Book description
Four Years in the Ice -
John Ross Disgraced and dishonored for his report of an
imaginary mountain range blocking the most likely access to the North
West Passage, in 1829 Ross returned to Canada's frozen archipelago to
vindicate his reputation. He rounded the north of Baffin Island and
entered what he named the Gulf of Boothia. Here the Victory, his
eccentric paddle-steamer, became frozen to the ice. Through three
tantalizingly brief summers the expedition tried to find a way out and
through four long winters then endured the worst of Arctic conditions
in a makeshift camp. In July 1832, with the ship long since abandoned,
Ross made what must be their last bid to reach open water.
Living off Lichen and Leather - John Franklin In 1845,
looking again for the North West Passage, two well-crewed ships under
Franklin's command sailed into the Canadian Arctic and were never seen
again. There began the most prolonged search ever mounted for an
explorer. For Franklin had been lost before and yet had survived. In
1821, returning from an overland reconnaissance of the Arctic coast
north of Great Slave Lake, he and Dr. John Richardson, with two
Lieutenants and about a dozen voyageurs (mostly French), had run out
of food and then been overtaken by the Arctic weather. Franklin's
narrative of what is probably the grisliest journey on record omits
unpalatable details, like the cannibalism of one of his men, the
murder of Lieut. Hood, and Richardson's summary shooting of the
murderer; but it well conveys the debility of men forced to survive on
leather and lichen (triple de roche) plus that sense of demoralization
and disintegration that heralds the demise of an expedition.
Adrift on an Arctic Ice Floe - Fridtjof Nansen Norwegian
patriot, natural scientist, and Nobel laureate, Nansen caught the
world's imagination when he almost reached the North Pole in 1895. The
attempt was made on skis from specially reinforced vessel which,
driven into the ice, was carried from Siberia towards Greenland. The
idea stemmed from his first expedition, an 1888 crossing of Greenland.
Then too he had used skis and then too, unwittingly and nearly
disastrously, he had taken to the ice. Arrived off Greenland's
inhospitable east coast, he had ordered his five-man party to spare
their vessel by crossing the off-shore ice floe in rowing boats. A
task which he expected to take a few hours turned into an involuntary
voyage down the coast of twelve days.
The Pole is Mine - Robert Edwin Peary Born in
Pennsylvania and latterly a commander in the US navy, Peary had set
his sights on claiming the North Pole from childhood. It was not just
an obsession but a religion, his manifest destiny. Regardless of cost,
hardship, and other men's sensibilities, he would be Peary of the
Pole, and the Pole would be American. Critics might carp over the
hundreds of dogs that were sacrificed to his ambition, over the chain
of supply depots that would have done credit to a military advance,
and over the extravagance of Peary's ambition, but success, in 1909,
came only after a catalogue of failures; and even then it would be
disputed. Under the circumstances his triumphalism is understandable
and, however distasteful, not unknown amongst other Polar travelers.