Sir John Ross

Home > ... > Earth and the Environment > Geography > Geography: Biographies > ...

Sir John Ross

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Sir John Ross 1777-1856, British arctic explorer and rear admiral. In 1818 he went in search of the Northwest Passage but turned back after exploring Baffin Bay. Financed by Sir Felix Booth, he commanded a second search expedition (1829-33), in the course of which he discovered Boothia Peninsula, the Gulf of Boothia, and King William Island and explored Smith, Jones, and Lancaster sounds. Ross was knighted in 1833. His last trip to the Arctic was made in 1850-51, when he went to the Lancaster Sound region to search for Sir John Franklin. He wrote two books describing his quest for the Northwest Passage.

Bibliography: See E. S. Dodge, The Polar Rosses (1973).

Hide all research tools
Print this article Print all entries for this topic Cite this article Link to this article
Link to this article

CloseClose

Create a link to this page

Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:

<a href="http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/.aspx#1E1-Ross-SirJ" title="Facts and information about Sir John Ross">Sir John Ross</a>

Add this article to Del.icio.usBookmark this article on DiigoShare this article on FacebookSubmit this article to RedditGive this article a thumbs-up on StumbleUpon
Show all research tools

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Sir John Ross." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. 29 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Sir John Ross." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. (November 29, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-Ross-SirJ.html

"Sir John Ross." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Retrieved November 29, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-Ross-SirJ.html

Learn more about citation styles

Sir John Ross

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Sir John Ross

British explorer Sir John Ross (1777-1856) joined the Royal Navy at the age of nine and spent much of the rest of his life at sea. In the early nineteenth century, he made three expeditions to the Arctic, looking for the Northwest Passage, exploring King William Island and the Boothia Peninsula, and searching for the lost expedition of Sir John Franklin.

Ross was the fifth son of Andrew Ross and his wife, Elizabeth. He was born in Balsarroch, Wigtonshire in Scotland on June 24, 1777. While still a boy, he joined the crew of a ship called the Pearl and spent the next three years in the Mediterranean. In 1790 he sailed on the Impregnable, whose captain, Sir Thomas Byard, advised him to join the merchant marine. He did so and became an apprentice to Byard for four years, sailing to the West Indies and the Baltic. After that he sailed on a number of ships as midshipman or mate and in 1805 became a lieutenant. In 1809 he was made a Swedish knight for a brief period of service to the Swedish admiral.

Explored the Northwest Passage

Ross was a good navigator, skilled at surveying land, and the inventor of a new type of sextant known as the Royal William. A sextant is an instrument that measures angular distances and is often used by navigators to determine latitude and longitude. He was also a believer in phrenology, a popular pseudoscience of the time that deduced a person's character from the shape of the skull.

In 1812 he was promoted to a naval commander and took the helm of a series of ships in the Baltic, North Sea, and the White Sea. In January 1818 he was appointed commander of the ship Isabella, which joined with the ship Alexander, commanded by Lieutenant Edward Parry, to explore the Northwest Passage through Davis Strait.

In The Arctic Grail, Pierre Barton wrote, "This stocky, red-haired Scot seemed the best choice for an Arctic adventure. Not yet forty-three, he had three decades of sea experience. He was undeniably brave, having been wounded no fewer than thirteen times in battle'scarred from head to foot' in the words of a future polar explorer, Elisha Kane."

The two ships were merely refitted transports not specially built for the rigors of the Arctic. By mid-June they were in the Davis Strait between Baffin Island and Greenland, where the amazing extent and grandiosity of the world of ice astonished them. According to Barton, Ross wrote in his journal, "It is hardly possible to imagine anything more exquisite by night as by day they glitter with a vividness of colour beyond the power of art to represent."

In early July, on the coast of Greenland, they met a group of native people who had never seen outsiders; even John Sacheuse, their native interpreter, had never heard of these people and could barely understand their dialect. These people had never seen boats or trees, and so they were baffled when Parry, trying to show peaceful intentions, sent out an officer carrying a flag with an olive branch on it. Ross, who was more practical, put up a flag on a pole and tied a bag of presents to it. The natives understood that as a gesture of peace. Communications were severely limited, and the Europeans, underestimating these seemingly naive people, never thought to learn some of their techniques for surviving in such difficult terrain.

