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How Greenland’s Dog-Sled Patrol Became Unsung Heroes of World War II

How Greenland’s Dog-Sled Patrol Became Unsung Heroes of World War II

It’s fall 1941, and World War II is underway. More than a dozen patrolmen have begun moving up and down the northeast coast of Greenland in groups, traversing the icy, snowy expanse on sleds pulled by a team of husky-like dogs. They’re scouring the largely uninhabited region for secret German weather stations.

They’re part of the North-East Greenland Sledge Patrol, a crack team assembled as part of a largely forgotten, but essential, mission during the war. While collecting meteorological data might not seem like an obvious part of the war effort, Allied forces knew that Greenland would be an ideal spot to predict the weather in Europe, which was invaluable information for military planning. The Germans also realized this and secretly set up four weather stations on Greenland throughout World War II.

“Germans called [Greenland] the ‘weather kitchen,’ the place where weather was made, to be served the following day in Europe,” says Peter Harmsen, a Copenhagen-based journalist and the author of Fury and Ice: Greenland, the United States and Germany in World War II.