Harper's New Monthly Magazine
The Rescue Of The Whalers
A Sled Journey Of 1600 Miles In The Arctic Regions.
By Lieut. Ellsworth P. Bertholf, U. S. R. C. S.
June, 1899
The Peculiar species of whale from which whalebone is
procured is only to be found in the polar regions amid the eternal ice,
and scarcely a year passes without leaving its history of ships crushed
and lives lost. In 1871 thirty-two vessels were driven ashore by the ice
and crushed, while in 1876 thirteen were caught in the ice near Point
Barrow, drifted in to the northward with the strong current, and neither
they nor the sixty men left on board have ever been seen or heard of again.
It is supposed that this current, which, as Professor Nansen has proved,
sweeps through Bering Strait and across the pole, carried them into the
polar basin, where they were crushed and sunk, leaving no trce behind.
With the advent of spring large schools of whales make
their appearance, forcing their way under the floes and through the leads
in the ice, bound to the northward. They follow the ice along the shores
of Alaska to Point Barrow, and then turn to the eastward along the northern
shore, where it is supposed they find good breeding-grounds. Late in the
fall they come back, and go south again along the shore of Siberia.
The fleet of whaling-vessels reach Point Barrow during
the first part of August. Arriving there, they follow up the whales to
the eastward, as far as and sometimes farther than the mouth of the
Mackenzie River. It is along here they make their greatest catch;
but they must not remain too long in the season, and the whaling captains
generally reckon on leaving that neighborhood by the middle of September,
in order to reach Point Barrow again before the last part of that month.
From there they work their way over to the westward, pursuing their whaling
south along the coast of Siberia, and finally come out through the Bering
Strait not later than the middle of October.
The fall of 1897, for some unkown reason, came exceptionally
early, and when the fleet reached the vicinity of Point Barrow they found
the way blocked, for the northerly winds had blown the pack ice down on
the shores, and the new ice had begun to make. Some of the vessels of the
fleet, having made a good catch, had started out early and got clear
just in time; but eight of them - the steamers Orca, Jessie H. Freeman,
Belvedere, Newport, Fearless, Jeannie, and the sailing-vessels Wandere
and Rosario - were caught. This in itself was bad enough, but as
they all had expected to reach San Francisco not later than early in the
winter, none of the vessels had supplies enough to last them until spring,
the earliest date when help could be expected to reach them, and starvation
stared the crews in the face. When those of the fleet that had escaped
the fatal grip of the ice reached San Francisco early in November, steps
were at once taken to ascertain whether help could not be sent to them.
The subject was thoroughly discussed at a cabinet meeting, with the result
that the President decided to assign the task of getting help to the imprisoned
men to the revenue-cutter service, the officers of which had seen so much
of Arctic duty.
It was a novel experiment, starting an expedition into
the frozen North during the winter, and as the duty was thought to be dangerous,
volunteers were called for, and it was my good fortune to be among those
selected for the expedition. The revenue-cutter Bear had but just
returned from her usual summer cruise in Arctic waters, and certain repairs
were very much needed; but as she was the best and most available vessel
for the trip, her commander, Captain Francis Tuttle, was telegraphed on
the 10th of November to make all haste to fit her out for the trip north.
Repairs that were absolutely necessary were hurried through, all the stores,
outfits, and fur clothing taken on board, and she finally sailed from Seattle
on the 27th of November, fitted out for a year's absence in the polar regions.
It is extremely doubtful if ever an expedition was fitted out for an absence
of a year in that part of the globe in such an incredibly short time -
only eighteen days. The officers selected for her were as follows: Captain
Francis Tuttle; 1st Lieutenants, D. H. Jarvis and J. H. Brown; 2d Lieutenants,
E. P. Bertholf, C. S. Cochran, J. G. Berry, B. H. Camcen, and H.
G. Hamlet; Chief Engineer, H. W. Spear; 1st Assistant Engineers, H. K.
Spencer and J. I. Bryan; and Surgeons, S. J. Call and E. H. Woodruff.
The Plan was for the Bear, after forcing her way
north as far as possible, to land a party, which was to proceed over-land
as far as Cape Prince of Wales, where they would find several herds of
domestic reindeer. These were to be driven up the coast to Point Barrow,
to serve as food for the imprisoned whalers. To pack any considerable quantity
of provisions was impossible, because, as the domestic deer from Siberia
have not yet been introduced into Alaska in sufficient numbers, the ususal,
and indeed the only, transportation in Alaska in the winter is by means
of dog-sleds. A team of from seven to nine dogs can draw a sled loaded
with from 500 to 700 pounds, but for any extensive trip where the trail
is bad, 300 to 400 pounds is considered a good load, and as the food for
these dogs must be carried along also, it will readily be seen that it
is quite impracticable to pack provisions for any but yourself an dogs
for any great distance. The officers designated for this overland trip
to Cape Prince of Wales were Lieutenant Jarvis, Dr, Call, and myself. Jarvis,
who was to command the party, had served eight seasons in the ArcticOcean
on the Bear, was familiar with the coast, knew the natives well,
and was eminently well fitted to carry the plans to a sucessful finish.
Besides the provisions for the ship's company. the Bear had taken on board
12,000 extra rations for the shipwrecked men when she should reach Point
Barrow in the spring.
We reached Unalaska, the chief of the Aleutian Islands,
on the 8th of December. We left, after coaling, on the 11th, and started
north on the really serious part of the undertaking. The weather holding
good, we made fair time, so that on the morning of the 13th we passed St.
Lawrence island, and having seen little or no ice, we began to hope to
be able to make a landing somewhere on the south side of the Cape Prince
of Wales peninsula. In the afternoon, however, we began to strike the mushy
water (that is, water on the point of freezing), and cosiderable drift
ice began to make its appearance, so that about five P.M. the captain decided
it would be impossible for us to get much farther, and we turned and stood
for Cape Vancouver, as the next available landing-place. At the time we
were in latitude 63 degrees 30 minutes, about twenty five miles northeast
from St. Lawrence Island, which is close to the mainland, and it seemed
too bad we could not land there, as it would save about seven hundred miles
of travel on land. However, there was no help for it, and we headed for
Cape Vancouver.
Here we found that fortune favored us, for the water was
clear all the way to the shore, although, we subsequently learned, the
ice had shut that place in up to within a few days previous, when the strong
southeasterly gale prevailing had driven it off to the westward and cleared
the beach for us. There was a small village here, and as the Bear
was the second vessel that landed there in the memory of the oldest inhabitant,
our arrival created quite a stir. Lieutenant Jarvis went ashore in one
of the ship's boats, and having learned that there were plenty of dogs
to be had in the village, preparations were immediately made to land our
outfits, and by the time it began to grow dark our provisions, clothing,
and camp-gear had been landed safely on the beach, our good-byes to our
shipmates had been said, and we stood on the shore watching the boat as
it went back to the Bear, wondering whether we should ever see our
friends again. There was another man with us, F. Koltchoff by name,
who was to be employed with the government herd of reindeer near St. Michaels,
and was to be taken with the expedition as far as that place. We landed
about four miles from the village. The natives came to meet us in their
kyaks, and transported our outfit to the village. We footed it, arriving
soon after. We found this village, the name of which was Tununak, to consist
of a half-breed Russian trader and his native wife and children, together
with about a dozen of his wife's relatives. His name was Alexis Kaleny,
and as it was he that owned the dogs, and indeed everything else in the
village, arrangements were made with him to take our party as far as St.
