Sir John Franklin
Sir John Franklin
The English explorer Sir John Franklin (1786-1847) is perhaps the most important figure in the search for the Northwest Passage.
In the 40-year period after the Napoleonic Wars, the British Admiralty took up the challenge of finding the elusive Northwest Passage, along the northern coast of North America between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The Royal Navy could afford to undertake the search at this time because of British predominance in naval power. Moreover, Arctic expeditions were seen as a good training ground for officers and men. The voyages themselves, the Admiralty believed, would yield important scientific information and strengthen the British imperial position in northern North America. Sir John Franklin was of major importance in these undertakings.
John Franklin was born on April 16, 1786, at Spilsby in Lincolnshire. His parents had intended that he enter the Church, but a holiday at the seashore aroused in him an inextinguishable desire to go to sea. His career in the Royal Navy began when he joined H.M.S. Polyphemus, which was about to play a significant part in the Battle of Copenhagen. Subsequent employment included a voyage in the Investigator, commanded by his cousin Capt. Matthew Flinders, to explore and map parts of the Australian coast, and service in H.M.S. Bellerophon and Bedford at the battles of Trafalgar and New Orleans, respectively. Franklin was promoted from midshipman to lieutenant on Feb. 11, 1808, and by the end of the Napoleonic Wars he had experienced much time at sea.
Early Exploration
Franklin's Arctic travels began in January 1818 with his appointment in command of the brig Trent. It was to accompany the Dorothea, commanded by Capt. David Buchan, on a voyage to the North Pole and Bering Strait, passing en route between Greenland and Spitsbergen. This expedition was unsuccessful.
In early 1819 Franklin was instructed to lead an expedition "to determine the latitudes and longitudes of the northern coast of North America, and the trendings of that coast from the mouth of the Coppermine River to the eastern extremity of the continent." The findings of this hazardous 5,550-mile expedition were published in 1823 in Franklin's Narrative of a Journey to the Shores of the Polar Sea in the Years 1819-20, a classic in the annals of exploration. By the time of his return to England in October 1822, he had been promoted to commander, and on Nov. 20, 1822, he was advanced to captain. His excellent service also brought him fellowship in the Royal Society.
Franklin's second journey to the Polar Sea was made via the Mackenzie River and Great Bear Lake in the years from 1825 to 1827. The object, Kotzebue Sound near Be-ring Strait, proved unattainable because of the lateness of the season; yet much of the northern coast of the continent was discovered by this expedition. Franklin was knighted in 1829 and thereafter achieved academic distinction.
In 1830-1833 Franklin commanded the frigate Rainbow in the Mediterranean Sea. In January 1837 he arrived at Hobart, Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania), to assume the position of lieutenant governor, which he held until 1843. His humanitarian sentiments toward the condition of the convicts restrained there resulted in judicious measures of social improvement.
Northwest Passage
At the time of his return to England in June 1844 Arctic exploration was of special interest, for the Erebus and Terror had just returned from a remarkable expedition to the Antarctic. The British Admiralty decided to use the Erebus and Terror to determine whether the Northwest Passage could be navigated by ship. Franklin, as senior naval officer with Arctic experience, obtained the command in spite of some protests that others were younger and perhaps more capable, and on March 3, 1845, Franklin, now 59, commissioned the Erebus. Both the Erebus and the Terror had been fitted with auxiliary screws (a new development in Arctic exploration) and supposedly provisioned for a 3-year voyage. The two ships sailed from England in May amid optimism
that the mission's object would be met. They were last seen July 26, 1845, in Lancaster Sound.
It took many years to reconstruct the fate of Sir John Franklin. Some 50 expeditions were sent over 20 years to find him or his remains. They revealed that from Lancaster Sound the Erebus and Terror had passed through to the maze of islands known today as the District of Franklin. In May 1847 Franklin's party discovered the remaining gap in the Northwest Passage—between Victoria and Simpson straits. On June 11 Franklin died. There followed a third winter in the ice, at the end of which Capt. F. R. M. Crozier, now in command, and his men (105 in all) set out for the nearest Hudson's Bay Company post, Ft. Resolution. All perished miserably in this attempt.
Franklin's second wife (formerly, Jane Griffin) was responsible for sending a number of relief and search expeditions. That of the Fox in 1857, under Capt. Francis L. McClintock, discovered the main traces of the expedition, including important documents that tell the tragic tale.
Further Reading
Two biographies of Franklin are H. D. Traill, Life of Sir John Franklin (1896), and Geoffrey F. Lamb, Franklin, Happy Voyageur: Being the Life and Death of Sir John Franklin (1956). Details of the last expedition are in Capt. Francis L. McClintock, The Voyage of the "Fox" in the Arctic Seas (1859), and Richard J. Cyriax, Sir John Franklin's Last Arctic Expedition: A Chapter in the History of the Royal Navy (1939). A work on Lady Franklin, showing her importance in the search missions, is Francis J. Woodward, Portrait of Jane (1951). Recommended for general historical background is Laurence P. Kirwan, A History of Polar Exploration (1959). □
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
The Somme remembered.(Somme: The Heroism and Horror of War)(Through German Eyes: The British and the Somme 1916)(Somme 1916: A Battlefield Companion)(The Somme)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Contemporary Review; 12/22/2006; ; 700+ words
; Somme: The Heroism and Horror of War. Martin...Through German Eyes: The British and the Somme 1916. Christopher Duffy. Weidenfeld &...383 pages. ISBN 0-297-84689-2. Somme 1916: A Battlefield Companion. Gerald Gliddon...
|
|
BEAUTY BEAT: EXPANSION PLAN IS SOMME STRATEGY...NEW SCENT FOR CERRUTI.
