",: A ■■, :'-f^ ^^ Mmm ^ioloQml Ubomforu Libmru ^oods o(ok, Massachusetts ^oYkQ^is • 0? • (Exploration CoWcctd ^EWCO/AB UhoMPSOM MONTGOMERY (1307-1936) ^hfiM£ht(i architut, mphcv^ of nhotnas Oiarnson MontQomcru iiei3-l9l2\ 9ABL mmtiQdtor, md ^nsalla 'Brmiin OAotit^mcrtj il674'l956X MBL Ubranan. ^jft of thc4rs(ms Ofu^h Monf^rnicrt^, M!D, and ^aumond^. Monf^rnicru — 1987. h7^ ¥ Sng^ by Jackman. /rom/'h THE OPEN POLAR SEA: NARRATIVE OF A VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY TOWARDS THE NORTH POLE, IN THE SCHOONER "UNITED STATES." BY Dr. I. I. HAYES. NEW YORK: PUBLISHED BY HURD AND HOUGHTON, 1867. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1866, by I. I. Hayes, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern District of New York. RIVERSIDE, CAMBRIDGE: STEREOTYPED AND PRINTED BT H. O. HOUGHTON AND COMPANY. / HAD INTENDED TO DEDICATE THIS BOOK TO WILLIAM PARKER FOULKE, Of Philadelphia, To whom I am indebted for all that a powerful intellect and a generous friendship could do^ to give practical shape to my plans^ and to insure success to an enterprise in which I had embarked^ with the simple advantage of an aim^ and with no better guide than the impulse of youth : hut since it is denied ?ne to pay that tribute of my admiration to one of the noblest of men ^ I now inscribe it to his MEMORY. PREFACE. The design of this book may be briefly explained. I have attempted Uttle more than a personal narra- tive, endeavoring to select from my abundant notes such scenes and incidents of adventure as seemed to me best calculated to bring before the mind of the reader, not merely the history of our voyage, but a general view of the Arctic regions, — its scenery and its life, with a cursory glance at those physical forces which, in their results, give characteristic ex- pression to that remote quarter of the world. A day of months, followed by a night of months, where the mean annual temperature rises but little above zero, must necessarily clothe the air and the land- scape with a sentiment difficult to appreciate, or, I might perhaps say, feel, without actual observation. I shall be abundantly rewarded if I have succeeded in impressing upon the reader's mind, with any de- gree of vividness, the wonders and the grandeur of Nature as unfolded to us under the Arctic sky. I know it is usually thought that a book of trav- els should be simply a diary of events and incidents ; but this, of necessity, involves a ceaseless repetition, and it seemed to me that I would do better to drop vi PREFACE. from my diary all that did not appear as immedi- ately relevant to the scene; and, indeed, where the occasion appeared to require concentration, to aban- don the diary altogether, and use the more concise form of descriptive narrative. The reader will observe that I have not attempt- ed, in any sense, to write a work of Science. True, the purpose of the voyage was purely a scientific one, — its chief object and aim being to explore the boundaries of the Open Polar Sea ; at least to de- termine if such a sea did exist, as had been so often asserted ; but while I have given a general discus- sion of the conditions of the Polar waters and the Polar ice, and have recorded many new facts in vari- ous departments of physical and natural science, yet I have desired to treat the subject in a manner which, as it seemed to me, would be most acceptable to the general reader, rather than to the scientific student, — preferring to direct the latter to those more strictly scientific channels where my materials have been or are about being published. Soon after returning from the North, my principal records were placed at the disposal of the Smithso- nian Institution at Washington ; and I have employed such leisure as I could command in their elaboration and discussion, — the principal labor, however, falling upon Mr. Charles A. Schott, Assistant, United States Coast Survey, who brought to the task the best fac- ulties of a well-stored mind, and unusual powers of patient investigation ; and papers, giving a full PREFACE. vii analysis of the magnetic, meteorological, astronomical, geo- graphical, pendulum, and tidal