Saturday Matinee: Shipwrecks and Sea Dogs

Primary Topic

This episode delves into the perilous 1845 Franklin Expedition led by Captain Sir John Franklin, which sought to discover the Northwest Passage but tragically ended with the loss of the HMS Erebus and HMS Terror and their crews.

Episode Summary

"Saturday Matinee: Shipwrecks and Sea Dogs" recounts the harrowing tale of the 1845 Franklin Expedition's attempt to chart the elusive Northwest Passage. The expedition tragically ended in disaster as both ships, the HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, became irrevocably trapped in ice near King William Island. The crew faced unimaginable hardships, including scurvy, starvation, and lead poisoning, culminating in a desperate struggle for survival. Extensive search efforts over the following decades gradually uncovered the grim fate of the 129 crew members, with recent discoveries shedding light on their final days. This historical narrative not only explores the details of the expedition but also reflects on the broader themes of human ambition, the harsh realities of polar exploration, and the enduring mystery surrounding the crew's final moments.

Main Takeaways

  1. The Franklin Expedition was a bold attempt to chart the Northwest Passage.
  2. The expedition faced catastrophic conditions, leading to the entrapment and disappearance of the HMS Erebus and HMS Terror.
  3. Subsequent search and recovery efforts spanned over a century, slowly piecing together the fate of the crew.
  4. Modern archaeological findings have provided significant insights into the causes of the crew's demise, including lead poisoning and possible cannibalism.
  5. The story of the Franklin Expedition remains a poignant example of human ambition and tragedy in the face of extreme adversity.

Episode Chapters

1: Introduction to the Franklin Expedition

This chapter introduces the historical context and the ambitious goals of the Franklin Expedition. Speaker A: "Two ships, the HMS Erebus and the HMS Terror, aim to explore uncharted territories."

2: The Tragic Fate

Exploring the grim fate of the crew as they became icebound with dire outcomes. Speaker D: "The expedition, led by Captain Sir John Franklin, has been in search of the elusive northwest passage."

3: Discovery and Analysis

Details the discovery of the ships' wrecks and analysis of the crew's remains which highlighted the hardships they endured. Speaker D: "Despite numerous search missions, the fate of the expedition remained a mystery for over 150 years."

Actionable Advice

  • Reflect on the limits of human endurance and the importance of preparation.
  • Understand the significance of historical explorations in shaping our current knowledge of geography.
  • Recognize the role of modern technology in uncovering historical mysteries.
  • Consider the ethical implications of archaeology and the preservation of historical sites.
  • Explore the ways in which historical narratives are constructed and the importance of diverse sources.

About This Episode

On today’s Saturday Matinee, we set sail on the Franklin Expedition of 1845 with the HMS Erebus and the HMS Terror, two ships that find themselves trapped in ice and fall victims to the frozen sea.

People

Sir John Franklin, Captain Francis Crozier, James Fitzjames

Content Warnings:

None

Transcript

Speaker A
There are more ways than ever to listen to history daily ad free. Listen with wondery in the Wondry app as a member of R@r.com or in Apple Podcasts. Or you can get all of history Daily plus other fantastic history podcasts@intohistory.com. dot it's July and here in Texas things are hot. But I know much of the country has been experiencing a bit of a heat wave, and this is no contest.

We can all agree it's not comfortable out there. Still, if this summer is going to be anything like last years here in Dallas, we're looking forward to two months of 100 degree plus weather reaching up to 105 110 on some days. That's nuts. Now last year, seeking a reprieve, I whisked my family away to the UK for a few weeks and let me tell you, the difference was appreciated. Even when Britain itself was experiencing its own heat wave, it was still 15 or 20 degrees cooler than it would have been in Texas.

So as I stare down this years summer, maybe theres another place to escape to, even farther north than the small midlands town we were visiting. How about a lot farther north like King William island in Nunavut, the northernmost territory of Canada. Looking at average temperature data, it seems like the highs in July are only about 60 degrees. Break out your sweaters. But wait.

This island, it has a history. And on today's Saturday matinee, we bring you an episode from the podcast Shipwrecks and Sea Dogs, which tells the story of the Franklin expedition of 1845. Two ships, the HMS Erebus and the HMS Terror, aim to explore uncharted territories and find the elusive northwest passage. But they became trapped in ice off King William island, and all 129 crew members perished. Despite numerous search missions, the fate of the expedition remained a mystery for over 150 years, until the wrecks of the two ships were discovered in 2014 and 2016.

What was found shed light on the hardships faced by the crew, including exposure, starvation, even lead poisoning from poorly preserved food cans, all contributing to their horrible demise. It's a terrible, fascinating tale and I hope you enjoy it. While you're listening, be sure to search for and follow shipwrecks and sea dogs. We put a link in the show notes to make it easy for you.

History Daily is sponsored by Audible. One of the best compliments I get from listeners is that they feel like they're there. You know, witnessing history themselves. It can be a powerful illusion because listening goes hand in hand with imagining. Thats why audible is such a great place to let your imagination soar when you listen, you can be inspired to imagine new worlds, new possibilities, new ways of thinking.