Michaels, where we counted on getting a supply of fresh dogs to continue
the journey. As one of the dog teams we were to use had returned only that
day from eight days' trip, and needed rest, Lieutenant Jarvis decided to
use the next day for completing our arrangements and packing the sleds,
and to make an early start on the 18th.
The routes of the members of the rescuing expedition.
The Alaskan sleds are built of wood as light as
is consistent with strength, and lashed together with hide ropes, so that
the whole frame-work will give readily and not be easily broken by the
constant rough usage to which they are subjected. The sled
is from nine to ten feet long, and eighteen or twenty inches wide, with
the runners one foot deep, shod with walrus ivory or strips of bone
fashioned out of jaw-bone of the whale. The rails or sides are about eighteen
inches high, and at the rear end of the sled are handles coming up high
enough for a man to push and guide it without bending very much. There
is a cover made of light drilling which is spread in the bottom of the
sled, and large enough so that after the articles have been packed on snugly
it hauls up over the load and the ends overlap on top. The load is then
lashed the whole length of the sled with hide thongs. By this arrangement
your sled will stand considerable shaking up and capsizing without spilling
the load.
The morning of the 18th dawned bright and clear, and we
were all astir early and ready for our start. We took with us four sleds,
each with a team of seven dogs, harnessed in pairs, with the leader in
front. Jarvis, Call, Alexis, and myself each had a sled, with an Eskimo
to help. About seven o'clock, amisdst an almost deafening howling of the
dogs, we were off, and were soon initiated into the mysteries of snow travel.
I have seen many pictures of the manner in which the Eskimos
travel, and the man is generally seated comfortably on the sled cracking
the whip, and the dogs are going at a smart gallop; but we soon found that
picture to be a delusion and a snare. Journeying in the Arctic regions
consists mostly in pushing behind the sled, for the poor little animals
frequently have to be helped over the rough places and in going up hill
or any rise in the ground. Where there is no beaten trail - as was the
case most of the distance we travelled - the dogs have nothing to
guide them, and one man is obliged to run ahead. He generally runs some
distance, and then walks until the head team comes up with him, when he
runs on again. When the snow is hard and the road level, the dogs, with
an average load, will maintain a trot, which is too fast for a man to walk,
and not so fast as he can run. By alternately running and walking, one
does not become greatly fatigued. Natives who travel from village to village
are so accustomed to this mode of travel that they can keep it up all day
without showing signs of fatigue.
Instead of travelling along the coast from Tununak to
St. Michaels, where Alexis told us the road was apt to be very rough, he
proposed to guide us across the country, striking the Yukon River at Andreafski,
there being native villages scattered along the route at convenient intervals,
so that we could hope to reach one every night, and thus get a few fresh
dogs in case any of ours gave out. The first day we had to cross a range
of mountains apparently some 1500 or 2000 feet in height, and in some places
the rise was so steep that it required three or four of us to help
the dogs pull each sled up. By the time we reached the summit we began
to think how delightful our journey was to be if our trail led us over
many such mountains, since we had some 1600 miles to go and this was only
the first day. The sight before us was not very encouraging, for we beheld
a mountain, higher and steeper than we had just ascended, with a deep valley
between.
We soon forgot our troubles in the excitement of the descent
into the valley, for the dogs were turned loose and we prepared to coast
down. Trees there were none, and the road looked clear, with only a few
patches of brush to keep away from. Each of us straddled his sled, and,
with a native behind to do the guiding, started. All the tobogganing I
had ever done, even shooting the chutes, was tame compared to this. It
had taken about five hours to toil up this mountain, and it took about
half an hour to come down. At first we did not go very fast, for the snow
was quite deep in places and our sleds heavy, but as soon as we got up
momentum we seemed to fly. Once in the descent I lost my balance, and in
a second found myself half buried in the snow and the sled rapidly disappearing.
But here was where the experience of the native came in, for he thrust
out his foot and in some dexterous manner turned the sled, so that it was
overturned in the deep snow.
At the bottom we had to wait awhile for the dogs, for
they had been obliged to come down on foot. They hove in sight, coming
at a good gait; in fact, they had to come fast, for having got started,
they had to keep it up, and one poor little fellow, who could not make
his legs go fast enough in the deep snow, was being dragged by his fellows.
The rest we enjoyed sitting on our sleds whil coming down,
together with the excitement, put us in good spirits again, and we started
for the second mountain with a better grace, for now we had the coasting
to look forward to.
When we reached the bottom of this second mountain, Alexis
showed us the village at which we were to stop, not more than three or
four miles away, and a level road before us. Our arrival at this place,
which rejoiced in the name of U-kog-a-mute, created quite a sensation,
and Alexis explained to us that, with the exception of one or two of the
Jesuit missionaries, white men had not travelled through this section of
the country since the days of the Russian occupation of Alaska. As it was
late when we arrived, we decided not to pitch our tent, but to spend the
night in one of the native huts.
Travelling with dog-sleds.
These huts are buit in a circular fashion, and are about
half underground, with the roof arched over by means of brush and what
wood the natives could pick up in the rivers in the spring. The whole is
then banked up with earth in the fall before the ground is frozen. The
floor is made of tough slabs of wood, and in the centre of it is a small
opening large enough to admit a man's body. This leads into a passage large
enough to crawl along, and finally emerges into a smaller hut, built like
the other one, which in turn opens into the outer air. Over each one of
the openings is hung a piece of deerskin or seal skin. In the roof of the
large hut is an opening, over which is stretched a covering made of the
dried intestines of the whale, walrus, or seal, and , being translucent,
admits the light during the day. The eskimos appreciate the fact that hot
air rises, for the outlet through the floor, being covered, only admits
a small amount of cold air, while the opening at the top, being tightly
ceiled, does not allow any of the warm air to escape. They do not have
any fires in the hut, as a rule, for wood is scarce, and the heat from
the bodies of the dozen or so inmates of each hut is sufficient to make
the temerature inside quite comfortable. The cooking, when any is done,
is carried on in the outer enterance. While this arrangement of not letting
the warm air escape has its advantages, we found out that it has its disadvantages
as well, for no sooner did we all crawl in through the passage and emerge
into the hut than our untutored noses were assailed with an oder that could
not be equalled in any part of civilization that we knew of. The combination
produced by old and decayed fish, ancient seal blubber and oil, together
with the natives themselves, who do not see the necessity of going to all
the trouble of melting snow just to get water to wash their bodies with,
has to be encountered to be appreciated; and beating a precipitate retreat,
we hastened to pitch our tent.