Magazine article from: WWD; 6/7/2005; 700+ words
; ...W. Evans, Brid Costello Expansion Plan is Somme Strategy NEW YORK -- Niche skin care firm Somme Institute is taking its namesake brand to spas...an expansion strategy this year. Each time Somme's treatment collection is introduced at a...
|
|
Somme Institute Is Branching Out.(plans distribution expansion and new treatment services)
Magazine article from: WWD; 2/21/2003; 700+ words
; ...Barneys New York as its backdrop next week, Somme Institute will introduce new treatment...preparations to expand its distribution base. The Somme line of five treatment products is now...including five Barneys locations. But Somme is building a sales force that will begin...
|
|
Somme wood bought in tribute to war dead Murphy gives [Pound]400,000 to preserve site
Newspaper article from: Belfast Telegraph; 7/1/2003; ; 628 words
; ...the first two days of the Battle of the Somme in July 1916, is preserved as a permanent...anniversary of the first day of Battle of the Somme. Relatives of many of the soldiers from...soldiers killed during the Battle of the Somme are buried after a major campaign against...
|
|
Platform - Unbreakable bond between Ulster and the Somme.(News)
Newspaper article from: The News Letter (Belfast, Northern Ireland); 7/1/2004; 700+ words
; ...of those who died at the Battle of the Somme 88 years ago and says we must not forget...their lives on the battlefields of the Somme. The services at the Ulster Tower, the...and the bloodstained battlefields of the Somme. That bond grows stronger year on year...
|
|
Soldiers, Families Mark Somme Anniversary
News Wire article from: AP Online; 7/1/2006; 700+ words
; ...the 90th anniversary of the Battle of the Somme, one of history's worst bloodbaths...warfare ravaged the gentle hills of the Somme region and left more than 1.2 million...in the wheat fields and towns of the Somme serve as a reminder of how the Great War...
|
|
Charles leads tributes to Somme dead
Newspaper article from: Belfast Telegraph; 7/1/2006; ; 676 words
; ...to mark the start of the Battle of the Somme on July 1, 1916.Tens of thousands of...Brookeborough, Vice-President of the Somme Association, and Lady Brookeborough...Eddie Irvine, who is a supporter of the Somme Association, and his parents Mr and Mrs...
|
|
Somme fallen remembered.(News)
Newspaper article from: The News Letter (Belfast, Northern Ireland); 7/2/2005; 675 words
; ...yesterday led tributes at the Battle of the Somme site in France to all those who made the...fought together,O said Mr Woodward. OThe Somme remains a byword for the horrors of war...Representatives of the Royal British Legion and Somme commemoration groups also gathered at the...
|
|
Somme anniversary: Ulster sons who passed into history.(News)
Newspaper article from: The News Letter (Belfast, Northern Ireland); 7/2/2001; 700+ words
; ...the border who lost their lives at the Somme, the Presbyterian Moderator said yesterday...anniversary service to mark the Battle of the Somme where unionists and nationalists had fought...perished in the battlefields around the Somme. The Moderator said that he found the...
|
|
Somme tears unite two nations WW1 anniversary: 82 years on, for the first time no veteran is able to attend the memorial ceremony
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 7/2/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...history. The most notable absentees on the Somme yesterday were survivors of the battle. For the first time, none of the remaining Somme veterans - a handful of centenarians...counterpart, Alain Richard. Choosing the Somme to commemorate the Entente Cordiale makes...
|
|
Somme Offensive
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
SOMME OFFENSIVE SOMME OFFENSIVE (8 August – 11 November 1918). The first Americans...engineers with the British in the Battle of Cambrai, which started in the Somme River area in northern France on 20 November 1917. These detachments...
|
|
Somme, Battle of the
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Somme, Battle of the Major World War I engagement along the River Somme, n France. It was launched by the British Commander...is sometimes referred to as the Second Battle of the Somme. A German offensive, designed to secure a victory...
|
|
Somme, battle of the
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History
Somme, battle of the, 1916. When he became commander-in-chief, Haig wanted...take part in an Anglo-French offensive further south, astride the river Somme, where the British and French armies met. This was part of a plan by which...
|
|
Somme
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
Somme a river of northern France, the upper valley of which was the scene of heavy fighting in the First World War. The Battle of the Somme was a major battle of the First World War between the British and the Germans...
|
|
Amiens
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...city (1991 pop. 136,234), capital of Somme dept., N France, in Picardy , on the Somme River. It is a rail hub and a large market for the truck farming carried on in the surrounding Somme marshlands. Also an important textile center...
|