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Arctic Explorations in the Years 1853, '54, '55

The Second and Last
United States Grinnell Expedition
in Search of
Sir John Franklin
by

Dr. Elisha Kent Kane, M.D., U.S.N

Copyright 1868

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Elisha Kent Kane

This is the story of the search for renowned British explorer, Sir John Franklin, and his last Arctic expedition. It is also the story of Elisha Kent Kane, an American Naval officer, doctor, and explorer.

 

The book consists of over 250 images, and 761 pages of text.

 

Kane was much revered in his time; he was seen as a true hero of his day. He ranks with the likes of Lewis and Clark, and John C. Fremont, yet his not very well known in this day and age. I, myself, had never heard of him before I read a history of the early explorations of the Arctic regions.

 

This book includes a biographical sketch of Dr. Kane that you should be sure to read.

 

The original work consisted of two separate volumes. This work includes both volumes, and a biographical sketch of Dr. Kane.

 

This work is a huge body of work, consisting of approximately 766 textual pages in 61 chapters, and over 250 images.

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Early Arctic Explorations

 

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The early explorations of the Arctic were like no other explorations. Not only were the explorers faced with the 'usual' constant hardships and dangers, such as drowning, or starving, or scurvy, or being lost, or being killed, or maimed, and, in some cases, even eaten (by animals and humans), they faced the very real prospect of freezing to death.

 

And how about isolation ? Could you imagine being on a tiny, crowded wooden ship, stuck in the ice for months at a time, and sometimes years at a time ? And it's not like everyone took a bath every day; or that there was a huge variety of food; there was no cable TV, and no Internet. No mail, no email. And definitely, there were no women.

 

If the ship survived, you would eventually sail away, but,  sometimes the ship was crushed by the ice, and you had to make your way to land, or perish, as many did. (Dr. Kane and his men hiked overland for 82 days when their ship was destroyed).

Henry Grinnell

 

And it's not like these explorations had the promise of riches to those who returned. I mean, a trip to the Spice Islands with Captain Cook could enrich a sailor for life. And there were no prolonged visits to Fiji, or the Hawaiian Islands, etc, for rest and relaxation.

 

Dr. Kane was an adventurer, at heart, before he ever explored the Arctic, so I guess several trips to the Arctic seemed to suit him just fine. And what is even more astonishing, is he had a somewhat fragile constitution, and he was often very ill, even near death, during these trips.

 

He was obviously a valuable asset on these expeditions. As a doctor, he did care for the men, and did his best to minister to their needs and wants. There is much affection toward him, to this end.

 

Even though he died at the ripe young age of 37, Dr. Kane was a much revered hero of his time; much more so than our modern society recognizes.

 

Enjoy !

 

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Table of Contents

 

CHAPTER I.

Organization — Equipment — St. John's — Baffin's Bay — Sounding

 

CHAPTER II

Fiskernaes — The Fishery — Mr. Lassen — Hans Christian — Lichtenfels — Sukkertoppen

 

CHAPTER III

Coast of Greenland — Swarte-huk — Last Danish Outposts — Melville Bay

In the Ice — Bears — Bergs — Anchor to a Berg Midnight Sunshine

 

CHAPTER IV

Boring the Floes — Successful Passage through Melville Bay — Ice-Navigation — Passage of the Middle Pack — The North Water.

 

CHAPTER V

Crimson Cliffs of Beverley — Hakluyt and Northumberland — Red Snow — The Gates of Smith's Straits — Cape Alexander — Cape Hatherton — Farewell Cairn — Life-boat Depot — Esquimaux Ruins found — Graves — Flagstaff Point

 

CHAPTER VI

Closing with the Ice — Refuge Harbor — Dogs — Walrus — Narwhal — Ice-hills — Beacon-cairn — Anchored to a Berg — Esquimaux Huts — Peter Force Bay — Cape Cornelius Grinnell — Shallows  — A Gale — The recreant Dogs

 

