Prentice G. Downes (1909-1959)

Prentice G. Downes was one of the most singular men to travel in the North in the last years before the 1939-45 War. An able man in the wilderness and a gifted cartographer, ethnologist, and naturalist, he is best remembered as the author of Sleeping Island: The Story of One Man's Travels in th...

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Published in:ARCTIC
Main Author: Cockburn, Robert H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Arctic Institute of North America 1982
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65405
id ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/65405
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Calgary Journal Hosting
op_collection_id ftunivcalgaryojs
language English
topic Biographies
Canoeing
Downes
Prentice Gilbert
1909-1959
Ethnography
Explorers
History
Mapping
Psychology
Boothia Peninsula
Nunavut
Great Bear Lake
N.W.T
Great Slave Lake
Kasba Lake
N.W.T./Nunavut
Mackenzie River
Reindeer Lake
spellingShingle Biographies
Canoeing
Downes
Prentice Gilbert
1909-1959
Ethnography
Explorers
History
Mapping
Psychology
Boothia Peninsula
Nunavut
Great Bear Lake
N.W.T
Great Slave Lake
Kasba Lake
N.W.T./Nunavut
Mackenzie River
Reindeer Lake
Cockburn, Robert H.
Prentice G. Downes (1909-1959)
topic_facet Biographies
Canoeing
Downes
Prentice Gilbert
1909-1959
Ethnography
Explorers
History
Mapping
Psychology
Boothia Peninsula
Nunavut
Great Bear Lake
N.W.T
Great Slave Lake
Kasba Lake
N.W.T./Nunavut
Mackenzie River
Reindeer Lake
description Prentice G. Downes was one of the most singular men to travel in the North in the last years before the 1939-45 War. An able man in the wilderness and a gifted cartographer, ethnologist, and naturalist, he is best remembered as the author of Sleeping Island: The Story of One Man's Travels in the Great Barren Lands of the Canadian North, a classic of northern canoe travel. . In a letter to George Douglas in 1943, Downes remarked that his having read Napolean Comeau's Life and Sport on the North Shore of the St. Lawrence "had a great deal to do with my ever going north, as I was so interested that I set off for the North Shore to find the old gentleman." Comeau had died, but thus in 1935 Downes commenced his northern travels. In 1936 he took passage aboard R.M.S. Nascopie from Montreal to Churchill, during which trip he made copious notes on climate, geography, wildlife, Ungava Eskimo vocabulary, and northern society. From Churchill he flew to Pelican Narrows and with an Indian companion canoed to Reindeer Lake and back again. In 1937 the New England Museum of Natural History sponsored a solo trip by Downes to study the Eskimos of Boothia Peninsula, before which he made his way to Brochet at the north end of Reindeer Lake and investigated the histories, languages, and ways of the Crees and the Chipewyans. This fascination with northern Indians, and above all with the significance of dreams in their cultures, was central to Downes's travels. The Crees named him "The-man-who-talks-about-dreams." Two of Downes's unpublished writings are a Cree-Chipewyan dictionary and a volume titled "The Spirit World of the Northern Cree: Contributions to Cree Ethnology." The first of Downes's major canoe trips came in 1938, when he paddled alone from Waterways to Fitzgerald, after which he moved on the Great Slave, the Mackenzie, and Great Bear. . The Sleeping Island trip of 1939 - from Brochet to Nueltin Lake - was followed by another, less triumphant, venture into that region in 1940. Despondent as he was at his failure to reach Kasba Lake by way of the Little Partridge River, Downes could still confide in his journal: "Three important routes and one previously unknown river have been worked out. Kasmere Lake is now plotted, both north and east arm. Actually, far more was accomplished than a successful trip through to Kasba would have afforded." Much of the North was as yet imperfectly mapped then, of course, and one of Downes's primary achievements was his meticulous mapping of every obscure route he followed. .
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cockburn, Robert H.
author_facet Cockburn, Robert H.
author_sort Cockburn, Robert H.
