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  FINDING JOHN RAE

  FINDING

  John Rae

  ALICE JANE HAMILTON

  RONSDALE PRESS

  FINDING JOHN RAE

  Copyright © 2017 Alice Jane Hamilton

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without prior written permission of the publisher, or, in Canada, in the case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, a licence from Access Copyright (the Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency).

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  Typesetting: Julie Cochrane, in Granjon 11.5 pt on 15

  Cover Design: Julie Cochrane

  Cover Photo: John Rae, age fifty-one. Courtesy “Images”: John Rae.

  Paper: Ancient Forest Friendly Silva (FSC), 100% post-consumer waste, totally chlorine-free and acid-free.

  Ronsdale Press wishes to thank the following for their support of its publishing program: the Canada Council for the Arts, the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund, the British Columbia Arts Council, and the Province of British Columbia through the British Columbia Book Publishing Tax Credit program.

  Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

  Hamilton, Alice Jane, 1950–, author

  Finding John Rae / Alice Jane Hamilton.

  Issued in print and electronic formats.

  ISBN 978-1-55380-481-9 (softcover)

  ISBN 978-1-55380-482-6 (ebook) / ISBN 978-1-55380-483-3 (pdf)

  1. Rae, John, 1813–1893. 2. Rae, John, 1813–1893 — Travel — Arctic regions. 3. Franklin Expedition (1845–1851). 4. Arctic regions — Discovery and exploration — British. 5. Northwest Passage — Discovery and exploration — British. 6. Hudson’s Bay Company — Biography. 7. Inuit — Canada — Social life and customs — 19th century. 8. Surgeons — Scotland — Biography. I. Title.

  FC3961.1.R33H36 2017917.1904’1092C2016-907441-2C2016-907442-0

  At Ronsdale Press we are committed to protecting the environment. To this end we are working with Canopy and printers to phase out our use of paper produced from ancient forests. This book is one step towards that goal.

  Printed in Canada by Marquis Book Printing, Quebec

  To the Inuit,

  who knew all along,

  but never received the

  credit they were due

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  I gratefully acknowledge the information provided by the staff of the following archives, museums and institutions: the Hudson’s Bay Company, the Royal Anthropological Society of London, Royal British Columbia Museum, National Museums Scotland, the Government of Manitoba, the Hamilton Association for the Advancement of Literature, Science and Art (HAALSA), the John Rae Society, the Orkney Islands Council, the Royal Society, and the Royal Geographical Society.

  I deeply appreciate having had access to the works of such respected authors and historians as William Barr, Pierre Berton, Alice den Otter, Ken McGoogan, Peter C. Newman, Rudy Wiebe, John Wilson, and David C. Woodman. John Walker’s film Passage was also an excellent source of information. John Rae’s published Arctic narrative, as well as his letters to newspaper editors after he returned from the Arctic, gave me valuable insight into his character.

  I am grateful for the assistance and advice of Inuit elder and statesman Tagak Curley, historians Mary and Bruce Davey, literary advisor Sue Henry, firearms expert Chris Williams, historian, curator and master storyteller Tom Muir, historian and author Bryce Wilson, John Rae Society president and author Andrew Appleby, Arctic scholar and author Russell Potter, Orcadian historian Ingirid Morrison, Stromness Museum curator Kathleen Ireland, and former owners of the Hall of Clestrain, Jean and Ivan Craigie. Many thanks to my editor Ronald Hatch, for expertly and patiently guiding me through, and to my husband Don Cooper, who was always willing to listen, brainstorm, draw maps, and offer advice and encouragement.

  TABLE OF CONTENTS

  Part I: Discovery

  Part II: Under Attack

  Part III: Home: The Orkneys

  Part IV: Life Changes

  Part V: Love, Courtship & Marriage

  Part VI: Enterprises & Family Life

  Part VII: Messenger from the North

  Epilogue

  Author’s Note

  About the Author

  – PART I –

  Discovery

  [1854]

  Boothia Peninsula, Arctic

  [APRIL 1854]

  My men and I had been struggling for days, pulling and pushing two heavy sledges across a section of bumpy Arctic terrain on the Boothia Peninsula, half-blinded by blizzard conditions. Around midnight on the fifth day, exhausted, we stopped in the lee of a hill for a rest and food. I had just finished rewrapping my young assistant Jacob Beads’ frostbitten toes, when I heard a high-pitched sound and reflexively reached for my rifle. Moments later, a team of barking dogs emerged from behind a curtain of snow, pulling a man on a sled. I relaxed and lowered my gun.

  The Esquimaux driving the dogs appeared to be travelling alone. As he came closer, I noticed something shiny affixed to his sealskin cap. It was a gold band, a sight familiar to me but it looked completely out of place on the clothing of an Arctic native. The gold strip was identical to the bands worn on the caps of British naval officers, and I was immediately curious to learn where he had acquired it. I stepped forward smiling, following the customary native greeting of showing teeth. I had somehow managed to retain all of mine thus far, which is more than could be said of our visitor. I extended a hand toward him, laid the other upon my breast and said, “John Rae.”

