Online Encyclopedia

JOHN RAE (1813-1893)

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Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 811 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN RAE (1813-1893)  , Scottish Arctic explorer, was born on the 3oth of September 1813, in the Orkney Islands, which he
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left at an early age to study
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medicine at
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Edinburgh University, qualifying as a surgeon in 1833 . He made a voyage in a professional capacity in one of the
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ships of the Hudson's
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Bay
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Company, and entering the service of the company was
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resident surgeon for ten years at their station at
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Moose Factory, at the head of James Bay . In 1846 he made a boat-voyage to Repulse Bay, and having wintered there, in the following spring surveyed 700 miles of new coast-
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line connecting the earlier surveys of Ross and Parry . An account of this expedition, A Narrative of an Expedition to the Shores of the Arctic Sea in 1846 and 1847, was published by him in 185o . During a visit to
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London in 1848 he joined the expedition which was then preparing to go out under
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Sir John Richardson in search of Franklin; and in 1851, at the request of the Government and with a very slender outfit, he travelled some 5300 miles, much of it on
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foot, and explored and mapped 700 miles of new coast on the south side of Wollaston and Victoria Lands . For this achievement he received the Founder's gold medal of the Royal
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Geographical Society . In 1853 he commanded another boat-expedition which was fitted out by the Hudson's Bay Company, which connected the surveys of Ross with that of Deane and Simpson, and proved King William's
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Land to be an island . It was on this journey that he obtained the first authentic
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news regarding the
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fate of Franklin, thereby winning the
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reward of £io,000 promised by the admiralty . He subsequently travelled across Iceland, and in Greenland and the
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northern parts of
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America,
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surveying routes for telegraph lines . Dr Rae attributed much to his success in Arctic travel to his adoption of the methods of the Eskimo, a
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people whom he had studied very closely . He was a keen sportsman, an accurate and scientific observer . He died at his house in London and was buried in the Orkney Islands .

End of Article: JOHN RAE (1813-1893)
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