A snow-house encampment.
Our camp-gear consisted of a wall-tent, stove and pipe,
two frying-pans, two camp kettles, two tea-kettles, an axe, two rifles
and one shot-gun, with ammunition, and in addition each man was provided
with a knife, fork, spoon, tin plate, and cup. The tent was made of light
cotton drilling, ten feet long, eight feet wide, and seven feet high, with
walls three feet high. The stove was a simple sheet-iron box, twenty-two
by fourteen inches, and twelve inches deep. The pipe was fitted in lengths
which telescoped into each other, and were short enough to go inside the
stove, so as to take up as little room as possible on the sled. Our provisions
consisted of tea, sugar, beans, bacon, pork, flour, and hard bread. The
beans and pork had been cooked before starting, and only required to be
warmed over at meals, and besides, were thus ready to be eaten in case
we were obligated to camp where no wood was to be had. Our clothing was
made principally of dog-skin, and besides not being warm, was bulky and
heavy, and thus added greatly to the fatigue of travelling. The sleeping-bags
were made of goat-skin lined outside with blanket, and provided with
two covers, one of canvas and the other of rubber. They weighed thirty
pounds each, and besides adding greatly to the weight to be carried on
the sleds, were not very warm. These articles were the best that could
be obtained at Seattle, however, and as the weather was not severe until
after we had obtained a proper outfit, they answered our purpose very well.
The doctor was our self-appointed cook, and as soon as
he had stewed up some pork and beans and made the tea, we all ate a hearty
meal, had our smoke, and crawled into our bags, where we were sound
asleep in a few minutes, for all hands were pretty well tired out with
this first day of unaccustomed travel.
The next morning Alexis made our hearts glad by informing
us that , as far as St. Michaels, anyway, we would not be troubled by any
more mountains, for our road now led us across the Yukon River delta,
which mainly consisted of frozen swamps and small streams. We broke camp,
lashed our sleds, and started about seven, as soon as it was light. But
what impressed me most was how the guide knew which way he was going. There
was no visible trail; we crossed and sometimes followed numbers of small
streams, and the guide did not seem to take much account of our small pocket-compasses.
There did not seem to be any marks by which to tell the general direction,
for the country was level, and there was nothing to be seen in any direction
but snow, with a few clumps of brush here and there.
Shortly before sundown we reached the next village, the
name of which we discovered, by dint of perseverance, to be Ki-yi-lieug-a-mute.
Here Alexis informed us that some of his dogs were too young to stand further
travel, and that the dogs he had hoped to replace them with at this village
were away, and not expected to return for two days. As this would cause
a delay, Lieutenant Jarvis decided to take two of the good teams and go
on ahead with Dr. Call and two of the native guides, leaving me to follow
with Koltchoff and Alexis as soon as possible. By this arrangement he would
lose no time, and could have all necessary arrangements made when we arrived
at St. Michaels. So early next morning the provisions and outfits were
divided, and Jarvis and Call said good-by.
The members of the overland party.
As there was only one tent, I was reduced to the necessity
of sleeping in one of the native huts, and having a whole day before me,
I concluded to make a tour of inspection to find out which seemed least
odorous. There did not appear to be much choice, and having selected one
at random, I broke myself in to my new quarters by going inside for a few
minutes at a time. This I kept up during the day, each time remaining a
little longer, with such good results that by night I was fairly acclimated,
as it were, and after eating the usual evening meal, turned into my sleeping-bag,
imagining I was comfortable. When I awoke in the mornig I found that
the foul air had given me a raging headache, but when I got out in the
open air it soon passed away. That evening the dogs returned to the village,
and having bargained for their use, Alexis informed me that we could resume
our journey the following day. It is wonderful how soon one can become
accustomed to odd conditions, for I awoke the next morning without any
bad effects, and form that on never particularly noticed the odor of the
huts.
We were off as soon as there was light enough to see,
and from this on until we reached Andreafski the country travelled over
did not differ, and the journey was practically without incident. As we
approached the Yukon the brush was more plentiful and larger, and we scared
up several flocks of ptarmigan, or arctic grouse - the first game I had
seen in the country. As I only had a rifle, Jarvis having taken the shot-gun,
I was unable to obtain any, for these birds are perfectly white in the
winter, and very hard to distinguish against the background
of snow. As Jarvis had left me without a thermometer, I had nothing but
my feelings to give me any idea of the degree of cold. The day we separated,
the mercury registered 23 degrees above zero, and although some days seemed
to be colder than others, I attributed the fact to the rising of the wind.
Judge of my surprise, then, at finding, when we reached Andreafski, that
the thermometer registered 15 degrees below zero. Of course I knew it was
colder than when we started, but travelling daily in the open air we had
not felt the gradual change. As soon as I saw what the thermometer had
to say, I began to feel cold.
Andreafski is one of the trading-stations of the
Alaska Commercial Company, and several white men and their families live
there. Jarvis had arrived two days before, and had given the people
a delightful surprise by bringing letters which they would not have received
under usual conditions until the following spring; but Uncle Sam's thoughtful
postmaster had sent all the mail destined for that part of the country
with the expedition.
Having replenished our larder, we left Andreafski the
following day, the 27th. The trail led down the frozen Yukon, and as the
road was good, our progress was much faster than in coming across the delta;
and it seemed, too, as if we had suddenly struck into a civilized country
again, for, whereas, before we reached the Yukon we had met but an occasional
native and sled, here we frequently came across parties of miners travelling
up or down the river, for several steamers carrying miners to the gold
districts had been frozen in at different places in the river, and the
miners were constantly going from one to the other. When we reached the
mouth of the river and made our camp at Pont Romanof, our guide Alexis
was taken very ill, and it transpired he had not been really well when
we started, for he had caught a heavy cold which had settled on his
lungs, so that he was in great pain, and we had to sit up all night
with him. I could do nothing to aid him, for I had no medicines, and, in
fact, was not enough of a doctor to know what was the matter with him.
The next day he was not able to walk, and had to sit all day on his sled,
and as the other native had developed some kind of a sore knee, he
also had to ride, in consequence of which Koltchoff and myself had to take
turns running ahead of the dogs for the next two days.
When we reached St. Michaels, about noon on January 1,
I found that Jarvis had reached there two days before, and had left again
a few hours before we arrived, leaving me a letter of instructions. From
this I learned that the large government herd of reindeer which had been
maintained at Port Clarence had been transferred to Unalaklik, was now
on its way to that place, and had reached the head of Norton Sound. Jarvis
accordingly had made arrangements to travel that far by dog teams, and
from there to Cape Prince of Wales by deer-sleds, which was supposed to
be much the faster mode of travelling. He was then to start
the herds of deer still in the vicinity of the latter place on their way
up the coast. As it would require several herders to drive the deer, and
there was no chance to get provisions between Cape Prince of Wales and
Point Hope, I was to transport 1000 pounds of stores from Unalaklik across
what is known as the Portage, to Kotzebue Sound, and meet him and the deer
herd at Cape Blossom.