observations, were pre- pared, and were accepted for publication in the Smith- sonian " Contributions to Knowledge." I regret to say that the publication of these papers has been much delayed. Deeming it desirable that some of the general conclusions to which we had arrived in our discussion of the observations should be given to the world without further postponement, I proposed to embody some leading facts in a short Appendix to this volume. Upon submitting the matter to the learned Secretary of the Institution, it was, however, claimed by him that, since I had intrusted the mate- rials to his care, the Institution now possessed the exclusive right to whatever advantage was to be de- rived from their publication. To a proposition so eminently reasonable I readily assented, especially as I was informed that the papers were already in type and were to be published immediately ; and, consid- ering myself thus absolved from any further respon- sibility to the scientific world for the long delay, I accordingly abandoned the idea of the Appendix. The Chart exhibiting the track and discoveries of my voyage, and of my various sledge journeys, was claimed, in like manner, as the exclusive property of the Smithsonian Institution, and, like the papers, was to be published immediately. Hence it is that the small map which illustrates this volume is but a copy (reduced ten diameters) of my field chart, pro- jected on the spot from my unrevised materials. It Vlll PREFACE. is perhaps needless for me to observe that enth^e accuracy was not attainable in the field, inasmuch as I had neither the leisure nor the facilities for re- ducing the magnetic variation, nor for obtaining the absolute time. I am happy to say, however, that no greater discrepancy exists than the one which places my highest latitude two minutes too far south on the field chart ; but the reductions having been made, and a chart projected therefrom, I had con- fidently relied upon this source for the correct infor- mation which the Smithsonian Institution now alone possessed. This failing me, I was obliged to fall back upon my original resources, as the time was too short for a new reduction. I am glad to say, however, that the field chart is sufficiently accurate for every practical purpose, and differs chiefly from the one prepared, with greater carefulness, and of large size, for the Smithsonian " Contributions to Knowledge," in the unimportant feature of the names applied to newly discovered places, some of which were changed after my return. No list of these alterations having been preserved, and being unable to get the more accurate map again into my hands from the Sec- retary of the scientific institution in whose care it had been placed, as before observed, for publication, I have simply adopted the original nomenclature, and have used the names as they appear in my journal and on my field chart. This explanation is made in anticipation of the possible contingency of the Smith- sonian Institution publishing the map, for some years PKEFACE. ix past in its possession, — an event which I think un- likely to happen, and which will now be unnecessary, the more especially as I am at present engaged in a new reduction of my materials, and the projection of a new map, the publication of which, in sufficiently large form to give it topographical as well as geo- graphical value, has been proposed by my distin- guished and very kind friend, Dr. Augustus Peter- mann, Gotlia, in his Geographical Journal. Papers descriptive of the botanical collection, pre- pared by Mr. Elias Durand ; of the algce, by Mr. Ash- mead ; of the lichens, by Professor James ; of the hirds, by Mr. John Cassin ; of the invertehnda, by Dr. Wil- liam Stimpson ; of the mammalia, by Dr. J. H. Slack ; of the cetacea, by Professor E. Cope ; of the infusoria, by Dr. F. W. Lewis ; of the fishes, by Dr. Theodore Gill ; and of the imleodology, by Professor F. B. Meek, have appeared from time to time in the "Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia," excepting the last, which was published in the Amer- ican "Journal of Arts and Sciences." Dr. J. Atkin Meigs has in preparation