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Inuit Contact and Colonization Toolkit - Historical Thinking

Northwest Passage

The is a famous sea route linking the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, thereby providing an alternate shipping route from Europe to Asia. It lies between and , above the Circle and below the north polar icecap. The sea in this region is frozen over for most of the year with huge ever- present icebergs drifting through. Temperatures in winter often fall to -50°F.

The search for the Northwest Passage was a long one. As early as 1534, Jacques Cartier, the French navigator, explored the St. Lawrence River looking for a passage to China. Sir discovered a body of water (Frobisher Bay) on what is now called in 1576 and thought it was the passage. Between 1585 and 1587, made three voyages, exploring the western shores of Greenland, , and Cumberland Sound. reached in 1610 and was abandoned there by his mutinous crew. Between 1612 and 1615, , , and made three voyages to Hudson Bay--searching unsuccessfully for both Henry Hudson and a passage to Asia.

By the beginning of the 19th Century, however, much of the American Arctic still remained uncharted and unknown. Whalers had not traveled far west from Greenland, knowing the waters there to be dangerous and lacking in profitable quantities of their quarry. Trading ships were still having to travel the long sea- routes around the Cape of Good Hope and Cape Horn to reach India and China. A lot of money could be saved if a shorter way could be found. The English Royal Navy had a large fleet of expedition-ready vessels following the Napoleonic Wars and, as thousands of pounds were being offered as a prize for finding the North-West Passage, its became an increasingly attractive proposition. In addition, techniques of polar travel had steadily improved and navigators became more willing to risk their vessels against the unpredictable Arctic weather and ice conditions.

Sir William Parry sailed through and through to Hecla Strait (1821-23); but was stopped by ice. Sir mounted an ambitious, ill-fated expedition that entered Lancaster Sound in July 1845; its last survivors died in 1848. More than 40 expeditions searched for Franklin's expedition, surveying most of the Arctic region. Robert McClure and his crew completed a passage from west to east in 1854, but partly by foot and sledge because of the thick ice. Not until 1903 did finally conquer the Northwest Passage by ship.

Though interest in the Passage remained through the mid-20th Century, it became apparent that it was not the path to riches that many had envisioned. Dangerous ice

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conditions, severe weather, and an inaccessible coast made it exceptionally difficult for navigation, diminishing its value commercially. Only about 60 vessels have ever made the transit.

Accessed from http://www.allthingsarctic.com/exploration/nwpassage.aspx 08/02/26

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