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Franklin emerged a hero, however, hailed by his countrymen as “The Man Who Ate His Boots” owing to the fact that expedition members resorted to eating leather during their tortured retreat south.
The fate of the Franklin Expedition has bedeviled millions for nearly two centuries now. In 1845, under the command of Sir John Franklin, two ships, the Erebus and the Terror, set sail from ...
These buttons from the 1850s were left during the search for the lost Franklin expedition. The buttons would guide survivors ...
Louth science communicator, writer, engineer, and performer Dr Niamh Shaw is travelling to the Arctic Circle this month to ...
Parks Canada’s underwater archaeology team explored the legendary shipwrecks of HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, lost on the ill-fated Franklin Expedition of 1845. Their research added to the body of ...
When a white-water rafter fell into the Franklin River, it triggered an extraordinary rescue mission that pushed everyone to ...
A rare Arctic rescue button was sold at auction on Tuesday for £6,000, which was 10 times its pre sale estimate. Auctioneer Brian Goodison-Blanks, of Bearnes, Hampton and Littlewood in Exeter, said ...
The island was named after Devon in England and it has no permanent residents due to its treacherous conditions. The ...
Devon Island is often remembered in association with the ill-fated Franklin Expedition of 1845. A total of 129 men, aboard ...
The expedition, under leader Sir John Franklin, now bids farewell to the party consisting of Commander Graham Gore, Lieutenant Charles Frederick Des Voeux, and six additional men. They are to ...
What makes Silversea different is also unrivalled expedition knowledge of the expert crew. Remote places like Svalbard, ...
In Kaliane Bradley's The Ministry of Time, a young woman must help a naval commander snatched from death in 1847 adapt to the ...