The deer train before loading.
As soon as we reached St, Michaels I requested Dr. Edie,
the surgeon attached to the military post at that place, to examine Alexis,
whereupon it developed that he had a bad case of double pneumonia,
and was a very sick man. So he was put into bed and attendants furnished
him, and under the doctor's care he managed to pull through; but it was
hard task, and for three months he was flat on his back, and it is quite
certain, but for the excellent care and treatement he received, he would
never have gone back to his home at Tununal. The dogs we had used thus
far were badly in need of rest, for their feet were all cut and sore from
breaking through the crust on the snow, but as dogs were scarce at St.
Michaels, and I had to wait for the return of the two teams Jarvis took
with him, I bought the best one of Alexis's teams, as it would probably
be in good shape again by the time I would be able to start.
A short halt.
Here I obatined a sleeping bag, clothing, and boots of
deer-skin, and discarded those articles brought from the ship, Jarvis and
Call having done the same. The sleeping-bag is made of the winter skins
of the deer sewed together with the hair turned in. The boots are made
of skin from the legs of the deer, the hair outside, while the soles are
the hide of the oogrook, or large hair-seal. Inside the boots are worn
deer-skin socks, with the hair next to the feet, and inside these again
are worn one and sometimes two pairs of heavy woollan socks. the shirt,
or parkie, is made of the summer skins of the deer, these being lighter,
and is double - that is, it is really two parkies in one, so that there
is hair next to the body, and outside as well. It is fitted with a hood,
which is trimmed around the face with wolf-skin, for the hair of that animal
being long an course, it affords exellent protection from the cold and
biting winds. The trousers are generally single, and made of the thick
winter skins, with the long hair out. Deer-skin combines two very essential
properties - it is very warm and very light; in fact, the double parkie
does not weigh any more than the average double-breasted sack-coat of civilization,
and our sleeping-bags weighed only twelve pounds. Over the parkie is worn
a snow-shirt made of light cotton drilling, so that the driving snow will
not get into the hair of the parkie and wet through to the skin. Our hand-covering
consisted of deer-skin mittens, with woollen gloves or mittens inside,
so that when it became necessary to work around the sled or adjust the
dog-harness, the clumsy deer mit could be slipped off, and the hands still
protected by the woollen gloves while working.
On the 6th of January, my dogs' feet having healed properly,
I concluded to go on to Unalaklik, and there intecept the other teams returning,
in order to save that much time. I took a native boy with me as a guide,
and although Unalaklik is but sixty miles from St. Michaels, it took us
three days to make the trip, for the road led along the shore, where the
ice had shelved and piled up, making an exceedingly rough and hummocky
trail. Imagine a road strewn with rocks and bowlders of all sizes, packed
close to-gether, and some idea of our trail will be gained. Our progress
was necessarily slow, as the sled required constant watching and guiding
to keep it from overturning, which, however, it did very frequently, despite
our best efforts, and the next three days were very fatiguing; but
we finally pulled into Unalaklik on the evening of the 8th, without any
serious mishaps. We passed two natives, however, on the way, who were packing
their load on their backs, their sled having been broken by the difficult
trail.
Eskimo children.
Unalaklik has a native population of some two hundred,
with Swedish, mission school, and a trading-station belonging to the Alaska
Commercial Company, managed by a Norwegian named Englestadt. By this time
the thermometer was registering during the day from 35 degrees to
40 degrees below zero, but as we were well provided with skin clothing
we did not suffer from the cold, except when we were obliged to face the
wind in travelling. After waiting here at the log house of the trader until
the 15th, and the dogs not having yet arrived, I concluded to go on to
Koyuk, at the head of Norton Sound, taking what provisions I could with
my one team, pick up all the dogs I could on the way, and send them
back for the remaining part. On the way, as expected, I fell in with the
two teams Jarvis had sent back, but as they seemed to be played out, they
were of no use to me.
At Koyuk, which is a native village composed of two huts,
on the 19th, I found myself with but one team, for the extra teams I had
but one team, for the extra teams I had been led to expect at this place
were not visible. So the following day I started for Golofnin Bay, three
days' travel to the wetward, where there was another trading-post, hoping
to be able to get the necessary dogs there. Again I was doomed to diappointment,
however, for all the dogs belonging to that station were absent on
a trip into the country. A few miles from here was the government
herd of reindeer, and there I went next; and after much talking with the
Lapp herder in charge (for the superintendent, Mr. Kettleson, had gone
up the coast with Jarvis), succeeded in convincing him I was an officer,
and obtained some sled-deer and two drivers. With this oufit I returned
to Koyuk, reaching that place on the 29th, and there found two more dog
teams waiting for me, with the rest of the provisions. In response to an
urgent note I had sent to him by a native runner, the trader at Unalaklik
had managed to scrape together these two teams, but they were a sorry lot
of dogs.
The midnight sun.
A deer-sled is about half as long as a dog-sled, very
much wider, and not so high, so that it cannot be easily overturned by
the somewhat erratic movements the deer ofttimes indulges in. The deer-harness
consists of a wooden collar and a belly-band. The trace by which he hauls
the sled is made fast to the collar and belly-band, and leads under him
and between his hind legs to the sled, being made of hide, and covered
with soft fur where it takes against his legs, so as not to chafe through
the skin. Around the base of the horns is secured the strip of hide rope
which the driver uses as a guiding-line. As a single deer is generally
used to each sled, and he soon tires with a load of more than
150 pounds, one man drives a train of several, each deer being secured
by his guiding-line to the sled ahead, while at the same time his trace
is fastened to the sled he is to draw. The head sled is used for the driver
only, who generally sits down, except when he is obliged to trot along
side to keep warm. In this way , if the deer are well trained and follow
readily, one man can drive a train of ten or more. The deer we had were
not very well trained, however, and one man drove but three, thus leaving
but four of the six sleds for freight. the real advantage of the deer lies
in the fact that food for them does not have to be carried if one is passing
through a country where the moss is plentiful. In travelling we usually
halted once during the day to allow the deer to feed, and again at night,
at which times he paws up the snow with his hoofs, using them very skilfully,
thus exposing the moss beneath. When the snow is very deep, this causes
the deer much labor, so that after dragging a sled all day, and working
half the night for his food, he seems to need a day of rest in each four
or five, for, after all, the deer is rather a delicate animal. The dogs,
on the contrary, are very tough little fellows, and will travel day after
day right along if properly fed, unless their feet become badly cut by
the crusty snow.
