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A New Job for the Navy "I say, Suh! We've whupped that Napoleon chappie... 'ow will we keep the lads busy now?" By 1818, Britain had conquered Napoleon, the War of 1812 with the United States was over, and there were ships and men aplenty - with nothing to do. Sir John Barrow, a Secretary of the Admiralty, thought it was high time the navy vanquished the polar regions. This would give work to unemployed officers and experience to others. It would also provide scientific information to the royal societies, and demonstrate the dominance of England's navy, science and technology. National prestige demanded it... and besides, Barrow thought that those Russians, who now claimed land on both sides of the Bering Strait, were getting altogether too pushy! The British parliament offered prizes from £5,000 to £20,000 (vast sums in the early 19th century) to the first English teams to score the goals of the North Pole and the Northwest Passage. Men who distinguished themselves would be known as "Arctic Worthies", and the exploration games began!
PICTURES TOP: British ships at the end of the Napoleonic wars.
Click pictures for more information and credits. Arctic Library: Explorers, Exploration, Maps Boats, Ships & Subs, Franklin Expedition Arctic Maps & Weather Reports Links: Arctic, Franklin Expedition Northwest Passage, Maps
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DICTIONARY: Just "double-click" any unlinked word on this page for the definition from Merriam-Webster's Student Electronic Dictionary at Word Central. |
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ARCTIC LIBRARY & GLOSSARY: Check this section for an index of the rest of the things you really need to know about the Arctic. |
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ARCTIC MAPS & WEATHER REPORTS: Maps of the Northwest Passage, explorers' routes, iceberg sources, Nunavut, the Arctic by treeline, temperature... |
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ARCTIC LINKS: Even more information! Links to sites related to the Arctic and "Iceberg: the Story of the Throps and the Squallhoots". |
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GUIDE TO ARCTIC SUNRISE & SUNSET: How much sunlight or darkness is there in the Arctic on each day of the year? |