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An Azimuthal projection showing the Arctic Ocean and the North Pole.
Northwest Passage routes
  • Intro

Background

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From the sixteenth century English sailors and adventurers had penetrated the Arctic in pursuit of whales and furs. The likes of Martin Frobisher (1576), John Davis (1585), Henry Hudson (1610), Thomas Button (1612), William Baffin (1615), Luke Foxe (1631) and James Knight (1719) reached as far as Baffin Island, Baffin Bay and Foxe Basin.[1] There was little appetite for Arctic exploration in a Royal Navy almost continuously at war during the eighteenth century, but by a variety of means a number of naval officers found their way to the Arctic.[1] By 1800 there was a general consensus that if a Northwest Passage existed, it was permanently closed by the Arctic ice.

Christopher Middleton

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Christopher Middleton, although not a Royal Navy officer, was commissioned for an expedition to find the Northwest Passage. He sailed in 1741 with Discovery and Furnace, but had to winter at the entrance of the Churchill River in Hudson Bay. He then proceeded as far North as Repulse Bay, but was prevented from going further by the ice.[2] His cousin, William Moor, led an unsuccessful expedition after a public falling-out with Middleton.

Samuel Hearne

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Samuel Hearne was a former Royal Navy officer who took service with the Hudson's Bay Company. He led three expeditions overland between 1769 and 1772, and during the third of these he followed the Coppermine River to the Arctic Ocean, proving that any Northwest Passage must be found in Arctic waters.[3]

Constantine Phipps

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Racehorse and Carcass in ice at 80° 37′N

Constantine Phipps, 2nd Baron Mulgrave led a 1773 expedition to find the Northwest Passage in HMS Carcass and HMS Racehorse. The ships reached the impressive latitude of 80° 37′N before turning back. The expedition was particularly notable for the presence of Midshipman Horatio Nelson, later Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson.

James Cook

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James Cook's third voyage was principally intended to discover the Northwest Passage. Having searched long and hard for a strait separating Alaska from the continent of North America (and shown on a Russian map by Jacob von Stählin), he turned North and passed through the Bering Strait, but was turned back at Icy Cape by the sea-ice.[4]

George Vancouver

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During his 1791-1795 expeditions George Vancouver confirmed Hearne's findings that any Northwest Passage would be found in the Arctic by showing that no passage existed on the Pacific coast below the latitude of 60°N.[5]

Barrow and the Open Polar Sea

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At the end of the Napoleonic Wars, the Admiralty found itself in possession of large numbers of enterprising officers and thousands of unrequired ships. John Barrow, the Second Secretary to the Admiralty encouraged interest in the possible existence of a Northwest Passage. Whalers in the North Atlantic in 1815 and 1816 described an unprecedented breaking up of the ice in the Davis Strait, that had apparently sent icebergs as far south as 40°N.[6] The prevailing theory held that seawater could not turn to ice (supported by observations that melted icebergs released fresh water), and therefore that all Arctic ice formed around coastlines. It further held that the waters around the North Pole might therefore be ice-free, forming an Open Polar Sea. If the barriers of ice surrounding this open sea were breaking up, then there might be an opportunity to sail across the top of the North American continent, either by the proposed Northwest Passage, or perhaps by sailing north past Spitzbergen, across the Polar Sea, and down through the Bering Strait. Barrow, with the support of Sir Joseph Banks, prepared two simultaneous expeditions, one to be led by John Ross, heading West through the Davis Strait, and the other to be led by David Buchan, taking the polar route. An arrangement of prizes for achievement both West and North were adopted by an Act of Parliament in 1818. Thus began a series of expeditions that lasted for sixty years.

The Ross and Buchan expeditions (1818)

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The 1818 expeditions of Ross and Buchan achieved relatively little: Ross re-explored waters that Baffin had visited in the Seventeenth Century and was turned back by a mirage that he mistook for range of mountains; Buchan became stuck fast at 80°34′ N in July 1818, and spent the rest of the expedition mapping the packice as far as Greenland. What they did achieve was to fire the imagination of the British public, and more importantly, build up the experience of a generation of explorers; among the officers accomanying Buchan and Ross were William Edward Parry, James Clark Ross, Henry Parkyns Hoppner, John Franklin and the army officer Captain Edward Sabine.

The Parry and Franklin expeditions (1819)

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William Edward Parry was to seek an entrance to the passage from Baffin Bay; his highly successful expedition eventually determined that Lancaster Sound (N.W.T.) opened a passage towards the west. A second expedition, for which Barrow proposed Franklin as leader, would set out overland from Hudson Bay to explore and chart the north coast of the American continent eastwards from the mouth of the Coppermine River and thereby, in theory, delineate the most direct route for a northwest passage. The plan set many difficulties before Franklin. The coast had been sighted by explorers only twice before – by Samuel Hearne at the Coppermine in 1771 and by Alexander Mackenzie at the Mackenzie River’s delta in 1789 – and it lay hundreds of miles north of the territory explored by fur traders. The Hudson’s Bay and North West companies were expected to convey Franklin to the edge of unknown territory and to equip him for the coastal journey, but they were only established as far north as Great Slave Lake (N.W.T.), their supply lines were tenuous, and they were engaged in trade warfare. Franklin had just three months to prepare for an expedition that had few precedents in the history of exploration. Advice was scarce and often misleading or excessively optimistic, and he received assurances of greater assistance from the fur-trading companies than they could actually provide. The party selected to accompany him consisted of midshipmen George Back and Robert Hood, surgeon and naturalist John Richardson, and seaman John Hepburn."

