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1865 Hall Map of Frobisher Bay, Baffin Island, Canada (important Arctic Exploration Map)

FrobisherBay-hall-1865
$112.50
A Chart of Frobisher Bay and part of the West Coast of Davis Strait showing the Track and Discoveries of C. F. Hall on his Franklin Research Expeditions during the years of 1860 - 61 - 62. - Main View
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1865 Hall Map of Frobisher Bay, Baffin Island, Canada (important Arctic Exploration Map)

FrobisherBay-hall-1865


Title


A Chart of Frobisher Bay and part of the West Coast of Davis Strait showing the Track and Discoveries of C. F. Hall on his Franklin Research Expeditions during the years of 1860 - 61 - 62.
  1864 (dated 1860 - 61 - 62)     16.5 x 22.5 in (41.91 x 57.15 cm)

Description


This is a rare and fascinating 1864 map of Frobisher Bay, Baffin Island and the Davis Straits, Canada prepared to illustrate the explorations and discoveries of Charles Francis Hall. Hall is a fascinating figure in Arctic Exploration. In 1860 Hall, at the time a Newspaper publisher, became obsessed with the idea of rescuing the missing Arctic expedition of English nobleman Sir John Franklin. Despite a lack of substantial funding or experience in the Arctic, Hall set out for Greenland with the plan to use local guides and techniques to aid in his explorations. The full story of Hall's fascinating adventures cannot be contained here, nonetheless, after several years in the Arctic, he did in fact discover the sad fate of Franklin's expedition – starvation and death. This however was not his most notable achievement. Rather, it is his correctly identifying Frobisher Strait as a Bay on Baffin Island. The English navigator Martin Frobisher first explored this area in 1576 in the search of a Northwest Passage. He described the discovery of a large body of open water to the west of Baffin Island. Desirous of a Northwest Passage, Frobisher assumed that the Bay was in fact a strait separating Baffin Island from another unknown island. It was not until Hall explored the area in 1860 that it became clear that Baffin Island was much larger than presumed and that the supposed 'strait' was little more than a large bay. This is consequently one of the first published maps to show this Arctic region with relative accuracy. Published to supplement C. F. Hall's account of the 'Franklin Research Expedition' in 1865.

Cartographer


Charles Francis Hall (1821 - November 8, 1871) was an important American born Arctic explorer who made his most important explorations in the vicinity of Baffin Island and King William Island between 1860 and 1871. Hall was born in Rochester, New Hampshire where he apprenticed to a local blacksmith. Apparently a life at the anvil was not his thing because he seems to have abandoned that calling. Several years later he appeared in Cincinnati, Ohio where he founded and published a local newspaper, The Cincinnati Occasional. Around 1857, Hall became fascinated with Arctic exploration and obsessed with the idea that members of English nobleman Sir John Franklin's missing expedition were still be alive and living with indigenous Inuit communities. It was not until 1860 that Hall was able to finally make it to the Arctic onboard the whaler George Henry. He was dropped off on Baffin Island where he befriended a local Inuit couple, Ebierbing (called "Joe") and his wife Tookoolito (called "Hannah"). This couple, who would remain with him for the remainder of his Arctic explorations, told Hall of the ruins of Martin Frobisher's 16th century mining venture at nearby Frobisher Bay. At the time Frobisher Bay was assumed by westerner cartographers to be a Strait between Baffin Island and another unknown landmass. Hall explored the old mining camp as well as the "Frobisher's Strait" and for the first time on record correctly identified it as a "Bay". While studying the area, Hall also found evidence that he claimed pointed to the survival of several members of Sir John Franklin's expedition on King William Island, to the west. Armed with his evidence and the Inuit couple "Joe" and "Hannah", Hall returned to the United States to raise money for a second expedition. Coming home to a nation embroiled in a terrible Civil War, Hall had a hard time raising funds. Nonetheless, just two years later in 1864, Hall embarked on a second expedition to King William Island in search of Franklin and his crew. Several years later Hall did in fact discover what he considered to be the remains of the expedition - bones, charcoal, and some basic tools. He was horrified that the expedition of 40 or so had been left to starve by local Inuit peoples, though never seemed to realize that the local population could barely feed itself through the harsh Arctic winters. Returning to the U.S., Hall determined to make a future for himself in the hearty field of Arctic Exploration. He petitioned Washington for funds and was successfully granted 50,000 USD to lead a ship, a distinguished crew, and three scientists to the Arctic. The Polaris Expedition, as it was known, had an auspicious start though Hall almost instantly fell out with the expedition's scientists, with whom he fought over leadership issues. The expedition reached Greenland in September of 1871 where it settled in to wait out the coldest winter months. Two months later, in early November, Hall drank a cup of coffee and suddenly fell ill. He died days later while accusing the ship's physician and leader of the three scientists, Dr. Bessels, of poising him. He was buried in Greenland on November 8 of 1871. The official investigation determined that Hall died of apoplexy. About one hundred years later in 1968, Hall's biographer Dartmouth professor Chauncey C. Loomis, made a trip to Greenland to exhume the body. The Arctic cold left Hall in an extraordinary state of preservation and tests were able to conclusively prove that Hall did in fact die of Arsenic poisoning. More by this mapmaker...

Source


Hall, C. F., Arctic Researches and Life Among the Esquimaux. (New York, 1865)    

Condition


Good condition. Minor toning. Original folds. Repair to left margin.

References


Mills, W. J., Exploring Polar Frontiers, p. 283- 286. Cyriax, R. J., 'Captain Hall and the so-called survivors of the Franklin Expedition,' Polar Record, 4 (28), p. 170-185.