William Robert Hobson (1831-1880)

In April 1854 Dr. John Rae heard from Inuit at Pelly Bay an account of the last fateful days of Franklin's expedition, missing somewhere to the west for a number of years. . When his report of his discovery reached England, Lady Jane Franklin mounted a private expedition . to search for relics...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:ARCTIC
Main Author: Barr, William
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Arctic Institute of North America 1986
Subjects:
Rae
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65122
id ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/65122
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Calgary Journal Hosting
op_collection_id ftunivcalgaryojs
language English
topic Biographies
Expeditions
Explorers
History
Hobson
William Robert
1831-1880
Search for Franklin
Cairns
Bellot Strait region
Nunavut
Boothia Peninsula
Chamisso Island
Alaska
Herschel
Cape
King William Island
Terror Bay
Felix
region
spellingShingle Biographies
Expeditions
Explorers
History
Hobson
William Robert
1831-1880
Search for Franklin
Cairns
Bellot Strait region
Nunavut
Boothia Peninsula
Chamisso Island
Alaska
Herschel
Cape
King William Island
Terror Bay
Felix
region
Barr, William
William Robert Hobson (1831-1880)
topic_facet Biographies
Expeditions
Explorers
History
Hobson
William Robert
1831-1880
Search for Franklin
Cairns
Bellot Strait region
Nunavut
Boothia Peninsula
Chamisso Island
Alaska
Herschel
Cape
King William Island
Terror Bay
Felix
region
description In April 1854 Dr. John Rae heard from Inuit at Pelly Bay an account of the last fateful days of Franklin's expedition, missing somewhere to the west for a number of years. . When his report of his discovery reached England, Lady Jane Franklin mounted a private expedition . to search for relics of the expedition on the site. Commander of the expedition was Captain Francis Leopold McClintock . McClintock chose Lieutenant William Robert Hobson as his second-in-command. . William joined the Navy in 1845 and was promoted to mate in 1852, in the interim serving aboard a number of ships on fairly routine duties. Early in 1853 he was appointed mate aboard Rattlesnake, which had been ordered to take supplies to Plover, waiting at Point Barrow, Alaska, in support of McClure's Investigator and Collinson's Enterprise. These latter ships had entered the Arctic via Bering Strait in 1850 to search for the Franklin expedition from the west. . In February, Hobson, with two seamen and nine dogs, set off on a sledge journey northward across the Seward Peninsula to Chamisso Island. This had been set as the rendezvous for Frederick Beechey in Blossom and John Franklin during the latter's second land expedition in 1825-1827, and hence it was thought that Franklin might have headed here again. Hobson's task was to check for signs of Franklin at Chamisso Island. He returned to Rattlesnake on 27 March, having reached his goal and finding no sign of Franklin. . On the basis of this arctic experience, McClintock chose Hobson as his second-in-command for his search expedition aboard Fox. Sailing from Aberdeen on 2 July 1857, Fox made her way north to Melville Bay, where she was caught in the pack ice and drifted for eight months before she could break free. The Fox found more secure winter quarters the next year at Port Kennedy, near the east end of Bellot Strait, and Hobson led several depot-laying trips to the west side of Boothia Peninsula. During a reconnaissance trip in February 1859, McClintock encountered Inuit near Cape Victoria who possessed various relics from the missing Erebus and Terror, and reported that one of them had been crushed west of King William Island. On the basis of this information McClintock and Hobson set off, each leading a party that included one man-hauled sledge and one dog sledge. . Heading west across Ross Strait, Hobson and his men reached the coast of King William Island. Near Cape Felix they found a cairn and the remains of a camp; by the clothing and equipment scattered around, Hobson deduced it had been a hunting or observatory camp occupied for quite some time by a party from Erebus and Terror. Three days later they found another cairn, originally built by James Ross, and inside it, in a cylinder, the only record that has ever been found describing, in frustratingly