Theres more to imagine when you listen. A great listen that got my imagination going was David Grands newest the wager, a tale of shipwreck, mutiny and murder. As an audible member, you choose one title a month to keep from their entire catalog, and new members can try audible free for 30 days. Visit audible.com historydaily or text historydaily to 500 500. That's audible.com historydaily or text history daily to 500 500.

Ryan Reynolds
Hey, I'm Ryan Reynolds. At Mint Mobile, we like to do the opposite of what big wireless does. They charge you a lot. We charge you a little. So naturally, when they announced they'd be raising their prices due to inflation, we decided to deflate our prices due to not hating you.

That's right, we're cutting the price of mint unlimited from $30 a month to just $15 a month. Give it a try@mintmobile.com. Switch $45 upfront for three months, plus taxes and fees. Promoting for new customers for limited time unlimited, more than 40gb per month slows full terms at mint mobile.com dot.

Speaker D
It is May of 1847. The crews of the HMS Erebus and HMS terror have been stuck in the ice of Victoria Straitjief in northern Canada since September of 1846. The expedition, led by Captain Sir John Franklin, has been in search of the elusive northwest passage to the Pacific Ocean. But winter has come early, and the two ships are trapped, wedged in the thick pack ice of the Canadian Arctic. The uncomfortable conditions aboard sailing ships were made even worse throughout the winter.

Hungry, freezing sick and miserable, the men are desperate. Franklin dispatches Lieutenant Graham Gore, first mate Charles Frederick Devaux, and six sailors to explore the west side of King William Island. Gore is instructed to leave pre written notes in stone cairns along the way, hoping the notes would be found and help would be sent. Lieutenant Gore comes across a stone cairn built by a previous expedition at what would later be called Victory Point. He leaves one of the pre drafted notes inside.

The scouting party continue south for several miles along the coast before stopping to build another cairn. Gore leaves a second note inside, identical to the first. Seeing no people, no food, and no resources of any kind, the men trek back through the ice and snow and return to the relative safety of their ships. The notes they left would indeed be found, although far too late to change the fate of the doomed expedition. The lost Franklin expedition today on shipwrecks and sea dogs welcome to shipwrecks and seadogs tales of mishaps, misfortune, and misadventure.

I'm your host, rich Napolitano. Thanks for joining me. Once again, much has been written of the Franklin expedition and even more has been speculated. The disappearance of the ships and its Madden captured the imaginations of those back in England, caused great distress and stirred feelings of uneasiness. Its a fascinating bit of history about human desire for exploration, the risks we are willing to take for it, and ultimately the human will to survive.

Im excited to finally bring you this story of the 1845 Franklin expedition, so lets jump in.

The HMS Terror was built in Topsham in Devon, England by the Royal Navy and was launched in 1813. Originally designed as a bomb vessel, the terror was not fitted with cannon but with mortars in order to fire high trajectory shells over long distances at enemy positions on land. For this reason, bomb vessels had very strong and sturdy hulls to withstand the recoil of the mortars. The terror participated in the War of 1812 between the United Kingdom and the United States. For the UK, this was another front of the Napoleonic wars.

The terror saw action at the Battle of Baltimore and the assault on Fort McHenry, the battle which inspired Francis Scott Key to write the Star Spangled Banner, which later became the national anthem of the United States. In 1815, the Treaty of Ghent was signed, ending the conflict, and the terror was laid up until 1828 before being redeployed in the Mediterranean for several years. The terror was then refitted as a polar exploration vessel, as her sturdy hull was perfectly suited to withstand breaking through the ice. In 1836, the terror was assigned to an arctic expedition to explore Canada's Hudson Bay. Under the command of Captain George back, the ship became stuck in the ice for ten months and sustained significant damage in the frozen strait at the northern tip of Hudson Bay.

At one point, the ship was pushed 12 meters up a slope by the encroaching ice and was nearly sunk by an iceberg. In the spring of 1837, she was able to break free and begin her journey back to England. But the terror was badly damaged and just barely made it to County Donegal, Ireland, where she was beached. In 1839, after major refitting and extensive repairs, the terror was assigned to the Ross Antarctic expedition and was paired with the HMS Erebus for the first time. The HMS Erebus was built in Pembroke Dockyard, Wales, and launched in 1826 by the Royal Navy.

Like the terror, it was built as a bombship. The ship's name comes from the deity Erebus in greek and roman mythology. Being the personification of darkness and shadow, it served two years in the Mediterranean before being refitted as a polar expedition ship in 1839 when it joined the terror for an antarctic expedition under the command of Sir James Clark Ross. From this point on, the fates of the two ships were linked. The arabesque terror departed the Chatham dockyard in Kent in September of 1839, bound for Van Diemen's land or modern day Tasmania.