CHAPTER VII

The Eric on a Berg — Godsend Ledge — Holding on — Adrift — Scudding Towed by a Berg — Under the Cliffs — Nippings — Aground — Ice-pressure — At rest

 

CHAPTER VIII

Tracking Inspecting a Harbor — The Musk-ox — Still Tracking — Consultation — Warping Again — Aground near the Ice-foot A Breathing-spell — The Boat-expedition — Departure

 

CHAPTER IX

The Depot journey — The Ice-belt — Crossing Minturn River — Skeleton Musk-ox — Crossing the Glacier — Portage of Instruments — Excessive Burden — Mary  Minturn River — Fording the River — Thackeray Headland — Cape George Russell — Return to the Brig — The Winter Harbor

 

CHAPTER X

Approaching Winter — Storing Provisions — Butler Storehouse — Sunday at Rest — Building Observatory — Training the Dogs — The Little Willie — The Road — The Faith — Sledging — Reconnoissance — Depot-party

 

CHAPTER XI

The Observatory — Thermometers — The Rats — The Brig on Fire Ancient Sledge-tracks — Esquimaux Huts — Hydrophobia — Sledge-driving Musk-ox Tracks — A Sledge-party

 

CHAPTER XII

Leaping a Chasm — The Ice-belt — Cape George Russell — Camp on the Floes — Return of Depot-party — Bonsall's Adventure — Results — An Escape — The Third Cache — McGary Island

 

CHAPTER XIII

Walrus-holes — Advance of Darkness — Darkness — The Cold — "The Ice-blink" — Fox-chase — Esquimaux Huts — Occultation of Saturn — Portrait of Old Grim

 

CHAPTER XIV

Magnetic Observatory — Temperatures — Returning Light — Darkness and the Dogs — Hydrophobia — Ice-changes — The Ice-foot — The Ice-belt — The Sunlight — March

 

CHAPTER XV

Arctic Observations — Travel to Observatory — Its Hazards — Arctic Life — The Day — The Diet — The Amusements — The Labors — The Temperature — The "Eis-fod" — The Ice-belt — The Ice-belt encroaching — Expedition preparing Good-bye — A Surprise — A second Good-bye

 

CHAPTER XVI

Preparation — Temperatures — Adventure — An Alarm — Party on the Floes — Rescue-party — Lost on the Floes — Party found — Return — Freezing — Returning Camp — A Bivouac — Exhausted — Escape — Consequences

 

CHAPTER XVII.

Baker's Death — A Visit — The Esquimaux — A Negotiation — Their Equipment — Their Deportment — A Treaty — The Farewell — The Sequel — Myouk — His Escape — Schubert's Illness.

 

CHAPTER XVIII.

An Exploration — Equipment — Outfit — Departure — Results — Features of Coast — Architectural Rocks — Three Brother Turrets — Tennyson's Monument — The Great Glacier of Humboldt

 

CHAPTER XIX.

Progress of the Party — Prostration — Dallas Bay — Death of Schubert — The Brig in May — Progress of Spring — McGary's Return — Dr. Hayes's Party — Equipment — Schubert's Funeral

 

CHAPTER XX.

Seal-hunting — Sir John Franklin — Resources — Acclimatization — The Hope — Dr. Hayes's Return — His Journey — Snow-  blindness — Cape Hayes — The Dogs tangled — Mending the Harness — Capes Leidy and Frazer — Dobbin Bay — Fletcher Webster Headland — Peter Force Bay — New Parties — Their Orders — Progress of Season — The Seal — The Netsik and Usuk — A Bear — Our Encounter — Change in the Floe

 

CHAPTER XXI.

Progress of Season — Plants in Winter — Birds Returning — Cochlearia — The Plants

 

CHAPTER XXII.

Mr. Bonsall's Return — His Story — The Bear in Camp — His Fate — Bears at Sport — The Thaws

 

CHAPTER XXIII.