brief terms, the final outcome of the Franklin expedition, including the information that Franklin had died in 1847 and ending with the horrifying announcement that the survivors were about to start to walk south to the nearest fur trade post. . Hobson and his men continued south on 7 May. For nearly two weeks they struggled south along the barren west coast of King William Island despite almost constant blizzards. . Hobson reached Simpson's cairn at Cape Herschel on the 19th. Next, he crossed Simpson Strait to the mainland and continued some distance farther east, finally turning back on the 21st. . For his achievements on King William Island, made in the face of vile weather and despite a progressively incapacitating attack of scurvy, Hobson deserves better than the passing recognition that has been accorded to him.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Barr, William
author_facet Barr, William
author_sort Barr, William
title William Robert Hobson (1831-1880)
title_short William Robert Hobson (1831-1880)
title_full William Robert Hobson (1831-1880)
title_fullStr William Robert Hobson (1831-1880)
title_full_unstemmed William Robert Hobson (1831-1880)
title_sort william robert hobson (1831-1880)
publisher The Arctic Institute of North America
publishDate 1986
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65122
long_lat ENVELOPE(-94.806,-94.806,71.994,71.994)
ENVELOPE(-94.000,-94.000,71.001,71.001)
ENVELOPE(-57.083,-57.083,-63.500,-63.500)
ENVELOPE(-97.968,-97.968,69.901,69.901)
ENVELOPE(-74.575,-74.575,78.587,78.587)
ENVELOPE(-36.503,-36.503,-54.283,-54.283)
ENVELOPE(-91.751,-91.751,74.718,74.718)
ENVELOPE(-61.017,-61.017,-64.183,-64.183)
ENVELOPE(-97.418,-97.418,69.168,69.168)
ENVELOPE(157.433,157.433,-80.217,-80.217)
ENVELOPE(-89.717,-89.717,68.433,68.433)
ENVELOPE(-94.334,-94.334,72.035,72.035)
ENVELOPE(-116.053,-116.053,62.834,62.834)
ENVELOPE(-97.165,-97.165,68.499,68.499)
ENVELOPE(-98.951,-98.951,68.868,68.868)
ENVELOPE(-130.703,-130.703,54.035,54.035)
geographic Arctic
Bellot Strait
Bering Strait
Boothia Peninsula
Cairn
Cape Felix
Cape Herschel
Cape King
Erebus
Herschel Cape
King William Island
McClintock
Nunavut
Pelly Bay
Port Kennedy
Rae
Simpson Strait
Terror Bay
William Island
geographic_facet Arctic
Bellot Strait
Bering Strait
Boothia Peninsula
Cairn
Cape Felix
Cape Herschel
Cape King
Erebus
Herschel Cape
King William Island
McClintock
Nunavut
Pelly Bay
Port Kennedy
Rae
Simpson Strait
Terror Bay
William Island
genre Arctic
Arctic
Barrow
Bellot Strait
Bering Strait
Boothia Peninsula
inuit
King William Island
Nunavut
Pelly Bay
Point Barrow
Seward Peninsula
Terror Bay
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Barrow
Bellot Strait
Bering Strait
Boothia Peninsula
inuit
King William Island
Nunavut
Pelly Bay
Point Barrow
Seward Peninsula
Terror Bay
Alaska
op_source ARCTIC; Vol. 39 No. 2 (1986): June: 109–194; 184-185
1923-1245
0004-0843
op_relation https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65122/49036
https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65122
container_title ARCTIC
container_volume 39
container_issue 2
_version_ 1766290866558730240
spelling ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/65122 2023-05-15T14:19:15+02:00 William Robert Hobson (1831-1880) Barr, William 1986-01-01 application/pdf https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65122 eng eng The Arctic Institute of North America https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65122/49036 https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65122 ARCTIC; Vol. 39 No. 2 (1986): June: 109–194; 184-185 1923-1245 0004-0843 Biographies Expeditions Explorers History Hobson William Robert 1831-1880 Search for Franklin Cairns Bellot Strait region Nunavut Boothia Peninsula Chamisso Island Alaska Herschel Cape King William Island Terror Bay Felix region info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion other 1986 ftunivcalgaryojs 2022-03-22T21:22:12Z In April 1854 Dr. John Rae heard from Inuit at Pelly Bay an account of the last fateful days of Franklin's expedition, missing somewhere to the west for a number of years. . When his report of his discovery reached England, Lady Jane Franklin mounted a private expedition . to search for relics of the expedition on the site. Commander of the expedition was Captain Francis Leopold McClintock . McClintock chose Lieutenant William Robert Hobson as his second-in-command. . William joined the Navy in 1845 and was promoted to mate in 1852, in the interim serving aboard a number of ships on fairly routine duties. Early in 1853 he was appointed mate aboard Rattlesnake, which had been ordered to take supplies to Plover, waiting at Point Barrow, Alaska, in support of McClure's Investigator and Collinson's Enterprise. These latter ships had entered the Arctic via Bering Strait in 1850 to search for the Franklin expedition from the west. . In February, Hobson, with two seamen and nine dogs, set off on a sledge journey northward across the Seward Peninsula to Chamisso Island. This had been set as the rendezvous for Frederick Beechey in Blossom and John Franklin during the latter's second land expedition in 1825-1827, and hence it was thought that Franklin might have headed here again. Hobson's task was to check for signs of Franklin at Chamisso Island. He returned to Rattlesnake on 27 March, having reached his goal and finding no sign of Franklin. . On the basis of this arctic experience, McClintock chose Hobson as his second-in-command for his search expedition aboard Fox. Sailing from Aberdeen on 2 July 1857, Fox made her way north to Melville Bay, where she was caught in the pack ice and drifted for eight months before she could break free. The Fox found more secure winter quarters the next year at Port Kennedy, near the east end of Bellot Strait, and Hobson led several depot-laying trips to the west side of Boothia Peninsula. During a reconnaissance trip in February 1859, McClintock encountered Inuit near Cape Victoria who possessed various relics from the missing Erebus and Terror, and reported that one of them had been crushed west of King William Island. On the basis of this information McClintock and Hobson set off, each leading a party that included one man-hauled sledge and one dog sledge. . Heading west across Ross Strait, Hobson and his men reached the coast of King William Island. Near Cape Felix they found a cairn and the remains of a camp; by the clothing and equipment scattered around, Hobson deduced it had been a hunting or observatory camp occupied for quite some time by a party from Erebus and Terror. Three days later they found another cairn, originally built by James Ross, and inside it, in a cylinder, the only record that has ever been found describing, in frustratingly brief terms, the final outcome of the Franklin expedition, including the information that Franklin had died in 1847 and ending with the horrifying announcement that the survivors were about to start to walk south to the nearest fur trade post. . Hobson and his men continued south on 7 May. For nearly two weeks they struggled south along the barren west coast of King William Island despite almost constant blizzards. . Hobson reached Simpson's cairn at Cape Herschel on the 19th. Next, he crossed Simpson Strait to the mainland and continued some distance farther east, finally turning back on the 21st. . For his achievements on King William Island, made in the face of vile weather and despite a progressively incapacitating attack of scurvy, Hobson deserves better than the passing recognition that has been accorded to him. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Barrow Bellot Strait Bering Strait Boothia Peninsula inuit King William Island Nunavut Pelly Bay Point Barrow Seward Peninsula Terror Bay Alaska University of Calgary Journal Hosting Arctic Bellot Strait ENVELOPE(-94.806,-94.806,71.994,71.994) Bering Strait Boothia Peninsula ENVELOPE(-94.000,-94.000,71.001,71.001) Cairn ENVELOPE(-57.083,-57.083,-63.500,-63.500) Cape Felix ENVELOPE(-97.968,-97.968,69.901,69.901) Cape Herschel ENVELOPE(-74.575,-74.575,78.587,78.587) Cape King ENVELOPE(-36.503,-36.503,-54.283,-54.283) Erebus ENVELOPE(-91.751,-91.751,74.718,74.718) Herschel Cape ENVELOPE(-61.017,-61.017,-64.183,-64.183) King William Island ENVELOPE(-97.418,-97.418,69.168,69.168) McClintock ENVELOPE(157.433,157.433,-80.217,-80.217) Nunavut Pelly Bay ENVELOPE(-89.717,-89.717,68.433,68.433) Port Kennedy ENVELOPE(-94.334,-94.334,72.035,72.035) Rae ENVELOPE(-116.053,-116.053,62.834,62.834) Simpson Strait ENVELOPE(-97.165,-97.165,68.499,68.499) Terror Bay ENVELOPE(-98.951,-98.951,68.868,68.868) William Island ENVELOPE(-130.703,-130.703,54.035,54.035) ARCTIC 39 2