The ships arrived in Tasmania in August of 1840 where they began preparing for their antarctic expedition. On the 21 November 1840 they departed for Antarctica with the stated mission of conducting magnetic experiments around the South Pole. They reached Antarctica in January of 1841, discovering what would be named the Ross Sea and Victoria Land. Ross also discovered an island, which they named Ross island and its two volcanoes, Mount Terror and Mount Erebus were named after ships. McMurdo Sound was named after Archibald McMurdo, the senior lieutenant of the Terror.

This first expedition also found what Ross called the Great Ice Barrier, now known as the Ross Ice Shelf and the Trans Antarctic Mountains. The expedition wintered in Tasmania and returned again later in 1841. Over the next two summers, the expedition charted much of the antarctic coastline, conducted magnetism experiments, and collected specimens of flora and fauna. The terror and Erebus returned to England on the 4 September 1843 after an extremely successful expedition. Exploration of the Arctic was of particular interest, but not solely for scientific purposes.

Explorers had been searching for the fabled northwest passage for centuries in order to find a faster trade route to Asia. With the Panama Canal still 70 years in the future. The second secretary of the Admiralty, Sir John Barrow, lobbied the Royal Navy to send an expedition to search for such a passage to the Pacific. Barrow was 82 years old and had held his post for 41 years. Much progress had already been made charting the north american polar regions, and he believed this passage would soon be found.

The Royal Navy agreed and commissioned the HMS Terror and HMS Erebus with the goal of finding and mapping a navigable northwest passage through Canada from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean. Barrows first choice to command the expedition was William Edward Perry. He was an experienced mariner, discovering Perry Channel through the central section of the Canadian Arctic while searching for the Northwest passage in 1819 to 1820. But he had had enough of arctic exploration and therefore declined. Barrow's second choice was James Clark Ross, who led the successful expedition to Antarctica and was the nephew of fame navigator Sir John Ross.

He too declined, having promised his wife that his days of polar exploration were over. Barrow's third choice, James Fitzjames, was rejected by the Admiralty due to his young age. George back was rejected for being too argumentative and Francis Crozier was found unsuitable, allegedly due to his irish birth, presbyterian religion, and for being a commoner, Barrow and the Admiralty finally decided on 59 year old Sir John Franklin. This was a surprising choice. Franklin indeed had experience and was well respected, but at 59 years old, he was not a young man.

Franklin was also a bit overweight, older than all the other candidates, and had not voyaged to the polar regions in 27 years. But Franklin had enough friends in the Admiralty to push him through, and he was appointed as commander of the 1845 expedition. Sir John Franklin had already had a long and storied career by this time. Born in Spilsby in Lincolnshire, he entered the Royal Navy in 1800 at age 14 and showed a keen interest in exploration, surveying and science. After two years exploring the coast of Australia with his uncle, Matthew Flinders, Franklin served under Admiral Horatio Nelson during the battles of Copenhagen and Trafalgar during the Napoleonic wars.

He later served as a lieutenant on HMS Bedford and was wounded during the Battle of New Orleans in 1815. Following up his war service, Franklin turned his interest to exploration. In 1818, he commanded the refitted whaling ship Trent on an unsuccessful expedition to find a passage through the icy waters of Norway. A year later, Franklin was chosen to explore the arctic coastlines of Canada. During Franklin's first arctic expedition, from 1819 to 1822, he was tasked with mapping the latitudes and longitudes of North America's coast, as well as taking scientific measurements and observations.

But harsh conditions and lack of proper supplies took their toll. The men struggled with starvation and sickness, resorting to scraping lichens off rocks and eating their leather boots. After wintering at Fort Enterprise, the men struck out for the mouth of the Coppermine river, where conditions were worse and supplies thinned. Ship surgeon John Richardson made it back to the relative safety of Fort Enterprise and reported two of the men had engaged in cannibalism. Richardson also admitted to killing the men who committed these acts.

In total, eleven of Franklin's 19 men perished during the voyage, and only 350 miles of coastline were charted. It was an undeniable failure. Despite the struggles of the expedition, Franklin returned to England a hero. He described the ordeal of his expedition in his narrative of a journey to the shores of the polar sea in the years 1819, 2021, and 22, which he published upon his return, and it included the controversial and quite shocking reports of cannibalism. His narrative was eagerly devoured by the public in an age when the chronicles of a gentleman's adventures were highly sought after.

Franklin was then appointed to a second overland arctic expedition. From 1825 to 1828, Franklin did not make the same mistakes and took sufficient supplies and personnel. Franklin wrote of the comparison between the two voyages. It was impossible not to be struck with the difference between our present complete of equipment and that on which we had embarked on our former disastrous voyage. Instead of a frail bark canoe and a scanty supply of food, we were now about to commence the sea voyage.

In excellent boats stored with three months provision, Franklin traveled about 14,000 miles and mapped roughly half of the continent's northern shores. All of the information gathered by Franklin and his men offered more clues for finding the Northwest Passage. In 1828, Franklin again published a narrative of his narrative of a second expedition to the shores of the Polar Sea. Adding to his fame, Franklin was promoted to captain and knighted by King George IV. He went on to serve as lieutenant governor of Van Diemen's Land from 1836 to 1843.