Morton's Return — His Narrative — Peabody Bay — Through the Bergs — Bridging the Chasms — The West Land — The Dogs in Fright — Open Water — The Ice-foot — The Polar Tides — Capes Jackson and Morris — The Channel — Free of Ice — Birds and Plants — Bear and Cub — The Hunt — The Death — Franklin and Lafayette — The Antarctic Flag — Course of Tides — Mount Parry — Victoria and Albert Mountains — Resume — The Birds appear — The Vegetation — The Petrel — Cape Constitution  Theories of an Open Sea — Illusory Discoveries — Changes of Climate — A Suggestion

 

CHAPTER XXIV

Prospects — Speculations — The Argument — The Conclusion — The Reconnoissance — The Scheme — Equipment of Boat-party — Eider Island — Hans Island — The Cormorant Gull — Sentiment — Our Charts — Captain Inglefield — Discrepancies — A Gale — Fast to a Floe

 

CHAPTER XXV

Working On — A Boat-nip — Ice-barrier — The Barrier Pack — Progress Hopeless — Northumberland Island — Northumberland Glacier — Ice-cascades — Neve

 

CHAPTER XXVI

The Ice-foot in August — The Pack in August — Ice-blasting — Fox-trap Point — warping — The Prospect — Approaching Climax — Signal-cairn — The Record — Projected Withdrawal — The Question — The Determination — The Result

 

CHAPTER XXVII

Discipline — Building Igloe — Tossut — Mossing — After Seal — On the young Ice — Going too far — Seals at Home — In the Water — In Safety — Death of Tiger

 

CHAPTER XXVIII

The Esquimaux — Larceny — The Arrest — The Punishment — The Treaty — "Unbroken Faith" — My Brother — Return from a Hunt — Our Life — Anoatok — A Welcome — Treaty confirmed

 

CHAPTER IX

Walrus-grounds — Lost on the Ice — A Break-up — Igloe of Anoatok — Its Garniture — Creature Comforts — Esquimaux Music — Usages of the Table — Bear and Cubs — A Hunt — Close Quarters — Bear-fighting — Bear-habits — Rats — The Terrier Fox — The Arctic Hare — A Wolf — Dogs and wolves — Bear and Fox — Winter Quarters — Morton's Return — The Light.

 

CHAPTER XXX

Morton's Journey — The Hut — Walrus Hunt — The Contest — The Victory — The Jubilee — A Sipak

 

CHAPTER XXXI.

An Aurora — The Arctic Firmament — Esquimaux Astronomy — Meteoric Shower — A Bear — Hasty Retreat — The Cabin by Night — Sickness increasing The Night Watch

 

CHAPTER XXXII

Bonsall's Return — Return of withdrawing Party — Esquimaux Escort — On Fire — Christmas — A Journey Ahead — Setting Out — A Dreary Night — Striking a light — End of 1854.

 

CHAPTER XXXIII.

Modes of Life — Dog Habits — Darkness — Plan of Journey

 

CHAPTER XXXIV

A Breakdown — The Hut in a Storm — Two Nights in a Hut — The Back Track — Health Failing — Unsuccessful Hunt.

 

CHAPTER XXXV

The Fire-clothed Bag — The Wraith — Cookery — A Respite — The Coming Dawn — The Trust — Prospects — Colored Skies 

 

CHAPTER XXXVI

The Bennesoak — A Dilemma — The Sun — End of February Our Condition — Moonlight — The Landscape

 

CHAPTER XXXVII

The Resorts — The Sick — The Rat in the Insect-box — Han's Return — Famine at Etah — Walrus Tackle — The Heat Diet

 

CHAPTER XXXVIII

Line of Open Water — Awahtok — His First-born — Insubordination — The Plot — The Development — The Desertion

 

CHAPTER XXXIX

Colloquy in the Bunks — Winter Travel — Preparations — Reindeer Feeding grounds — Terraced Beaches — A Walk — Occupations

 

CHAPTER XL

The Delectable Mountains — Review of March — The Deserter again — His Escape — Godfrey's Meat — Convalescent

 

CHAPTER XLI

 

Routine — Getting up — Breakfast — Work — Turning in — Hans still missing — The Determination    

