In 1845, British Royal Navy officer and Arctic explorer Sir John
Franklin (1786-1847) embarked on his third and final expedition into the
Canadian Arctic to force the Northwest Passage. After two years with no
word, a £20,000 reward was offered to anyone who could find the
expedition, leading to many rescue attempts. One such attempt was the De
Long expedition on the "Rodgers" under Captain Berry, for which William
Henry Gilder (1838-1900) was second in command between 1878 to 1880.
After a disaster in which the vessel was burned on the western shore of
Bering Strait, Gilder embarked on a journey of almost 2,000 miles across
Siberia to relay the news of the disaster via telegram. A correspondent
of the New York Herald, Gilder chronicled his death-defying experiences
in "Schwatka's Search: Sledging in the Arctic in Quest of the Franklin
Records". Contents include: "Northward", "The Winter Camp", "Our Dogs",
"In the Sledges", "Native Witnesses", "The Midnight Sun", "Relics",
"Irving's Grave", "Arctic Costumes", "Over Melting Snows", "Amateur
Esquimaux", "Walrus Diet", etc. Read & Co. History is republishing this
classic memoir now in a brand new edition complete with an introductory
biography by John Knox Laughton.