From Koyuk we followed the course of the Koyuk River,
making short-cuts occasionally where the stream turned aside from our general
direction, until we reached the head of that stream, when we struck across
the hills until we came to the source of the Buckland River, which we then
followed to its mouth. This brought us to Ecsholtz Bay, and after that
we kept along the coast to the mouth of Hotham Inlet. We passed through
a gently rolling country, which was devoid of trees or shrubbery except
along the rivers, where we found brush in abundance, together with some
scrubby pine trees.
The Station at Cape Smyth.
Each night, when we reached a clump of pines at which
the guide had decided to camp, the deer train was driven a mile or so to
leeward, so that the dogs would not scent them during the night and cause
a stampede. The one of us would pitch the tent while another chopped a
supply of firewood, and still another unharnessed the dogs
and unloaded the sleds, for the dogs would devour everything left within
reach. Boots or skin clothing left carelessly exposed were always found
half chewed in the morning, for the poor little fellows never get a square
meal when travelling in the winter, and are ravenous. We would then start
the fire in the stove, and another outside the tent to help melt the snow
or ice, to obtain water for drinking and cooking. The beans, which had
been boiled before starting, were always frozen so solid they had
to be chopped off with the axe, and indeed everything that had the least
moisture in it was frozen solid in a day. Our meals consisted of pork and
beans cooked in the camp kettle, tea, and, when the hard bread gave out,
"flap-jacks." We would mix up a batter of flour and water, and make the
flap-jacks as large as the frying-pan to save time, using the bacon for
grease, and when that was gone seal oil took its place. The Eskimos are
experts at this sort of cooking, but as they never wash their hands, I
always did my own and let them cook for themselves.
After the meal was finished we would proceed to the very
trying task of feeding the dogs. Each man took in his arms
one dried fish for each dog, and then tried to get his team all together
and away from the others. The poor hungry little fellows would jump up
after the fish, and in their eagerness to obtain a mouthful it was a difficult
matter to keep from being knocked down and bitten. But finally a fish would
be thrown to each one, and then you would have to stand by with a club
to drive off any dog that gulped his fish down and then tried to
steal from the others. As soon as all the fish intended to be used
had been given out and devoured, and the dogs saw no more was coming, they
would lie down quietly and go to sleep, and we would then go to our
tent, close the flap to keep out as much cold air as possible, and I would
enjoy a smoke, and watch the natives puff contentedly at their curious
long ivory pipes. And finally, having finished our smoke, we would crawl
into our bags and be asleep in a jiffy. Sometimes we were obligated to
camp where there was not a sign of wood, and then our supper would be frozen
pork and beans and cold water, which latter we always carried with us on
the sled in a pail, wrapped tightly in some artical of clothing to keep
it from freezing solid. In the morning the one that awoke first would
arouse the others, and we would have our breakfast and smoke, load the
sleds, harness the dogs, and be off again at seven o'clock.
As I have said, our guide led us through a comparatively
level country, and had the snow not been very deep and soft, we would have
made a quick trip across. As it was, we were obliged to use snow-shoes
nearly all the time, and often had to tramp back and forth ahead
of the dog teams in order to pack the snow down for the little fellows.
We did not reach Cape Blossom until the evening of February 11.
The survivors of the dog team that dragged us twenty-four
hundred miles.
Meanwhile, Jarvis and Call, travelling light, had pushed
rapidly along the coast from St. Michaels until they reached the government
herd of deer to which I have already referred, whence they sent back their
dog teams for my use, and taking deer-sleds, kept on to Point Rodney, at
which place was a herd of 138 deer, owned by an Eskimo called Charley (his
native name being Artisarlook). The government had contemplated the use
of its large herd for an expedition up the Yukon for aid of the miners
their, and Jarvis had been instructed not to take from that herd unless
compelled to do so. It is difficult to make an Eskimo undersrand that you
can pay back a debt you may wish to contract unless you have the visible
means at hand, and had Charley not known Jarvis for several years, and
always been treated well by the officers of the Bear, it is extremely
doubtful if he woud have allowed his deer to be taken. It was not without
many misgivings, however, that he finally let them go, for it must be remembered
they represented the support of his family and those dependent upon him.
He was also afraid there might be a delay in obtaining the deer from Siberia
in the spring, and then the other natives would laugh at him, and this
last is a very serious offence from a native stand-point. But all his scruples
were finally overcome, and he not only allowed his deer to be taken, but
agreed to leave his family and go along to help drive the herd. Leaving
Dr. Call to come with Charley and the herd, Jarvis proceeded along the
coast, stopping at Port Clarence to arrange for provisions to be sent to
Point Rodney for the use of Charley's family during his absence,
and reached Cape Prince of Wales January 24. At this place is a mission
in charge of Mr. W. T. Lopp, and in his charge also were 294 deer, mostly
belonging to the American Missionary Society, the remainder being owned
by the natives engaged in herding them. It was of course an easy thing
to obtain the deer from Mr. Lopp, provided the Treasury Department would
garantee their return, but the same argument had to be gone through with
the natives as with Charley. However, the fact that Charley had let his
deer go, together with the additional persuasion of Mr. Lopp, soon induced
them also to part with their deer. This would give Jarvis a herd
of 443 including a few straggling deer he had bought from outside natives,
and this was thought to be suffcient for the people at Point Barrow.
Several days were now taken up with the preparations that
had to be made, the sleds repaired, and the necessary fur clothing put
together, but on February 3, Dr. Call having come up with Charley and his
herd, the whole outfit was ready to start on its long journey north. This
was no light undertaking, for there were some 700 miles through practically
uninhabited country to be travelled, and the herd was to be driven by Alaska
natives entirely, while it had always been supposed that none but experienced
Laplanders or Siberians could care for or drive a herd of deer properly.
The sequel shows that the Eskimos were fully equal to the task, for the
herd reached Point Barrow in a very short time, and with a surprisingly
small number of casualties among the deer. Mr. Lopp being well aquainted
with the natvie language, and having his herders well in hand, agreed to
accompany the expedition to Point Barrow to overlook things generally in
the deer camp, and when the start was made on Frebruary 3, besides Jarvis
and Call, there were Lopp and six herders in the outfit, necessitating
eighteen sleds to carry the provisions, tents, and camp gear.
The route lay along the northern part of the Cape Prince
of Wales peninsula, about fifteen miles from the coast, where the deer-moss
was plentiful. The method of driving the deer was quite simple. The
herders would go close up to the herd, which woud at once strt ahead in
a walk. Then, with one herder on each flank and a couple in the rear,
they would keep the deer moving, the flanking herders preventing any deviation
from the general direction to be travelled. the little deer-dogs, of which
there were three, were of great service. They would keep behind the
herd, and whenever any of the deer would straggle or attempt to get to
one side, the dogs would run after them, bark and snap at their heels,
and force them back to the herd. These little dogs were of the Lapland
breed, about as large as a collie, and seemed to be untiring. Each night
the herd was halted at places where the snow was not very deep, so they
would be able to feed with little exertion as possible. During the winter
months the deer give very little trouble, for they seldom stray or wander
from the main herd, being content to crop their fill of the moss, and then
lie down until started ahead in the morning.