The expedition eventually reached the top of Baffin Bay, where no Europeans had been for two centuries. Ross then sailed west to the southern tip of what is now known as Ellesmere Island, then went south, looking for a channel that might enter into the fabled Northwest Passage. At the end of August he found a long inlet that led to the west. This had been named Lancaster Sound, but no one knew whether it led to the Pacific Ocean.

"Discovered" Croker Mountains

After sailing thirty miles into the sound, Ross became convinced that it was a dead end. In fact, he thought he saw a mountain range in the distance, blocking all passage. He was the only one who saw the mountains, but he turned his ship around and headed back the way he had come with no explanation to Parry, who was enraged by his actions. Ross named the imaginary range the Croker Mountains and returned to England, claiming the range blocked the Northwest Passage. He was promoted to post rank in recognition of his discovery, and in 1819 he published his book, A Voyage of Discovery, Made Under the Orders of the Admiralty, in His Majesty's Ships Isabella and Alexander, for the Purpose of Exploring Baffin's Bay and Inquiring into the Probability of a North-West Passage, about the trip. In it, he claimed that in addition to the mountains, the passage had been completely choked by ice. This was a lie; Parry and others had not seen any ice. Barton noted, "It was almost as if the doughty seaman didn't believe in the existence of the North West Passage and had seized on the first opportunity to confirm that opinion"whether it was true or not. Some members of the admiralty doubted the reality of the Croker Mountains, and they dispatched another expedition, under Parry's command, to verify Ross's claims. Meanwhile, the existence or nonexistence of the mountains became a public controversy, which was not put to rest until Parry returned in October 1820 with the news that Ross had been wrong.

Another Voyage

Ross became a laughingstock and was deeply embarrassed. In some quarters, according to Barton, anyone who was excessively vain was said to be suffering from "Rossism." Anxious to clear his name and prove that he was still a good sailor, navigator, and observer despite the mistake, Ross asked for another commission, but did not get one until 1829, when he was given command of a small vessel. A friend named Felix Booth, who was the distiller and sheriff of London, sponsored a new Arctic voyage and contributed 7,000 pounds. Ross put up 3,000 pounds of his own money.

Once in the Arctic, Ross sailed through Lancaster Sound and then searched for a passage south from Prince Regent Inlet, but was stopped by ice and trapped until the summer of 1830. In that summer, he made a few miles south, but once again became stuck in the ice until May 1832, when he and his men abandoned the ship and spent a fourth winter on Fury Beach, in a hut built from the remnants of a wrecked ship named the Fury, previously under Parry's command; they survived on provisions left by Parry.

The greatest hazards of this voyage were the boredom and depression endured by the men during the long immobile periods. Parry knew that these could easily lead to friction, fights, and mutiny, and made sure that his ships had music, sports, and other entertainment. Ross was not as lighthearted. William Light, a steward on the expedition, published his reminiscence of the voyage, and, according to Barton, summed up Ross as "a haughty, unsociable, and almost hermit-like officer who treated his men with iron authority but little compassion and kept to his cabin, sustaining himself on his sponsor's gin." He was the oldest man on the ship and came from a different era. In addition, his stubborn insistence that he was always right led to difficulty when he was wrong. However, his nephew, James Clark Ross, who was a member of the crew, was far more energetic and enthusiastic and actually made most of the expedition's notable discoveries.

Boredom was alleviated by the native people, who visited the Europeans in the winter. The sailors taught them to play leapfrog and soccer and in return learned how to survive through the winter. However, Ross continued to view them as barbarians and, once he had pumped them for information about the geography of the surrounding land and water, refused to allow them on the ship, even though they were unfailingly generous with their homes and personal possessions.

During this difficult voyage, Ross and his men were able to map the peninsula now known as Boothia, as well as the Gulf of Boothia. In addition, James Clark Ross was able to map the precise location of the magnetic North Pole.

In the summer of 1833 they were able to reach Ross's old ship, the Isabella, in Lancaster Sound, and they returned to England in October. As a result of his achievements, Ross was knighted in 1834 and received gold medals from the Geographical Societies of London and Paris. In 1835 he published a book about the expedition, Narrative of a Second Voyage in Search of a North-West Passage, and of a Residence in the Arctic Regions During the Years 1829-1833, with Appendix.

