John Rae
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Dr. John Rae by Stephen Pearce, 1858. |
Most of the explorers sent on the quest to find the Northwest Passage were sent by the British Royal Navy. Hbc was more interested in doing business than sending people out exploring. Nonetheless, when pressured by the British government, it periodically did so. Dr. John Rae was the last of the purebred explorers sent by the Company to chart the unknown northern lands.
John Rae was born in the Orkney Islands near Stromness, where the Hbc ships stopped to draw fresh water and load up final supplies and crew before the long transatlantic journey. Having watched two of his older brothers join Hbc and travel overseas, the draw was too much to resist: he joined Hbc as a ship's doctor a mere 2 months after obtaining his medical certification. In 1833 he set sail for Hudson Bay; it would be another 14 years before he returned to Scotland.
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William Armstrong, Dr. John Rae(1813-1893), Arctic Explorer, 1862 |
His qualities did not escape then Governor George Simpson, who visited Moose Factory on several occasions in the 10 years when John Rae was its doctor. (Simpson even lost a race to Rae. The doctor had challenged Simpson to a race on water. Rae bet that a sailboat of his design could circle the island faster than Simpson's canoe manned by his best voyageurs.) Rae spent the winter of 1844 with Simpson in Montreal and visiting some relatives in Hamilton. Upon his return to Moose Factory, Rae received a letter from Simpson promoting him in charge of the whole District. In a private missive, moreover, Simpson recognized that Rae was the most able Company man to undertake a survey of the Arctic coast of Rupert's Land.
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Dr. Rae meets Eskimos/ Discovery of Franklin Expedition Relics by Charles Comfort, 1949 |
Rae determined the fate of the Franklin expedition through intense questioning of Inuit hunters. He acquired from them physical remains of the expedition, such as spoons and buttons (depicted in this painting by Charles Comfort), and cross-examined them for two months to ensure the accuracy of his findings. He then had to make a tough choice that would haunt him the rest of his life. Winter was near, and although he could have made it to where the survivors had camped until their deaths, doing so would have meant spending another winter in the Arctic. On the other hand, there were already numerous ships looking for traces of the Franklin Expedition, all in the wrong corner of the Arctic. Knowing the dangers that he, his party, and all these unsuspecting sailors would face, he decided to travel to England as quickly as possible to communicate the grim news to Lady Franklin and the British public.
Thanks to Lady Franklin and her powerful lobby, John Rae has been negatively portrayed as an opportunist who relied on the testimony of savages who couldn't be trusted, preferring to rush back to England for a reward (which he did not even know existed) rather than travelling further to verify his findings. Even 150 years after the fact, when the values and the influence of Lady Franklin and her friends has long vanished, it is not hard to find this assertion repeated - one which ignores the facts and instead perpetuates hearsay. It is also the chief reason that Rae and his accomplishments are so little known today.
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