title Prentice G. Downes (1909-1959)
title_short Prentice G. Downes (1909-1959)
title_full Prentice G. Downes (1909-1959)
title_fullStr Prentice G. Downes (1909-1959)
title_full_unstemmed Prentice G. Downes (1909-1959)
title_sort prentice g. downes (1909-1959)
publisher The Arctic Institute of North America
publishDate 1982
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65405
long_lat ENVELOPE(-114.001,-114.001,61.500,61.500)
ENVELOPE(-120.753,-120.753,65.834,65.834)
ENVELOPE(-111.602,-111.602,59.850,59.850)
ENVELOPE(-94.000,-94.000,71.001,71.001)
ENVELOPE(62.875,62.875,-67.600,-67.600)
ENVELOPE(-101.672,-101.672,57.880,57.880)
ENVELOPE(-103.286,-103.286,56.336,56.336)
ENVELOPE(-99.834,-99.834,59.999,59.999)
ENVELOPE(-101.158,-101.158,59.571,59.571)
ENVELOPE(-101.950,-101.950,60.217,60.217)
ENVELOPE(-101.568,-101.568,60.000,60.000)
geographic Nunavut
Mackenzie River
Indian
Great Slave Lake
Great Bear Lake
Fitzgerald
Boothia Peninsula
East Arm
Brochet
Reindeer Lake
Nueltin Lake
Kasmere Lake
Kasba Lake
Little Partridge River
geographic_facet Nunavut
Mackenzie River
Indian
Great Slave Lake
Great Bear Lake
Fitzgerald
Boothia Peninsula
East Arm
Brochet
Reindeer Lake
Nueltin Lake
Kasmere Lake
Kasba Lake
Little Partridge River
genre Arctic
Boothia Peninsula
Chipewyan
eskimo*
Great Bear Lake
Great Slave Lake
Mackenzie river
Nunavut
Reindeer Lake
genre_facet Arctic
Boothia Peninsula
Chipewyan
eskimo*
Great Bear Lake
Great Slave Lake
Mackenzie river
Nunavut
Reindeer Lake
op_source ARCTIC; Vol. 35 No. 3 (1982): September: 349–455; 448-449
1923-1245
0004-0843
op_relation https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65405/49319
https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65405
container_title ARCTIC
container_volume 35
container_issue 3
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spelling ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/65405 2023-05-15T14:19:16+02:00 Prentice G. Downes (1909-1959) Cockburn, Robert H. 1982-01-01 application/pdf https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65405 eng eng The Arctic Institute of North America https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65405/49319 https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65405 ARCTIC; Vol. 35 No. 3 (1982): September: 349–455; 448-449 1923-1245 0004-0843 Biographies Canoeing Downes Prentice Gilbert 1909-1959 Ethnography Explorers History Mapping Psychology Boothia Peninsula Nunavut Great Bear Lake N.W.T Great Slave Lake Kasba Lake N.W.T./Nunavut Mackenzie River Reindeer Lake info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion other 1982 ftunivcalgaryojs 2022-03-22T21:22:31Z Prentice G. Downes was one of the most singular men to travel in the North in the last years before the 1939-45 War. An able man in the wilderness and a gifted cartographer, ethnologist, and naturalist, he is best remembered as the author of Sleeping Island: The Story of One Man's Travels in the Great Barren Lands of the Canadian North, a classic of northern canoe travel. . In a letter to George Douglas in 1943, Downes remarked that his having read Napolean Comeau's Life and Sport on the North Shore of the St. Lawrence "had a great deal to do with my ever going north, as I was so interested that I set off for the North Shore to find the old gentleman." Comeau had died, but thus in 1935 Downes commenced his northern travels. In 1936 he took passage aboard R.M.S. Nascopie from Montreal to Churchill, during which trip he made copious notes on climate, geography, wildlife, Ungava Eskimo vocabulary, and northern society. From Churchill he flew to Pelican Narrows and with an Indian companion canoed to Reindeer Lake and back again. In 1937 the New England Museum of Natural History sponsored a solo trip by Downes to study the Eskimos of Boothia Peninsula, before which he made his way to Brochet at the north end of Reindeer Lake and investigated the histories, languages, and ways of the Crees and the Chipewyans. This fascination with northern Indians, and above all with the significance of dreams in their cultures, was central to Downes's travels. The Crees named him "The-man-who-talks-about-dreams." Two of Downes's unpublished writings are a Cree-Chipewyan dictionary and a volume titled "The Spirit World of the Northern Cree: Contributions to Cree Ethnology." The first of Downes's major canoe trips came in 1938, when he paddled alone from Waterways to Fitzgerald, after which he moved on the Great Slave, the Mackenzie, and Great Bear. . The Sleeping Island trip of 1939 - from Brochet to Nueltin Lake - was followed by another, less triumphant, venture into that region in 1940. Despondent as he was at his failure to reach Kasba Lake by way of the Little Partridge River, Downes could still confide in his journal: "Three important routes and one previously unknown river have been worked out. Kasmere Lake is now plotted, both north and east arm. Actually, far more was accomplished than a successful trip through to Kasba would have afforded." Much of the North was as yet imperfectly mapped then, of course, and one of Downes's primary achievements was his meticulous mapping of every obscure route he followed. . Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Boothia Peninsula Chipewyan eskimo* Great Bear Lake Great Slave Lake Mackenzie river Nunavut Reindeer Lake University of Calgary Journal Hosting Nunavut Mackenzie River Indian Great Slave Lake ENVELOPE(-114.001,-114.001,61.500,61.500) Great Bear Lake ENVELOPE(-120.753,-120.753,65.834,65.834) Fitzgerald ENVELOPE(-111.602,-111.602,59.850,59.850) Boothia Peninsula ENVELOPE(-94.000,-94.000,71.001,71.001) East Arm ENVELOPE(62.875,62.875,-67.600,-67.600) Brochet ENVELOPE(-101.672,-101.672,57.880,57.880) Reindeer Lake ENVELOPE(-103.286,-103.286,56.336,56.336) Nueltin Lake ENVELOPE(-99.834,-99.834,59.999,59.999) Kasmere Lake ENVELOPE(-101.158,-101.158,59.571,59.571) Kasba Lake ENVELOPE(-101.950,-101.950,60.217,60.217) Little Partridge River ENVELOPE(-101.568,-101.568,60.000,60.000) ARCTIC 35 3