Pole. Russian - Slovak team; Peter Valušiak, Vladimir Čukov, Ivan Kuželivskij, Valerij Kochanov, (23 February - 20 June 1998). The documentary film 118 DAYS IN CAPTIVITY OF ICE[17] tells this story.
First unsupported ski crossing of the Arctic Ocean: Rune Gjeldnes and Torry Larsen, in 109 days; they passed through the North Pole on April 29, 2000.[18]
First unsupported solo trek from Canada to North Pole:
Pen Hadow reached the Pole May 19, 2003.[19]
First to reach North Pole during the Arctic winter:
Børge Ousland and
Mike Horn. March 23, 2006
First to reach North Pole on
snowshoes exclusively: April 26, 2006 North Pole Classic.
Richard Weber guided Conrad Dickinson to the North Pole with no re-supplies. This was Richard Weber's fifth full North Pole expedition. He has trekked to the North Pole more than anyone in history.
First woman pilot to command a Boeing 777 on the world's longest flight over North Pole:
Zoya Agarwal with an all women flight crew.[20][21][22][23]
First Qatari woman to reach North Pole was
Asma Al Thani on 21 April 2018.[24]
Section for magnetic North Pole firsts (note that the magnetic North Pole does move over time):
First to drive an
automobile to the North Pole was
Jeremy Clarkson with
James May, with
Richard Hammond and a crew of 7 others tasked to assist and document the journey. They drove a
Toyota Hilux modified by
Arctic Trucks and completed the trip faster than a dog sled they were racing. This journey was documented in an episode of
Top Gear called the Polar Special which was first broadcast on 25 July 2007.
^
abChukov, Vladimir (May 1995).
"Снова на полюс". Vokrug Sveta. Retrieved 2015-01-30.
^Cormick, Brett (February 2000).
"Diving the top of the world". Diver. Archived from the original on 2012-03-24. Retrieved 2012-01-09.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (
link)