Narrative of the North Polar Expedition
U.S. Ship Polaris, Captain Charles Francis Hall Commanding
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:28th Jun '12
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The account, first published in 1876, of a dramatic and ill-fated American expedition to the North Pole.
The Polaris expedition aimed to be the first US expedition to the North Pole. Difficulties beset the venture from the start, and this work, published in 1876, recounts the death of the expedition leader and the crew's fight for survival. It is an epic tale of human endurance.Charles Hall (1821–71) was neither seaman nor navigator, but by 1871 he had made two Arctic expeditions as a result of his fascination with the failed expedition of Franklin. With a grant from Congress, his Polaris voyage aimed to be the first US expedition to the North Pole. Desertion, drunkenness, and disagreements beset the venture from the start, and by the time Hall reached the furthest northern point yet attained by an Arctic explorer, crew discipline had broken down completely. Using official papers and crew journals, this 1876 work by C. H. Davis for the US Navy recounts Hall's sudden death (after accusing his crew of poisoning him), the failed attempt to reach the Pole, and the abandonment of half the crew left drifting for 2500 kilometres on an ice floe. With the mystery of Hall's death and the story of the crew's survival, this is an epic tale of human endurance.
ISBN: 9781108050159
Dimensions: 254mm x 178mm x 39mm
Weight: 1330g
780 pages