a monograph on ethnology, based upon a collection of upward of one hundred and forty specimens, and I shall soon have completed a more elaborate discussion of the Greenland Gla- ciers and other collateral topics than has been al- lowed me by the limits and character of this work. I should do great injustice to my own feelings, did I not here express the acknowledgment of my obligation to those societies, associations, and indi- X PREFACE. vidaals who united themselves with me in effecting the organization of the Expedition, and who Hber- ally shared with me its expenses. My wishes were always promptly met by them, to the extent of their ability ; and the enterprise was sustained with a zeal and interest rarely accorded to a purely scientific purpose. That I have not before published an ac- count of my voyage, or presented any detailed state- ment of my discoveries to those who had a natural right to expect it, has been entirely owing to the circumstance that my time has been wholly occupied in the public service, from the period of my return until late last year ; and they will, I trust, accept as a sufficient excuse for my silence during that period, the fact that the command of an army hospital, with from three to five thousand inmates, which devolved upon me during the greater part of the recent war, allowed me little leisure for literary or scientific work. It will also be understood that the tempo- rary abandonment of the exploration was due to the same general cause. October 23d, 1866. LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS TO THE EXPEDITION.* THROUGH A SPECIAL COMMITTEE OF THE AMERICAN GEOGRAPHI- CAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY, NEW YORK. EGBERT L. VIELE, Chairman; HENRY GRINNELL, Treasurer. Henry Grinnell. A. D. Bache. George Folsom. Henry E. Pierrepont. Benjamin H. Field. M. de LeRoquette. The " American Journal of Arts and Sciences " — Profs. Silliman and Dana. Egbert L. Viele. Cyrus W. Field. J. L. Graham. Auo;ust Belmont. Horace B. Clafflin. George Opdyke. Brown, Brothers & Co. F. S. Stalknecht. John Jay. C. Godfrey Gunther. Peter Cooper. Wm. Remsen. J. Carson Brevoort. Lewis Rutherford. C. P. Daly. Hugh N. Camp. W. A. White. John D. Clute. Marshall Lefferts. Wolcott Gibbs. John D. Jones. Joseph Harsen. Alexander H. Stevens. John C. Green. Samuel E. Barlow. A. H. Ward. James T. Hall. *. The author has reason to suppose that there are several persons to whom the Expedition is indebted for support whose names, not having been furnished him, do not appear in this list. Desiring to make it en- tirely complete, he will feel personally obliged to any one whose name is omitted to notify him of the fact, through the agency by which the sub- scription was furnished. xu LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS. E. A. Stansbury. W. T. Blodgett. Dr. Samuel W. Francis. Frank Moore. H. M. Field. Blakeman & Phinney. Harpers Brothers. John Austin Stevens. George A. Woodward. C. Detmold. Z. T. Detmold. Francis Lieber. F, E. Church. Bayard Taylor. O. M. Mitchell. Henrietta B. Haines. Mary W. Talman. Clarence A. Seward. F. L. Hawks. Robert B. Winthrop. G. P. Putnam. A. W. White. A. H. Wood. George L. Samson. Henry A. Robbins. Wm. H. Allen. Albert Clark. Joseph W. Orvis. John D. Wincp. Grinnell & Bibby. Simeon Holton, Jun. Sheldon, Blakeman & Co. American Desiccatincr Co. Ruxton, Barker & Co. G. Tagliabue. Messrs. Nequs. THROUGH COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF TRADE AND ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES, PHILADELPHIA. FRANCIS COPE, Treas- urer. Wm. Parker Foulke. Joseph Harrison, Jun. Henry Cope. Alfred Cope. Wm. Bucknell. John Rice. North American Life Insur- ance Co. Delaware Mutual Ins. Co. Corn Exchange. Cope Brothers. Isaac Lea. R, Pearsall. C. Macalister. Henry C. Carey. John C. Cresson. Wm. R. Leje6. Childs & Peterson. Samuel J. Reeves. Edward Trotter. J. T. Alburger & Co. M. J. Wickersham. Thomas Sparks. E. J. Lewis. Joseph Leidy. R. E. Rogers. Jacob P. Jones. J. B. Lippincott & Co. M. W. Baldwin. Samuel E. Stokes. Dr. T. B. Wilson. James C. Hand. Henry C. Townsend. Richard