NMM - Parry's Exped of 1819

Franklin, Lyon and Beechey

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Franklin's lost expedition

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The search for Franklin

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The British Arctic Expedition

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The Antarctic

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List of expeditions

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From To Expedition Expedition Commander Aim Ship (Captain)
1773 1773 Constantine Phipps's Expedition Constantine Phipps Northwest Passage (via Davis Strait) Racehorse (Phipps) and Carcass (Lutwidge)
1818 1818 John Ross's First Expedition John Ross Northwest Passage (via Davis Strait) Isabella (Ross) and Alexander (Parry)
1818 1818 Buchan's Polar Expedition of 1819 David Buchan North Pole (via Spitzbergan) Dorothea (Buchan) and Trent (Franklin)
1819 1822 Coppermine Expedition John Franklin Overland exploration of the Northwest Passage -
1819 1820 Parry’s First Expedition
(Northwest Passage Expedition of 1819)
William Parry Northwest Passage Hecla (Parry) and Griper (Liddon)
1821 1823 Parry’s Second Expedition
(Northwest Passage Expedition of 1821)
William Parry Northwest Passage Hecla (Lyon[7]) and Fury (Parry)
1824 1825 Parry’s Third Expedition
(Northwest Passage Expedition of 1824)
William Parry Northwest Passage Hecla (Parry) and Fury (Hoppner)
1824 1824 Lyon's Repulse Bay Expedition George Francis Lyon Repulse Bay Griper (Lyon[7])
1825 1827 Franklin’s Second Expedition John Franklin Overland exploration of the Beaufort Sea (via Mackenzie River) -
1825 1828 Beechey's Expedition Frederick Beechey Northwest Passage (via Bering Strait) - to link up with Franklin Blossom
1827 1827 Parry's Fourth Expedition William Parry North Pole via Spitzbergan Helca (Parry)
1829 1833 John Ross's Second Expedition
(Northwest Passage Expedition of 1829)
John Ross Northwest Passage (via Lancaster Sound) Paddle steamer Victory (Ross)
1833 1835 Back’s First Expedition
(Northwest Passage Expedition of 1833)
George Back Overland exploration of the Great Fish River -
1836 1837 Back’s Second Expedition George Back Hudson Bay and Mellville Island Terror (Back)
1845 - Franklin's Third Expedition John Franklin Northwest Passage Terror (Franklin) and Erebus (Fitzjames)
1847 1849 Rae and Richardson's search for Franklin Sir John Richardson and John Rae Search for Franklin (overland via the MacKenzie River to the Canadian Arctic coast) -
1848 1854 HMS Plover's search for Franklin Thomas Edward Laws Moore Search for Franklin (via Bering Strait) Plover (Moore, McGuire after 1852)
1848 1849 James Clark Ross Expedition of 1848 James Clark Ross Search for Franklin (via Wellington Channel) Enterprise (Ross) and Investigator (Bird)
1848 1850 Kellett Expedition Henry Kellett Search for Franklin (via Bering Strait) Herald (Kellett)
1850 1851 Austin Expedition Horatio Thomas Austin Search for Franklin (via Lancaster Sound) Resolute (Austin), Pioneer (Osborn), Assistance (Ommanney), and Intrepid (Cator)
1850 1855 Franklin Relief Expedition Richard Collinson Search for Franklin (via Bering Strait) Enterprise (Collinson) and Investigator (Robert McClure)
1850 1851 John Ross's Third Expedition John Ross Search for Franklin (Private expedition) Felix (Ross)
1850 1851 Rae's Second search for Franklin John Rae Search for Franklin (Overland) -
1852 1852 Inglefield Expedition Edward Inglefield Search for Franklin (via Smith Sound) Isabel (Inglefield)
1852 1854 Belcher Expedition Edward Belcher Search for Franklin (via Barrow Strait and Wellington Channel) Assistance (Belcher), Resolute (Kellett), Intrepid (McClintock), Pioneer (Osborn), North Star (Pullen)
1853 1854 Rae's mapping of King William Island John Rae Overland (via Hudson Bay) -
1857 1859 Lady Franklin's Private Expedition Francis Leopold McClintock Search for Franklin (King William Island) Schooner Fox (McClintock)
1875 1876 British Arctic Expedition George Nares North Pole (via Smith Sound) Alert (Nares) and Discovery (Stephenson)

References

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  1. ^ a b "Search for the Northwest Passage at the National Maritime Museum Explore online". Retrieved 2008-12-02.
  2. ^ "Christopher Middleton at the National Maritime Museum Explore Online". Retrieved 2008-12-2. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  3. ^ "Samuel Hearnes' Overland Expedition, 1770-72, at the National Maritime Museum Explore Online". Retrieved 2008-12-2. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  4. ^ "James Cook's expedition, 1776–78, at the National Maritime Museum Explore Online". Retrieved 2008-12-2. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  5. ^ "Biography of George Vancouver at the Discover Vancouver website". Retrieved 2008-12-02.
  6. ^ "Sir John Ross at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography online". Retrieved 2008-12-02.
  7. ^ a b Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Lyon, George Francis (1795–1832), naval officer and Arctic explorer), by Elizabeth Baigent

{{DEFAULTSORT:Royal Navy Arctic exploration}} [[:Category:History of the Royal Navy]] [[:Category:Royal Navy survey ships|]] [[:Category:British explorers]] [[:Category:Explorers of Canada]] [[:Category:Explorers of the Arctic]]