A NEGRO EXPLORER AT THE NORTH POLE
[Illustration: MATTHEW A. HENSON]
A NEGRO EXPLORER AT THE NORTH POLE
BY
MATTHEW A. HENSON
WITH A FOREWORD BY ROBERT E. PEARY REAR ADMIRAL, U. S. N., RETIRED
AND AN INTRODUCTION BY BOOKER T. WASHINGTON
_WITH ILLUSTRATIONS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS_
NEW YORK FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY PUBLISHERS
_Copyright, 1912, by_ FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
_All rights reserved, including that of translation into foreign languages, including the Scandinavian_
_February, 1912_
FOREWORD
Friends of Arctic exploration and discovery, with whom I have come in contact, and many whom I know only by letter, have been greatly interested in the fact of a colored man being an effective member of a serious Arctic expedition, and going north, not once, but numerous times during a period of over twenty years, in a way that showed that he not only could and did endure all the stress of Arctic conditions and work, but that he evidently found pleasure in the work.
The example and experience of Matthew Henson, who has been a member of each and of all my Arctic expeditions, since '91 (my trip in 1886 was taken before I knew Henson) is only another one of the multiplying illustrations of the fact that race, or color, or bringing-up, or environment, count nothing against a determined heart, if it is backed and aided by intelligence.
Henson proved his fitness by long and thorough apprenticeship, and his participation in the final victory which planted the Stars and Stripes at the North Pole, and won for this country the international prize of nearly four centuries, is a distinct credit and feather in the cap of his race.
As I wired Charles W. Anderson, collector of internal revenue, and chairman of the dinner which was given to Henson in New York, in October, 1909, on the occasion of the presentation to him of a gold watch and chain by his admirers:
"I congratulate you and your race upon Matthew Henson. He has driven home to the world your great adaptability and the fiber of which you are made. He has added to the moral stature of every intelligent man among you. His is the hard-earned reward of tried loyalty, persistence, and endurance. He should be an everlasting example to your young men that these qualities will win whatever object they are directed at. He deserves every attention you can show him. I regret that it is impossible for me to be present at your dinner. My compliments to your assembled guests."
It would be superfluous to enlarge on Henson in this introduction. His work in the north has already spoken for itself and for him. His book will speak for itself and him.
Yet two of the interesting points which present themselves in connection with his work may be noted.
Henson, son of the tropics, has proven through years, his ability to stand tropical, temperate, and the fiercest stress of frigid, climate and exposure, while on the other hand, it is well known that the inhabitants of the highest north, tough and hardy as they are to the rigors of their own climate, succumb very quickly to the vagaries of even a temperate climate. The question presents itself at once: "Is it a difference in physical fiber, or in brain and will power, or is the difference in the climatic conditions themselves?"
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Negro Explorer at the North Pole by Henson
- 2: On that bitter brilliant day in April
- 3: Because he was the best man for the place
- 4: Balboa had 30 Negroes with him
- 5: There were not many people who knew who Henson was
- 6: Both Verhoeff and Marvin were good friends of mine
- 7: Peary also took a young Esquimo girl
- 8: 17' was made by Commander Peary
- 9: MacMillan is a professor in a college in Massachusetts
- 10: Has been uneventful except for the odor of the Erik
- 11: All of the Esquimos want to come aboard and stay aboard
- 12: Whitney had asked me my advice
- 13: Assisted and hampered by some of the Esquimos
- 14: But did no damage except scaring the Esquimos
- 15: And chasing Esquimos out of my quarters
- 16: Sledges of a different pattern from those used heretofore
- 17: A typical Esquimo dog is the picture of alert attention
- 18: For the Esquimos themselves now hunt inland
- 19: The seventieth meridian was our pathway to the Pole
- 20: Worked all day soldering the tins of alcohol
- 21: Shipshape condition of the Captain's igloo
- 22: And very shortly after George Borup came driving in
- 23: Shows his distorted image above the horizon
- 24: That had been made for him by the Esquimo woman
- 25: George Borup were all alert and at attention
- 26: Ooblooyah and Slocum Esquimo name
- 27: And with Ootah I started to reconnoiter
- 28: Peary sent a detachment of three Esquimos
- 29: And when the Esquimos commenced to get cranky
- 30: Neither Borup nor Marvin had caught up
- 31: We are sheltered north of a huge paleocrystic floeberg
- 32: We got over the heavy floe ice
- 33: Our tickley benders were not done in the spirit of play
- 34: There were three Esquimos and seventeen dogs in his party
- 35: The Commander's Esquimo courier
- 36: And returned to the igloo for the sledges
- 37: When we reached the Captain's igloo
- 38: Quickly crossed with his Esquimos
- 39: Especially untangling the traces of the bewildered dogs
- 40: His Esquimo boys were incapable of telling it
- 41: My kamiks boots of sealskin were stripped off
- 42: Taking the time from Commander Peary
- 43: According to Esquimo standards
- 44: On bidding Commander Peary farewell in 1906
- 45: From Cape Columbia to Cape Chelyuskin
- 46: Peary continued on to Sail Harbor
- 47: When MacMillan and Borup returned
- 48: Borup went to Clements Markham Inlet to hunt musk oxen
- 49: Goodsell had reached it an hour before him
- 50: She had to be made fast to a floeberg
- 51: The Esquimos had a grand feast off the skin of the narwhal
- 52: A village of five tupiks skin tents
- 53: The Roosevelt steamed back to Karnah
- 54: Panikpah and Pooadloonah were the two Esquimos who found
- 55: Whitney to bring any of the Dr
- 56: Landing Esquimos at the different settlements
- 57: We arrived at Turnavik at seven thirty P
- 58: Peary and the children on board
- 59: Each holding a koodlah fire pot
- 60: The Esquimos are a very superstitious people
- 61: Obvious punctuation errors have been repaired
