Wrong hemisphere, I know, but I couldn’t resist sharing the pretty.

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Wrong hemisphere, I know, but I couldn’t resist sharing the pretty.

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Illustration of Magnetic Station on Shore with HMS Erebus in the Background, Outward Journey of the Franklin Expedition (1845) by James Fitzjames. (x)
The final days of Franklin's 1846 expedition have long been a tragic mystery.
A Parks Canada archaeology team is boating towards the graves of the Franklin expedition ships, more than 200 kilometres north of the Arctic Circle, hoping to uncover more secrets from the ill-fated mission.
NOVA 1988
I was planning to do a ‘Things I learned from reading...’ about Frozen in Time by Dr. Owen Beattie but life is super busy right now and I’m still reading the book. So for this week's Terror Tidbits I thought I would post a link to Buried In Ice, a documentary about Dr. Owen Beattie’s investigation into the Franklin expedition, for those who have not already seen it. It’s pretty heavy on the science but definitely worth a watch if you’re a history nerd like me or if you just want to know what (probably) happened to the real crews of the Erebus and Terror.
***WARNING*** This video contains graphic footage depicting the exhumation of bodies preserved in ice. Proceed at your own discretion.

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H.M.S. "Terror," Woolwich, 18th April 1845 MY DEAR KATIE,— Many thanks for your very kind letter of the 11th, which would have been replied to before now ; but I did not get it owing to one of our fellows taking care of it for two days instead of telling me of its arrival. As you say, my visit was one of the shortest, but better that than none at all. I can assure you there was no one it grieved me more to part with than yourself; for somehow or other, from the very first time we met, you and I seemed to understand each other wonderfully well. I got back here on the Monday morning to breakfast, and went about my occupations as usual. We make some show now, having got the masts up and rigging complete, ready for sea, and are now busy stowing away everything, provender, etc. etc., for two years' consumption. They talk of sailing on the 1st of May; but I suspect it will be some days later. As you observe, there must now be a long blank in our correspondence. However that may be, I hope when we meet next we shall not be obliged to part so quickly. . . . Whatever happens, it is the will of God. I hope you do not think me so weak as to labour under any presentiment of evil ; but remember this is no common voyage, and two years is a long period to look forward to in the life of the healthiest and the least exposed to risks. Only one half of Sir John Franklin's former party returned with him, and our "Terror" in her last voyage with Captain Back was so crushed by the ice that she could not have been kept afloat another day, when they got into Loch Swilly. Two years is a long time without any tidings, and perhaps we may be three years at least. Do not give us up, if you hear nothing. But now I will throw over a new leaf with the rest of my letter, and tell you that I am very sanguine of succeeding in the object of our expedition. Everything has been done that the latest improvements in the various branches of arts relating to nautical matters could suggest ; and every reservation against the climate provided for the health and comfort of the crews ; and we must for the rest put ourselves, and, what is dearer, our hopes, into the hands of our Maker. Should it please Him to permit us to return to reap the fruits of our labours, I trust the greater the dangers we may have passed the more gratitude we may be enabled to show in our future lives for the protecting Hand without which, after all, our skill and devices and contrivances are in vain. I intended to write something to amuse you, but I find I cannot help being serious. Everything around me, and every duty I am engaged in, tend at present to make me so,— I mean all keep so much alive the feeling of a long separation from those near and dear to me. Even in writing I am reminded that a terrible long pause of anxious suspense is before me, when I can only hope, without a prospect of tidings of good or ill. So, my dear Katie, do not blame me that you should have been, whilst reading this mass of scribbling, obliged to banish your usual smiles. I will write you yet again, so I shall not take a very formal farewell of you this time. My most brotherly love to my dear Lewis.— Yours very affectionately, JOHN IRVING
Lieutenant Irving’s Letter to His Sister-in-Law (1845) (x)
Terror Tidbits
Every now and then I thought I would post some interesting trivia relating to the Franklin Expedition for those of you who, like me, have finished all 10 episodes of AMC’s The Terror and want to know more.
Things I learned from reading Papers and Despatches Relating to the Arctic Searching Expeditions of 1850 by James Mangles, Vilhjalmur Stefansson:
1. Fitzjames was obsessed with icebergs
2. Goodsir was adorable irl (description provided by Fitzjames in a letter sent before they entered the Passage)
3. Sir Franklin discussed exploration strategies with Lady Franklin before he left #19thcenturycouplegoals
4. The monkey had a rather extensive wardrobe courtesy of the ship’s crew
5. Mr Blanky (who had previously sailed to the Arctic with John Ross) expected them to be away for five, six or even seven years!
Parks Canada
Some info on what archaeologists found on their first dive to HMS Terror last year. Also includes useful links about artifacts recovered from HMS Erebus as well as the Inuit Guardians Program set up to protect the ships.