  He responded in kind and announced that his name was In-nook-poo-zhee-jook, but that I could call him In-nook for short. This suited me because I would certainly have botched any attempts to pronounce it properly. Even after living in the Arctic for more than twenty years, I struggled to master the language, and I relied on translators for in-depth communication with the local people. When I recorded Esquimaux names in my notebooks, I tried to spell them out in letters that matched the way they sounded to my untrained ears.

  I instructed my interpreter, William Ouligback Junior, to invite the newcomer to join us. Our visitor readily accepted the offer, to which we cheerfully added gifts of pemmican for his dog team. The man’s friendly demeanour was engaging, and the conversation soon took on an amiable flow. I noticed that he reached up and touched the band often, as if to reassure himself that it was still there. It was obvious that he was proud of it. I reasoned that, to him, it probably signified a high level of achievement and status.

  We shared a meal of roasted caribou meat around a fire prepared by my guide, Thomas Mistegan, and enjoyed conversing about the weather, hunting and other matters. In-nook explained that owing to poor winter sealing conditions many families far in the north, including his own, were very hungry. He and other men from his community were driving their dog teams south, in search of caribou and muskox.

  He asked Ouligback about the purpose of our small travelling party. Were we hunting, too? I replied that we were on a journey to learn more about the land. We had begun with a group of twelve men, but various misfortunes had caused us to leave some of them at depots along the way. Our number was now reduced to just five, two of whom had fallen ill and were unable to walk much at all.

  I identified myself as a man of medicine, a healer, first. Then I explained my tasks as the overseer of the fur trade in the region, representing the Hudson’s Bay Company. He confirmed his knowledge of the organization, so I went on to say that I travelled a great deal, making maps for my employers and for the British government, a
nd working on the latter’s behalf to build strong trading relations with the people of the Arctic. We were making more than maps, of course. We were involved in an ambitious British push to open the Great White North of the American continent and use it for access to the Orient. What a paradox that Britain was attempting to conquer massive mountains of ice in the West, in search of faster routes to the riches of the East!

  It was complicated for me to describe to anyone my many professional roles at the time: surgeon trained in Scotland, chief factor for the Hudson’s Bay Company’s fur trade enterprise in the Mackenzie District of the Arctic, certified land surveyor, scientist, naturalist and explorer who was periodically seconded to the British Admiralty under special circumstances. My duties were many and varied, so I usually told people I worked for the Hudson’s Bay Company, and just left it at that.

  In this instance, however, I felt that some further explanation was necessary, because our new Esquimaux companion was wearing an item which could prove to be of great interest to thousands of British citizens. I suspected there was a chance that In-nook knew something about the fate of the missing Franklin Expedition, which was last spotted by whalers off the southeast coast of Greenland in August 1845. I did not add that for the past seven years, I had been actively engaged in the massive search for the two lost ships and men. I hoped he would mention the gold band during the course of our conversation so as to reveal something about where it had come from.

  I did not bother to mention my other mandate: creating detailed records of the region’s flora and fauna for various scientific institutions in England, since that information would have been of little interest to him. It was a certainty that In-nook and his people knew more about what crawled, walked, flew and swam in his territory than any foreign observer could ever learn.

  In-nook was an enthusiastic listener and conversationalist; I could see that we would get along well. I explained to him that our plan was to rest for several hours, then pack up our supplies and continue our westward journey to the coast of the Boothia Peninsula. Would he care to join us for a day or two? Our stock of food provisions was plentiful, and we would be pleased to have his company. He agreed to travel with us for a while, after which he would take his leave to continue hunting. Would he be willing to sell us a dog to help us on our journey? I asked. Alas, he was unable to do this because he needed the full team to move the large amount of meat he hoped to acquire for his people.

  He assisted us, though, by carrying our infirm men on his sled, and I was grateful for his kindness and cheerful company. I was growing more worried about our young fellows, Jacob Beads and James Johnston, who were in poor condition. I had lost only one man in all my years of leading expeditions in the Arctic: Albert One-Eye’s senseless drowning five years earlier in the rapids of the Coppermine River still haunted me. I was doing my best to treat Beads’ frostbite and Johnston’s loss of strength during this journey, but it was obvious they were struggling and needed rest. With In-nook’s help we made better progress; the two young men were able to stay off their feet while we travelled together.

  On the second night, after we finished our supper, In-nook enjoyed a smoke with my men by the fire. Our bellies were full and the mood was relaxed. According to my timepiece, it was almost two o’clock in the morning; the sun would be fully above the horizon in less than an hour. I decided it was as good a time as any to inquire about the gold capband.

  I referred to William Ouligback by his nickname. “Mar-ko, I wish to pay a compliment to our companion about the shiny band he is wearing on his hat. It is most impressive.” In-nook smiled when he heard the translation; he reached up and touched it, clearly flattered.

  “Where did he acquire such an interesting ornament?” I asked.

  Ouligback translated my question, and then In-nook embarked upon a tale which caused the interpreter to sit up straight, his eyes widening with growing surprise. I listened closely as the slow process of storytelling and translation took shape.

