Ross, John, Sir, 1777-1856.
Narrative of a Second Voyage in Search of a North-West Passage, and
of a Residence in the Arctic Regions During the Years 1829, 1830, 1831,
1832, 1833 ... Including the Reports of ... James Clark Ross ... and the
Discovery of the Northern Magnetic Pole. London, 1835. [Rare Books
Division: Gift of the Elizabeth Foundation]
After the ignominy of his first Arctic expedition, Ross never received
another appointment from the Admiralty. In the years that followed,
he developed a keen interest in steam navigation and convinced his old
friend Felix Booth, the wealthy manufacturer of Booth's gin, to help
finance another Arctic expedition. A paddle steamer, Victory,
was purchased and retrofitted for Arctic service. Ross's experienced
nephew, Sir James Clark Ross (1800-1862), a veteran of four previous
polar expeditions, including an attempt on the North Pole, agreed to
join as second-in- command.
Ross's expedition had several notable accomplishments:
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They explored the western coastline of Prince Regent
Inlet (though they missed Bellot Strait separating Somerset Island
from Boothia Peninsula).
-
A sledge journey by Sir James Clark Ross located the
North Magnetic Pole on Boothia Peninsula; he also crossed to King
William's Land and rounded the northern cape, reaching Point Victory
on the west. This area would figure prominently in the Franklin tragedy,
in part because no one yet knew if the Land was an island or an extension
of the Peninsula.
-
They survived four winters in the Arctic. Having abandoned
Victory to the ice in Victoria Harbor (on Boothia Peninsula)
in May 1832, they sailed (in small boats) and sledged up the Inlet
to Fury Beach, where Sir William Edward Parry's ship Fury had
been wrecked in 1825. Many of the stores from that wreckage were still
salvageable. They wintered there in an ice house they had built, then
gambled by sailing and rowing up Barrow Strait towards the entrance
to Lancaster Sound, hoping to find a ship to pick them up and take
them home.
-
Their wishes were granted. In one of the great ironic
twists of Arctic history, they caught the attention of a whaler, the
Isabella of Hull, which was the same ship Ross had commanded
on his first Northwest Passage expedition! Ross was knighted on his
return.
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