 

CHAPTER XLI Amico — Explanation — Further Search — Maturing Plans — Chances of Escape — Food plenty — Paulik — Famine among the Esquimaux — Extinction — Light Hearts — Deserter recovered

 

CHAPTER XLIII

Hartstene Bay — Esquimaux Dwellings — A crowded Interior — The Night's Lodging — A Morning Repast — Mourning for the Dead — Funeral Rites — Penance

 

CHAPTER XLIV

The Esquimaux of Greenland — Change of Character — Labors of the Missionaries — Noluk — The Ominaks — Pingeiak and Jens — The Angekoks — Husutoks — The Imnapok — The Decree

 

CHAPTER XLV

Walrus-hunting — Esquimaux Habits — Return to Etah — Preparing for Escape — Making Sledges — Dr. Hayes

 

CHAPTER XLVI. Kalutunah — The Hunting-party — Setting out — My Tallow-ball--A Wild Chase — Hunting still — The Great Glacier — The Escaladed Structure — Formation of Bergs — The Viscous Flow — Crevasses — The Frozen Water-tunnel — Cape Forbes — Face of Glacier

 

CHAPTER XLVII. Cape James Kent — Marshall Bay — Ice-rafts — Striated Boulders — Dallas Bay — Antiquities — The Bear-chase — The Bear at Bay — The Single Hunt — Teeth-wounds — The last Effort — Close of the Search

 

CHAPTER XLVIII

Preparations for Escape — Provisions — Boats — The Sledges — Instruments and Arms — Cooking-apparatus — Table-furniture — Cradling the Boats — The Sledges moving The Recreation..

 

CHAPTER XLIX

The Pledges — The Argument — Farewell to the Brig — The Muster — The Routine — The Messes

 

CHAPTER L

The Sick-hut — To First Ravine — Moving the Sick — The Healthstation — Convalescence 

 

CHAPTER LI. To the Brig again — Welcome at the Hut — Log of the Sledges — Educated Faith — Good-bye to the Brig — Metek's Prayer     

 

CHAPTER LII

New Stations — The Ice-marshes — Point Security — Oopegsoak — Catching Auks — Nessark

 

CHAPTER LIII

The Game of Ball — My Brother's Lake — The Polar Seasons — Fate of the Esquimaux — The Esquimaux Limits — Esquimaux Endurance — Awahtok's Hunt — His Escape — The Guardian Walrus

 

CHAPTER LIV

The Bakery — The Guitar Ghost — The Boat-camp — Nessark's Wife — Out in a Gale — Cape Misery — The Burrow — The Retreat.

 

CHAPTER LV

Fresh Dogs — The Slides — Rocking-stones — Ohlsen's Accident — Ice-sailing Mounting Belt — The Ice-marshes — Pekiutlik -- Hans the Benedick

 

CHAPTER LVI. The Red Boat sinking — The Life-boat Cache — The Open Water — Ohlsen's Death — His Funeral — Barentz, our Precursor — Accomodah — The Prescription — Cape Welcome — The Resolve

 

CHAPTER LVII.

The Farewell — Attempt to embark

 

CHAPTER LVIII

Sutherland Island — Hakluyt Island —  Fitz-Clarence Rock — Dalrymple Rock — Giving out — Break-up of the Floe — Broken down — Weary Man's Rest — The Fourth — Short Commons

 

CHAPTER LIX

A Look-out — Providence Halt — The Glacier — Providence Diet

 

CHAPTER LX

The Crimson Cliffs — The Esquimaux Eden — Depression of the Coast — Inventory — Imalik — Losing our Way — At the Rueraddies — The Open Sea — Effects of Hunger — Rescue of the Faith

 

CHAPTER LXI

The Seal ! the Seal ! — The Festival — Terra Firma — Paul Zacharias — The Fraulein Flaischer — The News — At the Settlements ---The Welcome

 

CONCLUSION

 

APPENDIX.

Sketch of the Life of Dr. Kane

 

 

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