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The Voyage of the Jeannette
The Ship and Ice Journals of George W. De Long, lieutenant-commander U.S.N., and commander of the Polar Expedition of 1879-1881
(2 vol.)
George Washington De Long, Emma de Long (ed.) ✸ 1883 ✸ 1st ed.
ENG "The Voyage of the Jeannette" contains the ship and ice journals of George W. De Long, Lieutenant-commander U.S.N. and Commander of the Polar Expedition of 1879-1881 (along with the original sketches and maps). This is a first-hand true account of the 1881 loss of USS Jeannette while exploring the Arctic ice. Jeannette, with a crew of 33, collapsed and sank under surging ice in the summer of 1881. Her crew, commanded by George W. DeLong, took to the ice dragging three small boats. When open water was found, the boats were used to sail to the Lena Delta of Siberia, 700 miles distant. DeLong commanded a boat of 14 total crew members, Executive Officer Charles W. Chipp's boat's crew was 8 total crew members, and Engineer Officer George W. Melville's boat had 11. Chipp's boat was lost at sea with all hands. Engineer Melville's boat landed in the southern delta, and DeLong's boat came ashore farther to the north on 17 September 1881. Melville quickly found aid, as did the two hardiest sailors of DeLong's crew soon after. The 12 remaining, including DeLong, perished from starvation or exposure. Luckily, his journal contained in this book survived to provide a detailed account.
Compiled by his wife from his journals and the testimony of the survivors, these two volumes document De Long's doomed expedition.
1st edition (in English).
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