After returning to England, Franklin made it known that he wished to receive another command, and he soon received it. Following the Ross expedition to Antarctica, the HMS Erebus and terror were again refitted. Upgraded, repaired and reinforced. 20ft of iron siding was added fore and aft to protect the ships from the arctic ice. They were also given cross planking to help absorb impacts from any direction.

The ships were also the first ever in the Royal Navy to be fitted with steam powered engines and a screw propeller, allowing them to reach speeds of up to 7.5 km/hour this was accomplished by installing railway locomotives from the London and Greenwich Railway in each ship to power the screw propellers. Having originally been bombships, storage space below decks was plentiful. In total, the ships carried 24 tons of meat, 35 tons of flour, two tons of tobacco, 8000 tins of meat, soup and vegetables, 7000 liters of liquor, 1100 pounds of tinned pemmican, 9000 pounds of lemon juice and 200 pounds of pepper. Livestock of cattle, sheep, pigs and hens were on board to be eaten. During the early stages of the voyage, the erebus also had three a monkey, which Lady Franklin gifted to the men, a dog named Neptune, and a cat for killing rats.

The ships also carried scientific instruments, photography equipment, and luxury items such as musical instruments and thousands of books. An innovative internal heating system was installed in both ships. Using a series of ducts from the steam engines. Both ships received another impressive a desalination system to produce fresh water from saltwater. The terror and erebus were fully upgraded.

Modern and sturdy ships with enough supplies to last three years and even longer if supplies were stretched. Under the command of the highly respected Sir John Franklin, the expedition was ready to launch the terror and Erebus departed from Greenhithe, England, in Kent, on May 19, 1845, with a crew of 134. Franklin commanded the expedition from the Erebus, with James Fitzjames serving as the ship's captain. Francis Crozier captained the HMS Terror. The ships first sailed to the Orkney Islands for a brief stop for supplies before heading west for Greenland.

Escorted by HMS Rattler and accompanied by the supply ship Barretto Junior on July 4, 1845, the ships arrived at whale Fish Islands at Disko Bay on the west coast of Greenland, where they anchored. Additional provisions were then loaded from the supply ship, and on July 12, crew members mailed their last letters home before a long and uncertain journey. When the ships were completely resupplied, the expedition was ready to set out. Already just two months into the expedition, five of the crew had become gravely ill and were sent home on the HMS Rattler and Barretto junior, leaving a total of 129 crew for the expedition. On the 29 July 1845, the terror and Erebus were spotted by the whaling ships enterprise and Prince of Wales in Baffin Bay off the west coast of Greenland.

This was the last known sighting of the Franklin expedition.

Speaker A
History Daily is sponsored by indeed this week was one of my employees four year work anniversary. She was only the second employee I ever hired back when it was just me and one other. Now my little podcast production company has grown to nine employees, each one a critical piece in the puzzle. So I know that hiring the right people, people who will stick with you and grow with you, is imperative. But when it comes to hiring, searching for a candidate can be hard.

So dont search match with indeed. With over 350 million global monthly visitors, according to indie data, their matching engine helps you find quality candidates fast. And as a listener of this show, youll get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility@indeed.com. onTHIsDAy so just go to indeed.com onthisday rightnow and support the show by saying, you heard about indeed on this podcast. Thats indeed.com onthisday.

Terms and conditions apply. Need to hire you need indeed. History Daily is sponsored by Greenlight. This is the last week of school for my daughter and she has grown up so much. Its been fun to watch.

Like the excitement of the new Taylor Swift album, a new infatuation with Skincare. You know what? Actually along with that, a surprisingly sharp consumer sense. She seeks out product reviews, compares prices, tries to find sales, and manages her own purchases with Greenlight because she wouldnt really know the value of a dollar unless she earns it herself. She saves it herself, and she spends it herself.

We use Greenlight, a debit card and money app made for families. You can send your kids instant money transfers, get real time notifications of spending, manage chores, and automate allowance. Meanwhile, your kids build financial literacy and independence by learning to earn, save, and spend wisely. Even at Sephora, millions of parents and kids are learning about money on greenlight, the easy, convenient way to raise financially smart kids. Sign up for Greenlight today and get your first month free@greenlight.com.

historydaily that's greenlight.com historydaily to try Greenlight for free greenlight.com historydaily.

Speaker D
In 1847, two years had passed since the Franklin expedition set out, and no thought or worry was given about their fate. An expedition such as this would easily be two to three years, so it was not out of the ordinary to have heard no news. But Lady Jane Franklin, Sir John's wife, as well as members of parliament and other influential people, began to push for the Admiralty to send search parties. By spring of 1848, the first of three search expeditions departed England. Captain Henry Kellett was sent to the western entrance to the northwest passage with Sir James Ross and Lieutenant Robert McClure to enter from the east.

