Ebierbing (ca. 1837-ca. 1881)

Ebierbing, called "Joe" by the many whaling men and explorers who knew him, was a small and diffident man, but in the course of a hard life he consistently displayed remarkable strength, courage, and fortitude, as well as unswerving loyalty to those non-Inuit "kabloonas" who came...

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Published in:ARCTIC
Main Author: Loomis, Chauncey
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Arctic Institute of North America 1986
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65123
id ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/65123
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Calgary Journal Hosting
op_collection_id ftunivcalgaryojs
language English
topic Acculturation
Biographies
Ebierbing
ca. 1837-ca. 1881
Expeditions
Explorers
Hall
Charles Francis
1821-1871
History
Search for Franklin
Survival
Igloolik region
Nunavut
King William Island
Repulse Bay region
Roes Welcome Sound region
spellingShingle Acculturation
Biographies
Ebierbing
ca. 1837-ca. 1881
Expeditions
Explorers
Hall
Charles Francis
1821-1871
History
Search for Franklin
Survival
Igloolik region
Nunavut
King William Island
Repulse Bay region
Roes Welcome Sound region
Loomis, Chauncey
Ebierbing (ca. 1837-ca. 1881)
topic_facet Acculturation
Biographies
Ebierbing
ca. 1837-ca. 1881
Expeditions
Explorers
Hall
Charles Francis
1821-1871
History
Search for Franklin
Survival
Igloolik region
Nunavut
King William Island
Repulse Bay region
Roes Welcome Sound region
description Ebierbing, called "Joe" by the many whaling men and explorers who knew him, was a small and diffident man, but in the course of a hard life he consistently displayed remarkable strength, courage, and fortitude, as well as unswerving loyalty to those non-Inuit "kabloonas" who came to depend upon him. Foremost among those who benefited from Ebierbing's loyalty was the American explorer Charles Francis Hall. Hall first met Ebierbing and his wife Tookoolito, known as "Hannah," at the mouth of Frobisher Bay in the autumn of 1860. Some years earlier, Ebierbing and Tookoolito had been taken to England by a whaling captain. There they had learned some English and had converted to Christianity; . For Hall, a neophyte explorer on his first venture into the Arctic, they were God sent. In the two years that followed they introduced him to the ways of the Inuit and taught him how to survive in the far North. When they were not on the road with the remorselessly energetic Hall, they were able to find peace and quiet at the home of whaling captain Sidney Buddington and his wife at Groton, Connecticut. They came to consider Groton their home, in fact, and when they returned with Hall from his second expedition, Ebierbing bought a house and land there. Hall's second expedition, like his first, was a futile search for supposed survivors of the Franklin expedition almost twenty years after it had disappeared. In five arduous years of roaming in the areas of Roe's Welcome Sound, Repulse Bay, Igloolik, and King William Island, he accomplished little but his own survival, and in that accomplishment Ebierbing and Tookoolito again were his mainstay. . The Polaris expedition was a disaster. Hall died early on, possibly murdered by its chief scientist, and with his death the morale of the expedition collapsed. In the spring of 1873 the ship's captain, Sidney Buddington, headed the Polaris southward. Caught in ice during a storm, he ordered abandonment of the ship. Nineteen members of the expedition, including Ebierbing, Tookoolito, and their adopted child, found themselves marooned on a floe when the partly unloaded ship suddenly drifted away. According to George Tyson, the ranking officer in the marooned party, in the incredible six-month drift on the ice that followed, everyone depended on Ebierbing. "We survive through God's mercy and Joe's ability as a hunter," he wrote in his journal. At the official investigation of the expedition held after both Tyson's party and the men aboard the Polaris had been rescued, Ebierbing and Tookoolito were questioned. And during his interrogation Joe revealed the depth of his feeling about Hall, saying at the end: "Captain Hall good man. Very sorry when he die. No get north after that. Don't know nothing more." But he did go north again - twice more in fact. While Tookoolito remained in Groton grieving the loss of their adopted child, Ebierbing sailed with Captain Allen Young on the Pandora in 1876, a British expedition in search of the northwest passage. . Ebierbing returned from the Pandora expedition to discover that his beloved Tookoolito had died. He remained in Groton briefly, then set out north again, this time with Lt. Frederick Schwatka in his search for records of the Franklin expedition. . When Schwatka returned to the United States, Ebierbing stayed in the North. . He died somewhere in the Arctic soon after the conclusion of the Schwatka expedition. .