The Controversy Over Franklin

Ross served as consul to Stockholm from 1839 to 1846. In 1845 another expedition was preparing to leave for the Arctic, under the command of Sir John Franklin, and Ross's advice was snubbed. In addition, Sir John Barrow, another explorer, wrote a bitter attack on Ross, and the community of Arctic explorers, including Ross's nephew, sided with Barrow. Ross replied by writing a vitriolic pamphlet defending himself, and when Franklin's expedition did not return at the planned time, Ross urged the admiralty to send out a rescue ship with him in command. The admiralty, as well as the other explorers, replied that it was too early to send out a rescue expedition. Ross was probably too old to be captain of such an expedition, but he attributed the rejection to Barrow's influence.

Ross wrote another pamphlet presenting his theories about why the admiralty had refused to allow a rescue expedition, but his arguments were marred by his obvious personal anger toward Barrow and some members of the admiralty. By 1849, he had gathered enough money from Felix Booth, the Hudson's Bay Company, and other donations to finance a small ship, the Felix, which he sailed to Lancaster Sound. In the end, however, it turned out that no one had seen Franklin or any of his men after 1845; no one knows how they died, and their bodies were never found.

Ross died in London on August 30, 1856. During his life he had married twice, and he had one son, who was a civil servant in the East India Company. His nephew, James Clark Ross, became a famed and much more successful explorer of the Antarctic.

Books

Barton, Pierre, Arctic Grail, Viking, 1988.

Dictionary of National Biography, Earliest Times to 1900, edited by Sir Leslie Stephen and Sir Sidney Lee, Oxford University Press, 1949-1950.

Langnas, I. A., Dictionary of Discoveries, Philosophical Library, 1959.

Ruby, Robert, Unknown Shore, Henry Holt & Co., 2001.

Wright, Noel, Quest for Franklin, Heinemann, 1959.

Hide all research tools
Print this article Print all entries for this topic Cite this article Link to this article
Link to this article

CloseClose

Create a link to this page

Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:

<a href="http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/.aspx#1G2-3404708107" title="Facts and information about Sir John Ross">Sir John Ross</a>

Add this article to Del.icio.usBookmark this article on DiigoShare this article on FacebookSubmit this article to RedditGive this article a thumbs-up on StumbleUpon
Show all research tools

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Sir John Ross." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 29 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Sir John Ross." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (November 29, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404708107.html

"Sir John Ross." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Retrieved November 29, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404708107.html

Learn more about citation styles

Ross, Sir John

The Oxford Companion to British History | 2002 | | © The Oxford Companion to British History 2002, originally published by Oxford University Press 2002. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Ross, Sir John (1777–1856). Originally with the East India Company, Ross joined the navy in 1805 and became an Arctic explorer. He led the 1818 expedition which sailed into Lancaster Sound from Baffin Bay but inexplicably turned back. The error was retrieved when, in 1829–33, he headed a privately financed expedition employing very inefficient steam vessels for the first time in the Arctic. The ships went under sail through the Strait to explore the Boothia Peninsula and King William Island. Here, in 1831, Ross's nephew James Clark Ross located the North Magnetic Pole. After service as British consul in Stockholm, Ross made an unsuccessful return to the Arctic to search for Franklin in 1850.

Roy C. Bridges

Hide all research tools
Print this article Print all entries for this topic Cite this article Link to this article
Link to this article

CloseClose

Create a link to this page

Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:

<a href="http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/.aspx#1O110-RossSirJohn" title="Facts and information about Sir John Ross">Sir John Ross</a>

Add this article to Del.icio.usBookmark this article on DiigoShare this article on FacebookSubmit this article to RedditGive this article a thumbs-up on StumbleUpon
Show all research tools

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

JOHN CANNON. "Ross, Sir John." The Oxford Companion to British History. Oxford University Press. 2002. Encyclopedia.com. 29 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

JOHN CANNON. "Ross, Sir John." The Oxford Companion to British History. Oxford University Press. 2002. Encyclopedia.com. (November 29, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O110-RossSirJohn.html

JOHN CANNON. "Ross, Sir John." The Oxford Companion to British History. Oxford University Press. 2002. Retrieved November 29, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O110-RossSirJohn.html

Learn more about citation styles

Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article Race to the Polar Sea: the Heroic Adventures of Elisha Kent Kane.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Arctic; 6/1/2009
Free Article Letters from the Battle of Waterloo. The Unpublished Correspondence by Allied Officers from the Siborne Papers.(Letter to the Editor)
Magazine article from: Infantry Magazine; 3/1/2005
Free Article SALUTE TO IRISH POLAR EXPLORERS.
Newspaper article from: Banbridge Leader (Banbridge, Northern Ireland); 1/18/2008