Doctor John Ray and Sir John Richardson were to trudge overland, starting at the mouth of the Mackenzie river. Though much effort was put forth, these searches provided no results. By 1850, there was growing pressure from the public and constant urging from Lady Franklin to do more to find the lost men. In response, the admiralty offered a reward of 20,000 pounds for information leading to their discovery, prompting private expeditions to join the search. Between 1849 and 1859, 32 separate expeditions were sent out to search for the terror Erebus and their crews.

On the 23 August of 1850, the first real clues were discovered when Captain Erasmus Omeni of the HMS assistants discovered remnants of Franklins camp at Cape Riley on the southeast shores of Devon Island. Omany wrote, I had the satisfaction of meeting with the first traces of Sir John Franklin's expedition, consisting of fragments of naval stores, ragged portions of clothing, preserved meat tins, etcetera, and the spot bore the appearance of an encampment. While this was helpful evidence, it left no clue of what happened to the men or where they went. Omany pushed on with Captain Horatio Austin Thomas, and later that day spotted a cairn high up on a cliff on Beachy island. This small island is on the southwestern tip of the much larger Devon island.

The cairn was disassembled, hoping to find a note inside, but nothing was found. As word spread of the evidence found at Cape Riley and of the cairn on Beachy island, many more ships approached and large parties of men disembarked. Commander of the HMS Pioneer, Sherrard Osborne, wrote of a boat full of officers and men proceeded on shore. On landing, some relics of european visitors were found. Captain William Penny of the HMS Lady Franklin thoroughly searched the area and discovered more traces of Franklin's expedition at Cape Spencer on Devon island, including a small stone hut, food tins, torn mittens, and scraps of a newspaper dated September of 1844.

On August 27, an excited sailor approached Captain Penny, shouting, graves. Captain Penny graves. Penny hurried to the site, followed by his ship's surgeon, Doctor Elisha Kent Kane. There they saw three tombstones lined up next to each other. Two of the graves were covered with a limestone slab.

Each tombstone included an inscription sacred to the memory of William Brain. RM HMS Arabis died April 3, 1846, aged 32 years. Choose ye this day whom ye will serve. Joshua, chapter 24, verse 15. The next read, sacred to the memory of John Hartnell Ab of HMS Erebus.

Died January 4, 1846, age 25 years. Thus saith the Lord of hosts, consider your ways. The third grave contained the first man to die sacred to the memory of John Torrington, who departed this life January 1, Ad. 1846, on board of his Majesty's ship terror, aged 20 years. The searchers were now confident that they had found the site of Franklin's 1840 518 46 winter encampment.

As the area continued to be searched, additional artifacts were found, including an armorer's forge, remains of tents, a storehouse, and a deceased polar bear that had been shot with a rifle, the same type as had been issued to Franklin's men. Another large cairn was found on Beachy island, made of discarded food tins, but still no note of any kind was found inside. But the graves of the three men left the searchers wondering how these men died so soon into the expedition, Captain Omeny speculated what could have caused such death in such a short amount of time. In a report to the british government in 1852, he we know that three of their men, young men, died the first year, from which we may infer they were not enjoying perfect health. It is supposed their preserved meats were of an inferior quality.

In fact, the supplier of the tinned foods, Stephen Goldner, had problems with the quality of his food with later expeditions, and at the time of the Franklin expedition, Commander James Fitzjames expressed concern about purchasing from an unknown supplier simply because he offered the lowest prices. Another surgeon with Penny's expedition, Doctor Peter Sutherland, wished to perform autopsies on the three men. But this was not received well by other officers and the idea was abandoned. The search expeditions then settled into their bitter cold winter camp in the frozen wasteland themselves. In the spring of 1851, sledging parties were sent out to nearby islands, including Cornwallis Island, Prince of Wales island and Devon island, but no further evidence was found.

Fearing another arctic winter, the northern search parties returned to England. Over the next several years, many more expeditions were sent to search for the lost expedition, both by the Admiralty, american interests, and through private funding by Lady Franklin. Coastlines were charted, islands discovered, and the final stretch of the overland northwest passage was found by Captain Robert McClure. But nothing was discovered regarding the Franklin expedition. In March of 1854, the Admiralty officially declared Sir John Franklin and the crews of the HMS Terror and Erebus as deceased.

But this did nothing to quell the fervor to find out the fate of the men and of the ships. In 1854, Doctor John Rae, a scottish explorer, fur trapper and surgeon, received information from a local Inuit tribe near King William island while he was exploring Boothia. This location is 900 km, or over 500 miles from Beechey island, where Franklin spent the winter of 1845 to 1846. The Inuit people reported that two ships were crushed in the ice and many died of starvation. The Inuit also reported seeing some of the white men dragging sledges south down King William island towards backfish river.

The Inuit discovered mutilated corpses and bones with cut marks on them in pots, indicating some of the men may have resorted to cannibalism. They also possessed european artifacts such as monogrammed silverware belonging to Sir John Franklin, Francis Crozier and James Fitzjames, as well as Sir John Franklin's Hanoverian Order of Merit. Ray was able to purchase some of these artifacts and bring them back to London. John Ray returned to England to report his news, and Lady Franklin, along with Charles Dickens, began a smear campaign against Doctor Ray. Not believing that the distinguished Sir John Franklin and other Englishmen would resort to cannibalism.