  “He says the shiny band came from a man who was seen marching in a group of many, many Kabloonans — white men — dragging a boat on a sledge. They looked cold, tired and hungry. It is said that all of the men perished on their journey across the ice.”

  A shadow suddenly crossed my heart. Dear God. A group of white people that large in number must have come from Sir John Franklin’s travelling party. I envisioned starving, ill-dressed and ill-equipped British naval men, stumbling across the frozen landscape in a desperate search for a rescue that never happened, doomed to die ahead of their time in a windswept, icy-cold and barren hell. Did the Esquimaux have the answers to the nine-year mystery of what happened to Sir John Franklin, his ships and crew?

  My mind leapt towards an obvious question: Why didn’t the Esquimaux people help the poor travellers? I almost blurted out my thoughts but restrained myself because I did not want to insult our guest. I hoped the answer would be revealed without prompting, so I looked down at my hands and held my tongue. I didn’t dare risk losing an opportunity to gain information about the mysterious marching group. I carefully chose the words of my next question: “How did In-nook come to be in possession of the shiny band?”

  “He says his cousin gave it to him. His cousin saw the men.”

  I filed this startling information away in my memory for further investigation. Did In-nook’s cousin steal the band from a white man marching to his death? Had there been some kind of confrontation? That notion was doubtful. I respected the generous nature of the Esquimaux in that region, so I set aside any thoughts of native violence against the weakened white men. There had been rumours about the Royal Navy’s occasional ill treatment of the Esquimaux, but it would have been imprudent to speculate about what may or may not have occurred between the two groups.

  “Does our friend know in which direction the Kabloonans were travelling?”

  In-nook pointed towards the south, and Ouligback translated his reply: “It is said they were dragging a boat filled with objects on a sledge and marching towards the mouth of a large river, that they were seen about twelve long days’ journey to the southwest of where we are now.”

  I knew of an infamous river that flowed northward from deep in the mainland and emptied into the Polar Sea, in the general region to which he referred. The Great Fish River was widely feared because of its dangerous rocks and innumerable rapids, but sections of its swirling waters were open and teeming with fish throughout the year. Earlier explorers such as Sir George Back had charted it on British maps of the Arctic when he, John Franklin, John Richardson and a large party of men were searching for a route from the mainland to the Northwest Passage to the Polar Sea. The river was later renamed Back’s Fish River by the British government, in honour of the admiral who produced a great number of meticulous, delicate sketches and paintings of the region. I wondered if the group of men In-nook’s people observed had been marching in search of the river, which would have led them south to possible rescue. Its waters would have provided them with continuous sustenance as they journeyed, thus increasing their chances of survival. If good fortune had been with them, they would have eventually met up with British parties on the lookout for them. It grieved me to think that their courageous march had not lasted long enough to save them.

  “Did you personally see any of the men, In-nook? Talk to them?”

  “No,” he answered through Ouligback. “But many of my own people did.”

  I knew from experience that Arctic natives rarely made errors when they passed along information from one to another, and another and so on. Because of the absence of writing materials in their homeland, the stories of the Esquimaux were generally verbatim and accurate. In the snowy and windswept north, even a message inscribed upon a rock in blood could vanish within minutes. The lives of the people depended upon meticulous oral record-keeping. I had to find a way of documenting his people’s accounts of what they witnessed. “May I meet with your countrymen who saw them? In case there are some Ka
bloonans who may still be alive.”

  “I can send a message to the others.”

  I looked up at the sky. The snow clouds had moved on, which bode well for the next leg of our journey. The waning April moon was barely visible, a slender fingernail of light in a sea of stars. Darkness was brief in the Arctic at this time of year, thus extending our ability to cover long distances if the weather was reasonable. I hoped our new acquaintance and his people would be willing to help us solve the mystery of the missing ships and crews.

  I pointed to the moon. “Mar-ko, give In-nook directions to our Hudson’s Bay Company depot at Pelly Bay, and tell him we would like to meet with witnesses there after a full moon’s time. Advise him that our countrymen are looking for the Kabloonans they saw, that they have been missing for a long, long time. Their families are distressed, anxious to know of their fates. We will trade gifts for information,” I added.

  Rewards in the form of foreign tools, buttons and cloth were highly valued amongst the Esquimaux; I never travelled without a good supply of these precious items. In-nook nodded gravely as he listened to Ouligback. He agreed to send out my request as soon as he could.

  During our fireside conversation, In-nook revealed more of what he understood to be true. It was said that people who saw the marching white men told of how frightening they looked, with spirit-dark faces and rolling eyes. The natives were reluctant to approach them and risk being infected with a fatal disease, or harmed in some other way. He pointed to our rifles, which we always kept close at hand. He said the marching men carried dangerous tools like ours. His people feared these objects that made sharp, loud noises and ejected clouds of smoke; perhaps they carried a poison of some kind. That information answered my question as to why the Esquimaux did not attempt to engage with the marching Kabloonans and offer them assistance.