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Loomis, Chauncey
author_facet Loomis, Chauncey
author_sort Loomis, Chauncey
title Ebierbing (ca. 1837-ca. 1881)
title_short Ebierbing (ca. 1837-ca. 1881)
title_full Ebierbing (ca. 1837-ca. 1881)
title_fullStr Ebierbing (ca. 1837-ca. 1881)
title_full_unstemmed Ebierbing (ca. 1837-ca. 1881)
title_sort ebierbing (ca. 1837-ca. 1881)
publisher The Arctic Institute of North America
publishDate 1986
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65123
long_lat ENVELOPE(-66.581,-66.581,62.834,62.834)
ENVELOPE(-60.613,-60.613,-62.654,-62.654)
ENVELOPE(-81.800,-81.800,69.378,69.378)
ENVELOPE(-97.418,-97.418,69.168,69.168)
ENVELOPE(69.383,69.383,-48.883,-48.883)
ENVELOPE(-86.666,-86.666,65.018,65.018)
ENVELOPE(-130.703,-130.703,54.035,54.035)
geographic Arctic
Frobisher Bay
Hannah
Igloolik
King William Island
Northwest Passage
Nunavut
Repulse Bay
Roes Welcome Sound
William Island
geographic_facet Arctic
Frobisher Bay
Hannah
Igloolik
King William Island
Northwest Passage
Nunavut
Repulse Bay
Roes Welcome Sound
William Island
genre Arctic
Arctic
Frobisher Bay
Igloolik
inuit
King William Island
Northwest passage
Nunavut
Polaris
Repulse Bay
Roes Welcome Sound
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Frobisher Bay
Igloolik
inuit
King William Island
Northwest passage
Nunavut
Polaris
Repulse Bay
Roes Welcome Sound
op_source ARCTIC; Vol. 39 No. 2 (1986): June: 109–194; 186-187
1923-1245
0004-0843
op_relation https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65123/49037
https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65123
container_title ARCTIC
container_volume 39
container_issue 2
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spelling ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/65123 2023-05-15T14:19:15+02:00 Ebierbing (ca. 1837-ca. 1881) Loomis, Chauncey 1986-01-01 application/pdf https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65123 eng eng The Arctic Institute of North America https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65123/49037 https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65123 ARCTIC; Vol. 39 No. 2 (1986): June: 109–194; 186-187 1923-1245 0004-0843 Acculturation Biographies Ebierbing ca. 1837-ca. 1881 Expeditions Explorers Hall Charles Francis 1821-1871 History Search for Franklin Survival Igloolik region Nunavut King William Island Repulse Bay region Roes Welcome Sound region info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion other 1986 ftunivcalgaryojs 2022-03-22T21:22:12Z Ebierbing, called "Joe" by the many whaling men and explorers who knew him, was a small and diffident man, but in the course of a hard life he consistently displayed remarkable strength, courage, and fortitude, as well as unswerving loyalty to those non-Inuit "kabloonas" who came to depend upon him. Foremost among those who benefited from Ebierbing's loyalty was the American explorer Charles Francis Hall. Hall first met Ebierbing and his wife Tookoolito, known as "Hannah," at the mouth of Frobisher Bay in the autumn of 1860. Some years earlier, Ebierbing and Tookoolito had been taken to England by a whaling captain. There they had learned some English and had converted to Christianity; . For Hall, a neophyte explorer on his first venture into the Arctic, they were God sent. In the two years that followed they introduced him to the ways of the Inuit and taught him how to survive in the far North. When they were not on the road with the remorselessly energetic Hall, they were able to find peace and quiet at the home of whaling captain Sidney Buddington and his wife at Groton, Connecticut. They came to consider Groton their home, in fact, and when they returned with Hall from his second expedition, Ebierbing bought a house and land there. Hall's second expedition, like his first, was a futile search for supposed survivors of the Franklin expedition almost twenty years after it had disappeared. In five arduous years of roaming in the areas of Roe's Welcome Sound, Repulse Bay, Igloolik, and King William Island, he accomplished little but his own survival, and in that accomplishment Ebierbing and Tookoolito again were his mainstay. . The Polaris expedition was a disaster. Hall died early on, possibly murdered by its chief scientist, and with his death the morale of the expedition collapsed. In the spring of 1873 the ship's captain, Sidney Buddington, headed the Polaris southward. Caught in ice during a storm, he ordered abandonment of the ship. Nineteen members of the expedition, including Ebierbing, Tookoolito, and their adopted child, found themselves marooned on a floe when the partly unloaded ship suddenly drifted away. According to George Tyson, the ranking officer in the marooned party, in the incredible six-month drift on the ice that followed, everyone depended on Ebierbing. "We survive through God's mercy and Joe's ability as a hunter," he wrote in his journal. At the official investigation of the expedition held after both Tyson's party and the men aboard the Polaris had been rescued, Ebierbing and Tookoolito were questioned. And during his interrogation Joe revealed the depth of his feeling about Hall, saying at the end: "Captain Hall good man. Very sorry when he die. No get north after that. Don't know nothing more." But he did go north again - twice more in fact. While Tookoolito remained in Groton grieving the loss of their adopted child, Ebierbing sailed with Captain Allen Young on the Pandora in 1876, a British expedition in search of the northwest passage. . Ebierbing returned from the Pandora expedition to discover that his beloved Tookoolito had died. He remained in Groton briefly, then set out north again, this time with Lt. Frederick Schwatka in his search for records of the Franklin expedition. . When Schwatka returned to the United States, Ebierbing stayed in the North. . He died somewhere in the Arctic soon after the conclusion of the Schwatka expedition. . Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Frobisher Bay Igloolik inuit King William Island Northwest passage Nunavut Polaris Repulse Bay Roes Welcome Sound University of Calgary Journal Hosting Arctic Frobisher Bay ENVELOPE(-66.581,-66.581,62.834,62.834) Hannah ENVELOPE(-60.613,-60.613,-62.654,-62.654) Igloolik ENVELOPE(-81.800,-81.800,69.378,69.378) King William Island ENVELOPE(-97.418,-97.418,69.168,69.168) Northwest Passage Nunavut Repulse Bay ENVELOPE(69.383,69.383,-48.883,-48.883) Roes Welcome Sound ENVELOPE(-86.666,-86.666,65.018,65.018) William Island ENVELOPE(-130.703,-130.703,54.035,54.035) ARCTIC 39 2