The guiding-line of the sled-deer is always left on his
horns, so he may be easily caught and harnessed when wanted. The herd was
driven on an average from ten to fifteen miles a day, and towards evening,
when it was time to go into camp, the deer train would drive ahead, find
a spot where the moss was plentiful, pitch a tent, build a fire, and get
the evening meal all ready for the weary herders when they came up with
the herd. During the day it was usual to halt the deer about noon
to feed, at which time the men would fortify themselves for the afternoon
with tea and hard bread.
House at Point Barrow in summer.
In travelling along the coast-line there is always drift-wood
to be picked up for fires, but when the trail leads back from the coast,
and the trees are very few, small sticks are gathered during the day, and
put on the sleds, in order to have enough to cook with at night and the
following morning. Fires are seldom used for warmth alone in travelling,
for inside the tent one is screened from the wind, and once you are in
the sleeping-bag no fires are needed. The only delay in travelling in the
winter is caused by the blizzards. At such times the wind picks up the
loose dry snow, and drives it with such force and in such quantities that
one cannot see ten feet ahead, and it is impossible to face the gale. The
only thing to do at such times is to make camp at once and wait for
the wind to go down. Often people who have become separated have wandered
about until they dropped from exhaustion, and have then frozen.
One day when the snow was driving so that the sled ahead
could not be seen, Jarvis was seated on the rear deer-sled of the train.
Suddenly his sled struck a stump in the road, which broke the trace. He
shouted as loudly as he could, but all to no avail; no one could
hear him, and the man on the sled ahead could not see what had happened.
So after waiting some time for some one to come back, Jarvis concluded
that they would not notice he was left until the train stopped to camp
- which proved to be the case - and crawled into his sleeping-bag,
which he fortunately had on the sled with him. Had he tried to run after
the train, he would probably have lost the trail and wandered about all
night; but deer will follow a trail when a man could not see.
When the herd had travelled to abreast Cape Espenberg,
Jarvis decieded to go to the coast, procure dogs at some village, and come
on ahead to meet me at Cape Blossom, leaving Lopp to follow with
the deer as quickly as possible.
I had reached that place on February 11, and he and Call
drew up on the evening of the 12th, having crossed on the ice from Espenberg
that day. Of course, as we had not seen each other since we parted company
Dec. 20, we had lots to say, and sat up far into the night telling
each other all about it. On the 15th Jarvise left for Point Hope, leaving
me behind with the provisions for Lopp and the herders, and instructions
to follow with the herd as soon as it came along.
The weather up to this time had been generally good, very
few days having been lost, and although the mercury was mow registering
between 40 degrees and 50 degrees below, we did not experience any great
inconvenience except during a blizzard, and then our tent, proved a good
refuge. Sometimes, however, the wind was too strong for the tent to stand,
and then we were forced to build a snow house. We would find the most covenient
drift, dig a hole in it large enough to hold us all, and roof it over with
blocks of snow cut with our long knives, leaving a hole to crawl in through,
and filling up the cracks, where the blocks joined, with loose snow. Our
provisions and sleeping-bags were then put inside, and we would crawl in
ourselves and block up the door, leaving no opening at all. The warmth
of our bodies would soon raise the temperature so that the snow would begin
to melt on the inside, and here we would remain until the blizzard
had passed or blown itself out. The dogs outside were all right, for they
would curl up and go to sleep, no matter how hard it blew or how
cold it was. When the snow drifted over them they would get up, shake
it off, and lie down for another nap.
The "Rosario" crushed in the ice.
There was plenty of drift-wood to be picked up at Cape
Blossom, but waiting is very tiresome in a country where one sees nothing
but an expanse of snow and ice, and I was very glad when Lopp showed up
on the 18th. He had crossed on the ice with the deer herd from Cape Espenberg
to Cape Krusenstern, reaching the latter place the previous morning.
At a native hut there he found a letter from Jarvis, telling him where
I was to be found, and had come over to Cape Blossom with dog teams, leaving
the deer behind for a rest.
As I sent back all my dog teams, we loaded the provisions
on my deer-sleds and Lopp's dog-sleds, and we returned to Krusenstern,
reaching there on the 19th. Here we remained until the 21st, to afford
the deer a much needed rest, and then started along the coast toward Point
Hope. Our good fortune as to the weather now left us, and for the next
few days we had a succession of blizzards, during which time we scarcely
made five miles each day. One morning, after having been obliged to camp
the previous afternoon on account of the driving snow, we awoke to find
our tent nearly drifted over, only the ridge-pole showing. We were obliged
to dig ourselves out, and then spend the whole forenoon digging to
recover our sleds and outfit. When we reached the mouth of the Kivalena
River, at which Lopp was to strike inland to cut off the long journey around
Point Hope, I left him, having procurded the necessary dog-sleds, and proceded
to this latter place, where according to instructions, I was to meet Jarvis
again. When I got as far as Cape Seppings, I learned from some natives
that he had gone back to the Kivalena to meet Lopp, so I waited until he
returned, when we both kept on to Point Hope, reaching there on the
2d of March. There being a cosiderable store of flour and other provisions
at Liebes's whaling-station here, it was decided I should remain at this
place to care for any of the shipwrecked men Jarvis might send down from
Point Barrow, should he find that measure advisable upon reaching
the latter place. On March 4, having replenished their stores, Jarvis and
Call set out again, this time for the last stage of their journey, and
after a very arduous trip, for the snow was very deep and the road bad,
they reached Point Barrow on the 29th.
The Officers of the "Bear" in undress uniform
When the whaling-vessels found themselves hemmed in by
the ice the previous fall, three of them - the Orca, Freeman,
and Belvedere - had by desperate efforts succeded in cutting and
blasting their way around Point Barrow and as far as the Sea-Horse Islands,
about fifty miles farther south. Here the Orca was crushed, and
sank soon after, her crew escaping to the Belvedere. Later the same
day the Freeman, being nipped and threatened with destruction, was
abandoned, her crew also escaping across the ice to the Belvedere,
which had managed to get in behind the Sea-Horses, where she was
protected from the crushing pressure of the ice pack. A day or two later
the Freeman was set afire to by some natives, and was destroyed.
Here, then, was a worse state of affairs - these two crews destitute, for
of course whatever stores the two ships had remaining were lost. At Cape
Smyth, ten miles south of Point Barrow, is a shore whaling-station managed
by Mr. Charles D. Brower, who has lived in northern Alaska for nearly
fifteen years. Having quite a supply of provisions, he took matters in
hand when disaster overtook the vessles, and, but for his care and management,
it is certain that many of the men would have perished before the expedition
came to their relief. Brower employed some 200 natives, and the stores
referred to were principally for their support during the winter.
With about 300 whalers to feed in addition, things did not look very cheerful.
