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ELISHA KENT KANE (1820–1857)

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 650 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ELISHA KENT KANE (1820–1857)  ,
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American scientist and explorer, was born in
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Philadelphia on the loth of
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February 182o, the son of the jurist John Kintzing Kane (1795–1858), a friend and supporter of Andrew Jackson, attorney-general of Pennsylvania in 1845-1846, U.S. judge of the Eastern
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District of Pennsylvania after 1846, and president of the American Philosophical Society in 1856–1858 . Young Kane entered the university of Virginia and obtained the degree of M.D. in 1842, and in the following
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year entered the U.S.
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navy as surgeon . He had already acquired a considerable reputation in physiological research . The
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ship to which he was appointed was ordered to
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China, and he found opportunities during the voyage for indulging his passion for exploration, making a journey from Rio de Janeiro to the
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base of the
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Andes, and another from Bombay through India to
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Ceylon . On the arrival of the ship at its destination he provided a substitute for his
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post and crossed over to the island of Luzon, which he explored . In 1844 he
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left China, and, returning by India,
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Persia,
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Syria,
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Egypt,
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Greece, Austria, Germany and
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Switzerland, reached
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America in 1846 . In that year he was ordered to the west coast of Africa, where he visited Dahomey, and contracted fever, which told severely on his constitution . On his return in 1847, he exchanged the
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naval for the military service, and was sent to join the U.S. army in Mexico, where he had some extraordinary adventures, and where he was again stricken with fever . On the fitting out of the first
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Grinnell expedition, in 1850, to search for
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Sir John Franklin, Kane was appointed surgeon and naturalist under Lieut. de Haven, who commanded the
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ships " Advance " and " Rescue." The expedition, after an absence of sixteen months, during nine of which the ships were ice-bound, returned without having found any trace of the missing vessels . Kane was in feeble
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health, but worked on at his narrative of the expedition, which was published in 1854, under the title of The U.S . Grinnell Expedition in Search of Sir John Franklin . He was determined not to give up the search for Franklin, and in spite of
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ill-health travelled through the States lecturing to obtain funds, and gave up his pay for twenty months .

At length

Henry Grinnell fitted out an expedition, in the little brig " Advance," of which Kane was given thecommand . She sailed in
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June 18J3, and passing up Smith Sound at the head of Baffin
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Bay advanced into the enclosed sea which now bears the name of Kane Basin, thus establishing the Polar route of many future Arctic expeditions . Here, off the 'coast of Greenland, the expedition passed two winters, accomplishing much useful
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geographical, as well as scientific,
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work, including the attainment of what was to remain for sixteen years the highest
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northern latitude, 8o° 35' N . (June 1854)• From this point a large
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area of open
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water was seen which was believed to be an " open Polar Sea," a chimera which played an important and delusive role in subsequent explorations . After enduring the greatest hardships it was resolved to abandon the ship, Upernivik being reached on the 5th of August 1855, whence a
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relief expedition brought the explorers home . Medals were authorized by, Congress, and in the following year Dr Kane received the founder's medal of the Royal Geographical Society, and, two years later, a gold medal from the Paris Geographical Society . He published The Second Grinnell Expedition in 1856 . Dr Kane died at Havana on the 16th of February 1857, at the age of
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thirty-seven . Between his first and second arctic voyages he made the acquaintance of the Fox
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family, the spiritualists . With one of the daughters, Margaret, he carried on a long correspondence, which was afterwards published by the lady, who declared that they were privately married . 'See Biography of E . K .

Kane, by

William Elder (1858);
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Life of E . K . Kane and other American Explorers, by S . M . Smucker (1858) ; The Love-Life of Dr Kane, containing the Correspondence and a
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History of the Engagement and Secret
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Marriage between E . K . Kane and Margaret Fox (New York, 1866) ; . " Discoveries of Dr Kane," in Jour. of the Roy . Geog
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Soc., vol.
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xxviii . (reprinted in R . G . S .

Arctic Papers of 1875) .

End of Article: ELISHA KENT KANE (1820–1857)
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