Price. LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS. XUl M. L. Dawson. Samuel Coffin. W. Have. Lodge 51, A. Y. M. John Thompson. John P. Crozer. Joseph Jeanes. E. J. Levis. Edward A. Souder. Geo. N. Tatham. John A. Brown. B. Marshall. R. Marshall. Thomas Richardson & Co. D. Haddock, Jun. J. B. Morris. Israel Morris. B. C. & R. A. Tilghman. John W. Sexton. John Grigg. William Sellers & Co. Tobias Wagner. Warren Fisher. Wm. S. Vaux. Dr. James Bond. Chas. Henry Fisher. J. Edgar Thompson. Charles E. Smith. Frothingham, Wells & Co. Fairman Rogers. John L. Leconte. J. C. Trautwine. Edward Hayes. Aubrey H. Smith. C. Townsend. E. C. Knight. Buckman & Co. E. Durar. E. H. Butler. Blair & Wyeth. King & Baird. Sharp & Brother. Rowland & Irvin. Henry Winsor. David McConkey. Wilson, Childs & Co. A. Whitney & Son. Townsend Sharpless. David S. Brown. Chas. Ellis. Wm. M. Baird. James H. Orne. Joshua L. Bailey. James Addicks. Benj. Marsh. Buzby & Co. Weaver, Fitler & Co. James Leslie & Co. McAlister & Brother. Bible Society. John H. Cooper. S. Hazard. Isaac J. Williams. Buckner & M'Connor. Burley & Co. Mrs. Dr. Bond. THKOUGH COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS, ALBANY, N. Y. CLIFFE, Treasurer. D. V. N. KAD- J. H. Armsby. Thomas W. Olcott. Eli Perry. D. V. N. Radcliffe. Erastus Corning. R. C. Davis. XIV LIST OF SUBSCRIBEKS. Isaac W. Vosburg. John T. Rathbone. Alden Marsh. A. B. Banks. Charles L. Garfield. David J. Boyd. T. Rousell & Son. W. Frothingham. G. J. H. Thatcher. Samuel Anable. S. H. Ransom. R. H. Wakeman. J. O. Souner. James Kidd. A. A. Dunlap. Alanson Sumner. James W. Cook. E. Owens. John Tracy. Cook & Palmer. THROUGH THE CITIZENS' COMMITTEE AND COMMITTTEE OF THE ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES, BOSTON. RICHARD BAKER, JuN., Treasurer. Richard Baker, Jun. Warren Sawyer. John Stetson. J. D. W. Joy. O. W. Peabody. S. A. Dix. Theodore Lyman. Richard P. Pope. David Sears. Thomas Lee. Philip H. Sears. B. W. Taggard. Amos A. Lawrence. Jacob Bigelow, M, D. James M. Beebe. A. W. Spencer. S. H. Walley. Wm. Gray. H. A. Whitney. Geo. R. Russell. L. Agassiz. B. A. Gould. C. C. Felton. Prof. J. Lovering. Prof. E. N. Horsford. James Lawrence. Jonathan Phillips. Nathan Appleton. Joseph Whitney. Abbott Lawrence. George W. Lyman. Edward Wio-filesworth. Francis Skinner. George B. Blake. Naylor & Co. H. O. Houo-hton. Columbia Lodge. Woburn Lodge. Mt. Lebanon Lodge. Winslow Lewis Lodge. Merchants' Insurance Co. (through Capt. Smith.) Manufacturers' Ins. Co. J. Sawyer & Co. Wm. H. Kennard. E. Hammer (Danish Con sul.) D. N. Haskell. Wm. Baker. Daniel Paine. LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS. XV H. Howard. Wm. M. Parker. Francis Kendall. C. G. Kendall. E. R. Mudge & Co. Wilkinson, Stetson & Co. Merrill & Co. Allen, Whiting & Co. Huntington, Wadsworth & Parks. Fitchburg Woolen Co. Macullum, Williams & Parker. Edward Everett. N. P. Banks. Frederick W. Lincoln. John Cunimings, Jun. John Clark. James O. SafFord. S. S. Arnold. Winslow Lewis, M. D. Beni. French. Black & Bacheller. Wm. B. Boyd. Wm. Furness, Jun. John Paine. James Sturgis. Thornton K. Lothrop. Caleb Curtis. Chas. D. Homans, M. D. Georoe L. Pratt. A. G. Smith. Henry P. Kidder. Henry Mulliken. A. W. Stetson. Chas. J. Sprague. N. I. Bowditcli. Stone, Wood & Baldwin. Messinger & Brothers. Middlesex Co. Oak Hall. Fenno & Co. F. A. Hawley & Co. Andrew Pierce. Burnham & Scott. March Brothers. William R. Lovejoy & Co. Whiting, Galloupe & Co. Kelley & Levin. John A. AVhipple. Stetson, Kendall & Minot. Isaac Fenno. Charles E. Wiggin. Joshua Blake. Preston & Merrill. Wm. Read & Son. Richard Fay, Jun. Redding & Co. Hostetter & Smith, (Pitts- burg, Pa.) John Wilson. Henry W- Poole. Otis Norcross. H. B. Walley. Richard F. Bond. L. Audenried & Co. Noble, Hammott & Hall. N. Sturtevant & Co. Wm. F. Weld. J. G. Bigelow. Wm. D. Atkinson, Jun. Jos. W. Wightman. George H. Snelling. J. C. Hoadley. A. Loring. H. Poor & Son. XVI LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS. Thomas Thompson. Wm. Bond & Son. Pierce & Co. Joshua Stetson. Chas. W. Freeland & Co. Burrough, Bro. & Co. Frost & Kimball. Washington Mills. Hunt & Goodwin. Geo. W. Simmons. Nevin, Sawyer & Co. George Osgood. Theodore H. Bell. Brown & Tacrgard. Winsor & Whitney. Richard Morris Hunt. Edward J. Thomas. Wm. B. Hayden. E. H. Blake. Lewis R. Reynolds. Swann, Brewer & Tileston. E. B. Moore. John E. Hayes. Ballard & Pi-ince. Dana, Farrar & Hyde. Solo. Piper. Jacob Stanwood. E. P. Tileston. Isaac Rich. Salem T. Lamb. Daniel D. Kelley. Wm. M. Jacobs & Son. Mrs. Pratt. Mrs. E. Thompson. W. Clafflin & Co. Day, Wilcox & Co. J. J. Adams & Co. Alex. Williams & Co. E. Paige & Co. D. P. Ives & Co. Max, White & Bartlett. J. B. Kendall. Sewall, Day & Co. E. A. & W. Winchester. Seth Adams. J. & J. F. Samson & Co. Wilder & Eastbrook. Maynard & Noyes. Winn, Eaton & Co. J. H. Poole. Fogg, Houghton & Co. Brown & Stanley. J. Childs, Jun. Doan & Skilton. Parker, Gannett & Osgood. Denton & Wood. Foster & Smith. Wm. K. Lewis & Co. Thomas W. Pierce. Joseph B. Glover. Addison Gao;e. I. N. Brown. New Bedford Cordajre Co. C. B. Bryant. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. PAGE 1. MAP OF THE POLAR REGIONS 1 Drawn by C. A. Schott. Engraved by J. Schedler. 2. MAP OK SMITH SOUND, SHOWING DR. HAYES' TRACK AND DISCOVERIES 72 Drawn by Dr. Hayes. Engraved by J. Schedler. 3. MAP OF PORT FOULKE, THE WINTER QUARTERS OF THE EXPEDITION 96 Drawn by Dr. Hayes. Engraved by J. Schedler. 4. AN ARCTIC TEAM 104 Drawn by G. G. White, from a Sketch by Dr. Hayes. Engraved by J. A. Bogert. 5. A BEAR-HUNT 174 Drawn by Darley, from Description. Engraved by J. A. Bogert. 6. CROSSING THE HUMMOCKS 322 Drawn by G. G. White, from a Sketch by Dr. Hayes. Engraved by J. A. Bogert. 7. THE SHORES OF THE POLAR SEA 346 Drawn by H. Fenn, from a Sketch by Dr. Hayes. Engraved by Fay & Cox. 8. A WALRUS-HUNT 408 Drawn by Darley, from Description. Engraved by J. A. Bogert. 9. TYNDALL GLACIER, WHALE SOUND 438 Drawn by H. Fenn, from a Photograph by Dr. Hayes. Engraved by Kingdon & Boyd. b EXPLANATION OF TAIL-PIECES. Drawn on wood by G. G. White from, Photographs and Sketches by Br. Hayes. En- graved mostly by J. A. Bogert. PAGE 1. Anchor 15 2. Akched Iceberg 27 3. Greenlander in his Kayak 34 4. Upernavik , 43 5. Snowflake (magnified three diameters) 56 6. Seal on Cake of Ice 67 7. Head of a Keindeer 91 8. Port Foulke 100 9. Snowflake (same as No. 5) 126 10. Chester Valley, showing Alida Lake and the Glacier 136 11. " My Brother John's Glacier," from First Camp 148 12. Group of Reindeer 164 13. Schooner in Winter Quarters 211 14. The Esquimau Hut at Etah 235 15. Head of Walrus 247 16. Portrait of Birdie, the Artic Fox 250 17. Sonntag's Grave 276 18. Snowflake (same as No. 5) 296 19. Camping in a Snow-Bank 306 20. Polar Bear 314 21. Dog Sledge 321 22. Head of the Esquimau Dog Oosisoak 332 23. Cape Union 352 24. A Sketch 3R2 25. Observatory at Port Foulke 375 20. Snowflake (same as No. 5) 380 27. Kalutunah and his Family 395 28. Head of Arctic Hare 425 29. A Sketch 438 30. " End " 454 CONTENTS. INTRODUCTION. PAGE Plan of the Expedition. — First Announcement. — Appeal to Scien- tific Societies. — Aid solicited. — Public Lectures. — Liberality of various Societies and Individuals. — Vessel purchased in Boston. — Interest manifested in that City. — Difficulty in obtaining a proper Crew. — Organization of the Party. — Scientific Outfit. — Abun- dant Supplies 1 CHAPTER L Leaving Boston. — At Anchor in Nantasket Roads. — At Sea 13 CHAPTER IL Passage to the Greenland Coast. — Discipline. — The Decks at Sea. — Our Quarters. — The First Icdberg. — Crossing the Arctic Cir- cle. — The Midnight Sun. — The Endless Day. — Making the Land. — A Remarkable Scene among the Bergs. — At Anchor in Proven Harbor 16 CHAPTER in. The Colony of Proven. — The Kayak of the Greenlander. — Scarcity of Dogs. — Liberality of the Chief Trader. — Arctic Flora 28 CHAPTER IV. Upernavik. — Hospitality of the Inhabitants. — Death and Burial of Gibson Caruthers. — A Lunch on Board. — Adieu 35 CHAPTER V. Among the Icebergs. — Dangers of Arctic Navigation. — A Narrow Escape from a Crumbling Berg. — Measurement of an Iceberg .... 44 CHAPTER VL Entering Melville Bay. — The Middle Ice. — The Great Polar Cur- rent. — A Snow-Storm. — P2ncounter with an Iceber