Detail View: JCB Archive of Early American Images: [One of a chain of Arctic lakes]

Accession number: 
02296
Record number: 
02296-22
JCB call number: 
D824 P265j / 1-SIZE
Image title: 
[One of a chain of Arctic lakes]
Place image published: 
[London]
Image publisher: 
[John Murray]
Image date: 
[1824]
Image function: 
illustration; vol. 2, p. 327
Technique: 
lithograph
Image dimension height: 
8.1 cm.
Image dimension width: 
17.1 cm.
Page dimension height: 
27.1 cm.
Page dimension width: 
20.5 cm.
Materials medium: 
ink
Materials support: 
paper
Description: 
Men carrying walking sticks or staves climb up a hill and across the falls of a lake.
Source creator: 
Parry, William Edward, Sir, 1790-1855
Source Title: 
Journal of a second voyage for the discovery of a north-west passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific; performed in the years 1821-22-23, in his Majesty's ships Fury and Hecla, under the orders of William Edward Parry, ...
Source place of publication: 
London
Source publisher: 
John Murray, Publisher to the Admiralty, and Board of Longitude.
Source date: 
MDCCCXXIV. [1824]
notes: 
The image depicts Captain Lyon's attempt to discover land to the south at the end of August 1822. He and his crew discovered a chain of lakes connected by falls. One of the chains extended 6 to 8 miles, and the lakes were surrounded by mountains and cliffs.William Parry's first independent expedition to find a northwest passage left in 1819 to try to meet John Franklin coming over land. His ships were the first British ones to enter the Arctic Archipelago, and he was the first to reach 110o W longitude. He stayed on Melville Island (named for Viscount Melville) until August 1, 1820, sailed a little farther south and west, then returned to England. He proved that it was possible to winter over in the Arctic and showed that one would have to navigate through an archipelago to find a northwest passage. The second expedition left in April of 1821; two winters were passed in the Arctic and much knowledge of the Inuit was gained, but ice blocked any discovery of a passage.
Time Period: 
1801-1850
Provenance/Donor: 
Acquired before 1874.
Owner and copyright: 
©John Carter Brown Library, Box 1894, Brown University, Providence, R.I. 02912
geographic area: 
Arctic
Subject Area: 
Geography, maps, city views and plans
Subject headings: 
Canada, northern
Subject headings: 
Arctic regions
Subject headings: 
Northwest Passage