The situation of the ships was as follows: the Rosario close
to Point Barrow, the Newport and Fearless about a mile off
shore, fifteen miles to the eastward, and the Jeannie some thirty
miles farther eastward, and four miles off shore - all, of course frozen
in the ice. the whereabouts of the Wanderer was not known at that
time, but it was subsequently ascertained that after finding out how ice
was at Point Barrow, she made her way back to Herschel Island, where the
whaler Mary D. Hume was wintering, with two years' supplies.
The "Bear" caught in the ice at Cape Smyth.
Brower held a consultation with the captains, and it was
decided that the vessels should keep on board as many as their stores
would support, and send the rest of the crews to his station at Cape Smyth.
He then called together his natives, explained to them that all his provisions
must be saved for the white men, and told them that they, being well supplied
with fur clothing and accustomed to the sever cold of the country, must
go back to the mountains and make great efforts to kill all the wild deer
they could find, and that though he could not give them any flour during
the winter, as usual, they would be well rewarded in the spring when the
ships arrived from the south. The natives having assented to this, they
took their dogs and sleds, travelled back into the mountains some 150 or
200 miles, and so faithfully did they follow the instructions of Mr. Brower
that, during the winter, up to the time when Jarvis arrived, they killed
and sent into the station over 1000 wild deer. Providence seems to have
had a hand in this, because for some unknown reason the wild deer
wandered to that part of the country in greater numbers than had been known
for twenty years. Brower gave up all his stores to the whalers and divided
them into daily rations, but the amount was so little that many would have
starved but for the deer the natives sent in from the hills. Even with
these the daily allowance was limited, but it sufficed.
When the expedition arrived with the government herd,
the poor fellows enjoyed the first square meal they had seen for many a
long day. It was a memorable afternoon, that 29th of March, when
Brower saw two strange sleds approaching from the south; and he could scarcely
believe his eyes when these sleds drew up at his house and was greeted
by Lieutenant Jarvis. His first impression was that the Bear had
been lost somewhere on the coast below, for he had seen that vessel leave
in the fall, and could not imagine what would bring any of her officers
up to that part of the country in the middle of winter but shipwreck.
When the poor half-starved sailors learned that there was a herd of over
400 deer coming up the coast for them, they could scarcely contain themselves
for joy.
The following day, the deer herd having reached
a place about twenty miles below Cape Smyth, where the moss was abundant,
Lopp halted it, and went on ahead to join Jarvis. Having left his wife
and family at Cape Prince of Wales, Lopp was very anxious to get back,
now that his work was done, so after resting for a few days he started
on his return, leaving Charley and one herder behind to look after the
deer. As I had, in the mean time, made a trip up the coast from Point Hope
as far as the Pitmegea River, and there cach'ed provisions and dog food
for the use of whoever might be coming down the coast, Lopp did not have
to pack supplies for the entire trip, and thus being able to travel light,
he made the trip in ten travelling days, and reached Point Hope April 19.
Resting his dogs there for afew days, he set out again on the 23d, and
reached Cape Prince of Wales May 5, thus having, together with his herders,
driven a herd of reindeer over bad roads of snow and ice, through a country
but little known, dragging all their provisions a distance of about 700
miles, and then returned to his home, in the remarkably short time of three
months and two days.
Ice piled up by the crush that nearly stove in the "Bear's"
side.
The powers of endurance of the Eskimo dogs are wonderful.
The team I bought at St. Michaels, having already brought us that far,
took me to Golofnin Bay, back again to the head of Norton Sound, and then
across the country to Cape Blossom. From there it took Jarvis to
Point Barrow, and finally returned with Lopp to Cape Prince of Wales, thus
having travelled over 2400 miles. It had dragged heavy loads, most of the
way over difficult trails, and had had only a few days' rest at odd times.
Only one dog was lost out of the seven (he having been shot at Cape Smyth);
the other six were in exellent condition at the end of the journey.
It must be remembered, too, that when travelling through country where
villages are few and far between, dog food must be carried along, and most
of the time these dogs received but one meal a day, and that meal was a
small one.
The day after Jarvis arrived at Cape Smyth he investigated
the state of affairs, and found that though the men had fared better as
regards food than could possibly have been expected, they were very badly
off in the matter of quarters. In the fall, when Brower had got all the
surplus men from the ships to his station, he found the problem of providing
quarters for them difficult. There were other buildings besides his own
station at cape Smyth, but though Dr. Marsh, the missionary at that
place, had a school-house in which he taught the natives, he did not offer
it for the use of the shipwrecked men. The old government refuge station,
which had been built to accommodate 100 men in an emergency, had been sold
to the Pacific Steam Whaling Company, and by it leased to Mr. E. A. McIlhenny,
who occupied it at that time, being engaged in scientific pursuits; but
he declined to take in any but the officers of the wrecked vessels.
There was still another house, an old dilapidated building called "Kelley's
old house," and after taking as many as he could into his own house, Mr.
Brower, feeling he had no real authority to force the men upon anybody,
was obliged to quarter the remaining seventy-eight men in this old building,
fifty by twenty-five feet. Of course in such cramped quarters it was impossible
to get sufficient ventilation and still keep the house warm enough to
live in, and besides, it was very dificult to keep the men and the building
clean. When the expedition arrived, Lieutenant Jarvis having authority
from the department to assume charge of affairs, immediately made such
arrangements that the school-house and refuge station were brought into
use, and the men provided with decent quarters. The old house, being in
a deplorable condition, was then torn down, and used for firewood, which
was very scarce, for all the drift-wood for miles along the beach had been
burned during the winter. Owning to the scanty allowance the men had lived
on, and the bad quarters in which they had been obliged to live, scurvy
had begun to make its appearance, two men being down with it and two more
being threatened; but Dr. Call soon got the upper hand of the dread disease,
and with the men in comfortable quarters, such sanitary regulations were
enforced as would prevent its return. The men were obliged to take exercise
regularly, and when there was no work to do, they had to play ball.
A Ball-game with the ground covered with snow and the thermometer away
below zero was certainly a novelty.
Hauling coal from the "Bear" to the whaling-ships
It could be said that the overland expedition had finished
the difficult part of its task, for the men were comfortably quartered
and in good health, the arrival of the deer herd had dispelled any possible
fear of starvation, and there was nothing to do now but to keep the men
occupied and in good health and spirits, and wait patiently as we might
for our ship to arrive in the spring.
After the Bear had landed us at Cape Vancouver
in December, she steamed back to Unalaska, where she remained durin the
winter. On the 14th of the following June she again pointed her head toward
the north. On the 19th she passed St. Lawrence Island, but was turned back
by the heavy ice later in the day, when she tried to reach Indian Point
on the Siberian coast. The following day she again ran into heavy drift-ice,
but finally managed to work through into the St. Lawrence Bay, Siberia,
reaching there on the 22d. Here she met the steam-whaler William Bayless,
and having learned from her that Lopp had returned to Cape Prince of Wales,
the Bear was worked through the ice over to that place, where Captain
Tuttle received from Lopp all the news of the expedition up to the time
the latter had left Point Barrow. Learning that the wrecked men would be
in need of clothing by the time he reached them, Captain Tuttle steamed
over to St. Michaels, obtained a supply of under-clothing, and again turned
the Bear north. She reached Point Hope July 15. I came on board,
and after giving all the news I had, was more astonished than I had ever
been in my life by receiving the news that our country was at war with
Spain, and Admiral Dewey had won the glorious victory at Manila.