Facts and information from other sites

Related topics

  Edit this list

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, and more

Sir Ross decides the time is right to retire.(Sir Ross Buckland of Uniq)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Grocer; 1/20/2001; 700+ words ; ...profile chief executive Sir Ross Buckland is to retire in...earlier than expected. Sir Ross told The Grocer that the...three years' time." Sir Ross said there was also a pressing...boss. Finance director John Worby will become deputy...
Sir Ross Belch
Newspaper article from: The Scotsman; 5/4/1999; ; 700+ words ; Sir Ross Belch, shipbuilder Born...26 March, 1999, aged 78 ROSS Belch was an eminent and much...Scottish industry. Alexander Ross Belch was, in fact, born...passenger liner the Queen Mary at John Brown's yard. It was an...
Money: Sir Ross steps down at Uniq.(Features)
Newspaper article from: The News Letter (Belfast, Northern Ireland); 1/27/2001; 273 words ; ...formerly known as Unigate, is losing chief executive Sir Ross Buckland, who will step down when the planned demerger...and chairman Ian Martin becomes executive chairman. John Worby, finance director, takes on responsibility for...
Obituary: Sir Alexander Ross
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 4/20/1994; ; 671 words ; Alexander Ross, banker: born Auckland 2 September...Wales 10 April 1994. ALEXANDER ROSS left his native New Zealand...to England at the behest of John Gibson Jarvie whose United Dominions...impeccable banking background. Ross had joined the Reserve Bank...
It's time for some political backbone How might a policy of safe havens work in Kosovo? Lieutenant General SIR ROBIN ROSS, a veteran of Operation Haven in Northern Iraq, says the problems have been overstated. What is needed is an end to Nato's dithering and a willingness to draw a line and warn the Serbs to cross it if they dare.
Newspaper article from: Evening Standard - London; 4/9/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...Nato allies - resolve such as was so clearly demonstrated by John Major almost exactly eight years ago when more than 500,000...operated under the inspired leadership of Lieutenant General John Shalikashvili - later to become the most senior uniformed officer...
Around town: Duke in town to mark Sir Malcolm's retirement
Newspaper article from: Evening News - Scotland; 10/29/2009; 281 words ; ...attend the installation of Sir Malcolm Ross, the new prior for the Priory...Scotland, of the Order of St John. The appointment marks the...show as they parade from St John's House, down the Royal Mile, via St John's Cross at 2pm.
Chocolate and tripe de roche: emergency provisions left behind by the first expedition to search for Sir John Franklin's missing party in the Canadian Arctic.(FROM THE COLLECTION)
Magazine article from: Geographical; 6/1/2007; 700+ words ; When Arctic explorer Sir John Franklin and his crew went...explorer Sir James Clark Ross was the first man to set...somewhat ironic twist, as Ross had been the initial choice...into the food. Although Ross's expedition failed to...
Ross Goobey hoists Banham.
Newspaper article from: Financial News; 2/23/2003; 364 words ; ...Securities Institute last week, Alastair Ross Goobey, former chief executive...unkind swipe at another member, Sir John Banham.Ross Goobey recounted that "Banham...economy companies. I asked Sir John to examine what had been going on...
Sir Francis Leopold McClintock (1819-1907) a Royal Navy officer and polar explorer, Francis McClintock discovered the fate of the missing Franklin Expedition and charted large areas of the Arctic.(Late Great Geographers #50)
Magazine article from: Geographical; 12/1/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...in the search for the Franklin Expedition. In 1845, Sir John Franklin had disappeared while seeking the Northwest...Three years later, McClintock joined the expedition of Sir James Clark Ross to search the area around North Somerset Island. Over...
A vintage performance Sir John Mortimer is 76, blind in one eye and walks with a limp, but he 's still delightfully naughty and very funny. After all, there's no need to whinge. There's still time to write a truly great play - and have another glass of champagne
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 5/17/1999; ; 700+ words ; The first time I speak to Sir John Mortimer - novelist, playwright...Helloooooo," he goes. "Sir John? It's Deborah Ross..." "Oh, how marvellous...champagne, won't we?" Sir John Mortimer is 76 and still beautifully...

Pictures from Google Image Search

Click to see an enlarged picture
Click to see an enlarged picture
Click to see an enlarged picture

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Popular on Newser: