Hall, Charles Francis, 1821-1871

Charles Francis Hall (b. 1821 - d. November 8, 1871) In 1849, he moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, where he established a small seal-engraving business and, in the late 1850s, two small newspapers, the Cincinnati Occasional and the Daily Press . Developing a keen interest in the Arctic, he decided to mount an expedition to search for survivors of Sir John Franklin's missing Northwest Passage expedition of 1845-1848. In 1860, Hall travelled to the east coast of the United States where he met the merchant and philanthropist, Henry Grinnell, who introduced him to whaling firms in Connecticut, one of which offered Hall a free passage to Baffin Island. In 1860, Hall sailed to the Arctic for the first time on the US Whaling and Franklin Search Expedition, 1860-1862, planning to visit King William Island to find any relics of Franklin's expedition and to search the adjacent coast for possible survivors. During the 1860 winter, Hall befriended the English-speaking Eskimo couple, Ebierbing (Joe) and Tookoolito (Hannah), who became his companions for the rest of the expedition and accompanied him on subsequent expeditions. While making an exploratory boat journey between August and September 1861, Hall discovered that Frobisher Bay was not a strait as had previously been assumed, and found relics of Sir Martin Frobisher's 16th-century expedition.

Determined to raise funds for a second expedition, Hall conducted a lecture tour on his return to the United States and published an account of his first expedition, insisting that there might be survivors of the Franklin expedition living in the area of King William Island. In 1864, he led the U.S. Franklin Search Expedition, 1864-1869, sponsored by public subscription in a further attempt to search for relics of Franklin's expedition on King William Island. Setting out from New London, Hall decided to make his base at Repulse Bay, northwest Hudson Bay, where he would live and work among the Eskimos. After attempting unsuccessfully to persuade the Eskimos of that region to accompany him to King William Island, he hired some whalers, but this experiment ended in failure when he shot and killed one for threatening mutiny. Finally in March 1869, he set out with a party of Eskimos for King William Island, where he found relics and skeletal remains of the Franklin party, thus dispelling any belief that survivors might still be in the region. However, the greatest achievement of this expedition was to demonstrate that explorers could live successfully among the Eskimos and adopt their methods of travel and survival, greatly influencing a later generation of polar explorers.

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