Lady Franklin even refused to pay Doctor Ray for his efforts. As Ray's information was secondhand from the Inuit people, it was not trusted and most did not believe any of it to be true. The Hudson Bay Company was asked to follow up on Rays information and chief factor James Anderson discovered a few more artifacts from the Franklin expedition, but did not find anything conclusive. Doctor Ray was ultimately awarded 8000 pounds in reward money and his crew split another 2000 pounds.

With the outbreak of the Crimean War in 1853, much attention was diverted to the support of the war effort. Interest in searching for the Franklin expedition waned, but it did not disappear. Lady Franklin continued to push for the british government to perform one last search, but her efforts were unsuccessful. Instead, she took it upon herself to fund another expedition. Through public donations and a donation of supplies from the Admiralty, she was able to purchase the yacht, called the Fox, and hired Captain Francis Leopold McClintock.

He was a Royal Navy officer and a veteran of three prior expeditions to search for Franklin. On July 1, 1857, McClintock set off on board the fox from Aberdeen, Scotland, with second in command Lieutenant William Robert Hobson. McClintock immediately experienced problems and was forced to spend the winter of 1857 to 1858 stuck in Baffin Bay. By spring, he was able to continue west into Lancaster Sound, reaching Beechey island in August of 1858. There he erected a monument at the request of Lady Franklin.

The inscription to the memory of Franklin Crozier Fitzjames and all their gallant brother officers and faithful companions who have suffered and perished in the cause of science and the service of their country. This tablet is erected near the spot where they passed their first arctic winter and whence they issued forth to conquer difficulties or to die. After stopping at Beachey Island, McClintock headed south and by September of 1858 had reached the bellot strait and set up his second winter camp on the Boothia peninsula. In April of 1859, the men set out overland with sledges, splitting up into three parties. McClintock would head south down the Boothia peninsula and then the eastern shores of King William island, while Hobson was to head to the west and down the west coast of King William island.

And Alan Young took a search party northwest across the ice to Prince of Wales Island. McClintock came upon an Inuit village on the eastern side of King William island, and they told him of white men dragging a sledge across the snow on the other side of the island and then dropping dead. They also had artifacts belonging to the Franklin expedition, which McClintock traded for. Continuing south, McClintock reached the north american mainland, going as far as Montreal island at the entrance to the Backsfish river. Here he found a preserved meat tin, an iron hoop, and other scraps of the Franklin expedition.

Turning back north, he crossed Simpson Strait and reached the southern shores of King William island. Heading west along the southern shores, McClintock's team made a disturbing but relevant discovery. A human skeleton wearing a steward's uniform. Next to the skeleton was a tattered notebook, a clothes brush, and a hair, combined McClintock wrote of this discovery, this poor man seems to have selected the bare ridge top as affording the least tiresome walking and to have fallen upon his face in the position in which we found him. It is probably that, hungry and exhausted he suffered himself to fall asleep, when in this position his last moments were undisturbed by suffering.

The notebook belonged to a man named Harry Pegler, who was a petty officer on the HMS Terror. Most of the messages in the notebook were of no significance and others were indecipherable. However, a badly spelled, broken and partial entry read, o death, where is thy sting? The grave at comfort Cove for who has any doubt? How the dire sad.

It is impossible to determine if the skeleton was that of Harry Peglar or if this was another man who took up writing in the notebook after Peglar died elsewhere. Because the skeleton was wearing a steward's uniform, it is more likely that the body belonged to Thomas Armitage, a gunroom steward on HMS Terror and a shipmate of peglars. While McClintock was searching to the east and south, Lieutenant William Hobson made probably the most significant discovery regarding the Franklin expedition. Starting at Cape Felix at the extreme northwest of King William Island, Hobson and his men trekked south down the western shore at a location known as Victory Point. A stone cairn was found and this time they found a note.

Inside the note was a standard admiralty form with space for a written message and a pre printed request to report the finding of the document to the Admiralty in London. The handwritten message was dated the 28 May 1847 and stated the HMS ships erebus and terror wintered in the ice in latitude 70 degrees five minutes north, longitude 98 degrees 23 minutes west, having wintered in 1846 to 1847 at Beechey island in latitude 74 degrees 43 minutes 28 seconds, longitude 91 degrees 39 minutes 15 seconds west. After having ascended Wellington Channel to latitude 77 degrees and returned by the west side of Cornwallis Island, Sir John Franklin, commanding the expedition, all well party consisting of two officers and six men, left the ships on Monday 24th May 1847. Gm Gore Lieutenant Charles F. Daveau mate this was conclusive proof the Erebus and terror survived the winter and ventured further south.