On the 16th we left, and succeded in working through the
drift-ice as far as Point Lay, where we anchored on the 18th in response
to signals from the shore. Soon after a canoe came alongside, and Captain
Sherman of the wrecked Orca, together with several natives and members
of wrecked vessels, came on board. They had come down the coast, sometimes
hauling their canoe over the ice, and sometimes paddling and sailing,
to bring a letter from Jarvis to Captain Tuttle, telling him the situation
at Cape Smyth. From Sherman we learned that the ice was very heavy to the
northward, and he did not think we would get very far. Captain Tuttle made
the attempt, however; but at Icy Cape the ice turned us back, and we anchored
at Point Lay again on the 21st. Another fruitless attempt was made the
following day, and on the 23d, Sherman having brought the information that
the Belvedere was short on flour, Lieutenant Hamlet was sent up
the coast with a canoe-load of provisions to that vessel. He reached her
all right, but, owing to the heavy ice along the shore, he did not reach
Cape Smyth until the day after the Bear arrived. On the 25th the
ice opened up a little, and we got as far as Wainwright Inlet, but were
compelled to stop there on account of the fog. On the 27th the fog lifted,
and we managed to push through the leads and get around the shoals off
Point Belcher, but we were obliged to run off shore and lose the land on
account of the heavy drift. We soon got a good opening, however, and headed
in again, and about eight o'clock in the morning, July 28, we made fast
to the ground-ice at Cape Smyth, opposite the station. This ground-ice
is the old ice of the polar seas piled up by the crushing of the
floes, until this mass gets so deep in the water that it grounds, and there
it remains until it is blown off again by the gale. Where we made fast
the water was seventeen fathoms, and yet this ice was hard and fast to
the bottom.
In a little while we saw the people coming out to us on
the ice, and soon Jarvis climbed over the side, and later the doctor. We
gave them a heartly welcome, but as soon as they made their report to the
captain and heard the war news, they asked so many questions that we all
forgot the shipwrecked sailors in the excitement of discussing the war
as the only thing we knew - the battle of Manila. Later in the day Jarvis
went ashore again to send off the men we were to take down, and by
the end of the following day most of them had come aboard.
By this time a westerly wind had sprung up, and the drift-ice
began to get so heavy we were forced to move into a little bight in the
ground-ice to escape it. The wind was increasing all the time, and although
we could see the pack coming in, we could not get through the heavy drift,
and on August 1 the Bear was jammed tight up against the ground-ice
by the pack, and we were in the same position as the vessels the
previous fall, only there was hope for us because it was early in the season
and the water was not freezing. The only thing we could do now was to look
out for the crush and wait patiently for an easterly wind to carry the
pack-ice off shore and open a lead. On August 3, the wind chopped around
to the southwest, disturbed the pack, and brought on a pressure, so that
our port side was pushed in a few inches. The snapping, cracking, and grinding
of the timbers is a frightful sound, and for a few minutes it looked as
if the stanch old Bear, that had seen so many cruises to the
Arctic, was at last to leave her bones there, but fortunately the pressure
ceased before any real damage was done. The danger was not over, however,
for with the wind blowing on shore a pressure was likely to occur at any
time, and it was almost sure that the next time the Bear was
doomed. Provisions were hastily gotten up and all preparations made to
abandon her should it become necessary. For the next few days no one went
asleep without expecting to be called at any time, and every morning we
gave a sigh of relief to find the good old ship still safe.
Meanwhile the Belvedere had freed herself
from the ice that had made around her during the winter, and was
ready to start south as soon as the drift-ice cleared from the shoals outside
her; the Rosario had been crushed when the ice broke up early in
the spring, her crew taken to the station at Cape Smyth and were
now on board the Bear; the Newport and Fearless
had worked their way close to Point Barrow, and the Jeannie was
expected to put in an appearance at any time. On August 3 she succeeded
in working up to Point Barrow, and as a lead had opened inside the ground
ice, all three vessels came down and made fast on the inshore side of the
piece we were jammed against.
On the 7th we made an attempt to blast a passage through,
but powder proved to have very little effect on ice grounded in seventeen
fathoms, and we were of course unsuccessful. There was now a long succession
of unfavorable winds and calms until the 15th, when the wind came out from
the eastward, the pack began moving off shore, and by midnight there
was only about fifty yards of ice outside us. The pack had by this time
loosened sufficiently to allow the Bear to move back and forward
a little, so steam was made on all her boilers, and she began to force
her way through, but it took all the forenoon, backing and filling under
a full head of steam, to get clear. About noon on the 16th, after a final
rush at the barrier of ice, the Bear forced through, and we
sent up a rousing cheer as we found ourselves in open water once more.
We proceeded down the coast to where the Newport, Fearless,
and Jeannie were waiting for us, and after giving them each sufficient
coal and provisions to last until they could reach the nearest port, the
Bear
steamed
away southward, having on board ninety-three officers and men of the wrecked
vessels. At Port Hope we picked up nine more destitute seamen, the crew
of the schooner Louise J. Kenney, which had been driven ashore a
few days previous. We steamed into Seattle on the 13th of September, 1898,
after an absence in the Arctic regions of nine months and a half, with
a consciousness of having performed the task allotted to us.
The sled journey of the overland expedition from Cape
Vancouver to the northernmost limits of Alaska, a distance of some 1600
miles, is, I believe, the longest ever made by a single party in one winter.
That no lives were lost and there are no stories of fearful suffering
to be told is due, I am convinced, to be the care and good judgement exercised,
rather than to any fortuitous circumstances. Hardships are of course inseperable
from Arctic travel; a bath is an unheard-of luxury; one is never quite
free from unwelcome little visitors inside the the fur clothing so
long as there are natives in the party. Many times we crawled into
our sleeping-bags hungry, when the weather or lack of fuel rendered cooking
impossible; running, walking, and pushing behind a sled through deep snow
and over rough and difficult trails of broken ice are very fatiguing and
exhausting; the weather is very cold, but though the thermometer registered
as much as 50 degrees below zero during our travelling, there were only
two cases of frost-bite in the party, and these were slight and the result
of carelessness in not paying proper attention to the nose, which member,
being very much exposed, is most likely to be the first affected; but in
an Arctic expedition properly fitted out, if discretion and judgement are
used in travelling and camping, it appears to me to be quite unnecessary
for the members to undergo any great amount of real suffering, except in
case of an extraordinary succession of adverse circumstances.
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