Sir John Ross (1777-1856), the distinguished British naval officer and Arctic explorer, undertook three great voyages to the Arctic regions; accounts of his first and his second voyages are also reissued in this series. (During the latter, his ship was stranded in the unexplored area of Prince Regent Inlet, where Ross and his crew survived by living and eating as the local Inuit did.) In this volume, first published in 1855, the explorer describes his experiences during his third (privately funded) Arctic voyage, undertaken in 1850 as part of the effort to locate the missing expedition led by Sir John Franklin, his close friend. Ross also summarises in partisan style the previous efforts by the Royal Navy to find out what happened to the Erebus and Terror, and is scathing in his account of what he regards as the mismanagement and incompetence of the Admiralty.
This book provides an account of the ill-fated Arctic expedition led by Sir John Franklin in the mid-19th century, as well as the search expeditions that were launched in an attempt to find and...
A biography of the famous explorer Sir John Franklin, written by Augustus Henry Beesly, a British historian and barrister. This book covers Franklin's early life and naval career, as well as his...
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and...
The Search For Sir John Franklin: A Lecture Delivered At The Russell Institution (1851) is a historical book written by Charles Richard Weld. The book is about the search for Sir John Franklin, a...