Curiously, the note left by Gore and Devoe states that they spent the winter in 1846 to 1847 at Beechey island, but this was an error. The evidence found on Devon island and Beechey island already indicated that Franklin had wintered there between 1845 and 1846. This was an error, perhaps due to the cold, hunger and exposure, but written around the margins was scrawled another note of written much later than the first, the note reads the 25 April 1848 HMS ships Terror and Erebus were deserted on the 22 April 5 leagues north northwest of this having been beset since the 12 September 1846. The officers and crews, consisting of 105 souls under the command of Captain Frm. Crozier, landed here in latitude 69 degrees 37 minutes 42 seconds, longitude 98 degrees 41 minutes.

This paper was found by Lieutenant Irving under the cairn supposed to have been built by Sir James Ross in 1831 4 miles to the northward, where it had been deposited by the late commander Gore in May 1847. Sir James Ross Pillar has not, however, been found and the paper has been transferred to this position, which is that in which Sir J. Ross Pillar was erected. Sir John Franklin died on the 11 June 1847 and the total loss by deaths in the expedition has been to this date. Nine officers and 15 men.

Frm. Crozier, captain and senior officer and start on tomorrow 26th for Backsfish River. James Fitzjames, captain, HMS Erebus this note, found in a cairn at Victory Point on King William island in 1859. Over a decade after it was left there, provided evidence that Sir John Franklin and other men had died. It also confirmed that captains Fitzjames and Crozier had survived, at least initially, along with over 100 of the crew.

McClintock later wrote, after visiting the site around the cairn, a vast quantity of clothing and stores of all sorts laid strewed about as if at this spot. Every article was thrown away which could possibly be dispensed with, such as pickaxes, shovels, boats, cooking stoves, ironwork, rope blocks, canvas, instruments, oars, and a medicine chest. The route of the Franklin expedition was now coming into focus. Franklin circled Cornwallis island to the west of Devon island before wintering on Beachy island. The ships then continued south into Victoria Strait, where they became trapped in the ice.

In September of 1846, most likely out of desperation, Lieutenant Gore led a scouting party, depositing these standard admiralty forms with their first note and cairns. Along the way, Gore and his men trekked through the ice and snow another 8 miles and left another note at what is now called Gore Point before returning to the ships a year later. In April 1848, Fitzjames and Crozier abandoned the ships in the ice and led their men to King William island. When they found Gore's note at Victory Point, they added their second message. The ships had spent almost two years frozen in the ice in Victoria Strait.

The victory point note provides the only firsthand evidence of the progress of the Franklin expedition. As the note indicates, the men were heading for backsfish river to the south. It can only be speculated, but it is reasonable to expect that they believed more food and supplies could be found to the south and perhaps even rescue. After finding the victory point note, Hobson continued south and came across a lifeboat from one of the ships. Inside he found two skeletons and many artifacts.

One of the skeletons had evidence of being mauled by large animals, possibly wolves. McClintock described the other skeleton as being untouched and wrapped in warm clothing and furs. Two loaded double barreled guns were found nearby, indicating the men were protecting themselves against some unknown danger. The boat had been prepared for river travel and included a vast amount of goods that McClintock described as a mere accumulation of dead weight, of little use, and very likely to break down the strength of the sledge crews. The artifacts on the boat were carefully logged and included boots, silk handkerchiefs, scented soap, sponges, slippers, toothbrushes, and hairbrushes.

A number of books were also found, including the Bible and the vicar of Wakefield. The only food found on board was tea and chocolate. The boat was found pointed in the opposite direction from Backsfish river, which was where the men indicated they were heading in the victory Point note. This led McClintock to conclude that perhaps these men broke off from the main group and attempted to return to the ships. McClintock named this area cape Crozier, but has since become known as the boat place by historians.

By June of 1859, McClintock had returned to the fox, followed shortly by William Hobson, who was very weak and suffering from his ordeal. Alan Young returned on the 29 June, also in very bad health, having mapped peel sound but finding no traces of the Franklin expedition. McClintock set sail home for England in July of 1859, taking with him the news of the significant discoveries made by his team. The discovery of the victory point note the human remains and the boat place earned McClintock and his men fame and brought closure to Lady Franklin. McClintock was knighted and elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1865, and all members of the crew were awarded the Arctic Medal.

Speaker C
Listening on audible helps your imagination soar. Whether you listen to stories, motivation, expert advice, any genre you love, audible makes it easy to be inspired and entertained as part of your everyday routine. Listening can lead to positive change in your mood, your habits, and ultimately your overall well being. As an audible member, you choose one title a month to keep. From their ever growing catalog, explore themes of friendship, loss, and hope with remarkably bright creatures.

By Shelby Van Pelt it's a unique story about an otherworldly friendship between a widow and a giant Pacific octopuse. New members can try audible free for 30 days. Visit audible.com imagine or text imagine to 500 500 thats audible.com imagine or text imagine to 500 500 Temp check what. Kind of summer are we having this year? A family road trip summer, a beach bum summer, or a wake me up when the sun sets?

Speaker E
Summer with Instacart? Choose your own adventure and skip the shopping side quests. Where available, you can get ice cream delivered to your hotel, sunscreen to the pool, or cold brew to your bed well door in as fast as 30 minutes. Wherever you find yourself this summer, you can get the goods. Download instacart for free delivery on your first three orders.

Offer valid for a limited time. Minimum $10 per order excludes restaurants. Additional terms and fees apply.

Speaker D
American explorer Charles Francis hall lived with the Inuit at Frobisher Bay on Baffin island, and he launched two expeditions to King William island in the 1860s. There, he found evidence of graves, campsites, and other relics along the southern coast. In 1869, an Inuit led him to a shallow grave containing a well preserved body and fragments of clothing. The remains were returned to England, where they were examined by biologist Thomas Henry Huxley and determined to be second lieutenant of the Erebus. Henry Thomas Dundas le Vicomte the remains were interred under the Franklin Memorial at Greenwich Old Naval College in London, but a re examination in 2009 determined the remains most likely belonged to Harry Good, sir, assistant surgeon of the Erebus.

Charles Francis hall collected hundreds of pages of testimony from the Inuit, who claimed they visited the ships and saw the men trekking overlandhouse and dying. Hall later was skeptical of much of the Inuit testimony. In 1881, an expedition by United States army lieutenant Frederick Schwatka led to the discovery of the remains of John Irving, third lieutenant of the HMS Erebus. With the help of local Inuit, Irving's remains were found along with personal items that helped positively identify Irving. His remains were returned to Scotland and buried at Dean Cemetery in Edinburgh.

Of the crew of the Franklin expedition, only the bodies of John Irving and Harry Goodsir have ever been recovered and returned to their homeland. For over 100 years, no official searches had been done for the ships. In 1981, Doctor Owen Beatty, a forensic anthropologist, and his team from the 1845 Franklin Expedition Forensic Anthropology Project went back to the area to investigate. Having a good idea of where to look, the team found the artifacts and three graves on Beachy island. After receiving permission to exhume the bodies, Beatty and his team carefully excavated the frozen tombs.

The remains were remarkably well preserved, and Beatty was able to extract frozen tissue, hair and bone samples and have them analyzed using modern technology. The results confirmed extremely high levels of lead in the samples, as much as 20 times higher than what would be found in humans today. Beattys examination of the food tins also revealed faulty manufacturing, with some of the tins not being properly sealed at its edges. Beatty also found skeletal remains on the southern shores of King William island. After careful examination, he determined cut marks on some of the bones made by a knife or other sharp object.

This isnt conclusive evidence of cannibalism, but it is an additional clue to consider. In 1992, the canadian government declared the Erebus and terror as national historic sites, even though the ships had not been found yet at that time. Finally, in 2014, expeditions led by Parkes Canada found the wreck of the Erebus in just 11 meters of water off the coast of the Attala peninsula. And in 2016, the terror was found 45 miles to the north in what is now called Terror Bay off the coast of King William island. Both of the ships are now in what is Nunavut territory of north central Canada.

Many artifacts were found, including all varieties of personal items, supplies, dishes, and musical instruments. Some still had their contents inside, such as a ceramic jar of prepared mustard. Unfortunately, no personal diaries or logbooks were found, which might help explain what happened to the crew. But Parks Canada continues to maintain the wreck sites as they carefully plan future excavations. In 2017, the british government gave ownership of both ships to Parks Canada in exchange for a share of the artifacts found at the sites.

The canadian government subsequently gave partial ownership to to the Inuit people, recognizing their contributions to finding the sites. Despite the failed expedition, Sir John Franklin mapped more of the canadian coast during his career than any explorer except George Vancouver. The Lost Franklin expedition and the fate of its 129 crew are still a source of fascination and mystery today that is going to do it for the lost Franklin expedition episode. Thank you so much for listening. Shipwrecks and Sea Dogs is written, edited and produced by me, Rich Napolitano.

You can follow shipwrecks and sea dogs on social media at Shipwreckspod, and you can also subscribe@intohistory.com Shipwreckspod for ad free episodes and bonus content and other great perks. Original theme music is by Sean Siegfried and you can follow him on YouTube at or on the web at Sean Siegfried SE. You can also now buy official shipwrecks and seadogs merchandise@shipwrecksandseedogs.com. please check it out. There's a number of different designs and sizes, and you'll be supporting the show and helping me continue to bring you great history content.

Thanks again for listening. Join me again in two weeks for another new episode. And until then, don't forget to wear your life jackets.

Speaker F
From wondery I'm Raza Jaffrey and this is the spy who this series we open the file on Ayman Dean, the spy who betrayed bin Laden.

In 1990, 416 year old Ayman wants to die. He heads to war torn Bosnia to join the mujahideen and save his fellow Muslims. He hopes to become a martyr so that he can be reunited with his dead parents in paradise. Instead, he's about to be confronted by a cruel and bloody reality, a reality that'll lead him to turn his back on terrorism and become the West's top spy inside al Qaeda. Follow the spy who on the wandery app or wherever you listen to podcasts.

Or you can binge the full season of the spy who betrayed bin Laden early and ad free with Wonderye.