Wednesday, May 5, 2021

His Ship Vanished in the Arctic 176 Years Ago. DNA Has Offered a Clue. - The New York Times




His Ship Vanished in the Arctic 176 Years Ago. DNA Has Offered a Clue. - The New York Times

On July 9, 1845, two months after departing from Greenhithe, England, Warrant Officer John Gregory wrote a letter to his wife from Greenland in which he described seeing whales and icebergs for the first time.

Gregory, who had never been to sea before, was aboard the H.M.S. Erebus, one of two ships to sail in Sir John Franklin’s 1845 expedition to find the fabled Northwest Passage, a sea route through the Canadian Arctic that would serve as a trade route to Asia.

Disaster struck. The Erebus and the H.M.S. Terror became stuck in ice in Victoria Strait, off King William Island in what is now the Canadian territory of Nunavut. In April 1848, the survivors — Franklin and nearly two dozen others had already died — set out on foot for a trading post on the Canadian mainland.

All 129 explorers ultimately perished, succumbing to brutal blizzard conditions and subzero temperatures. The doomed expedition endured in the public imagination — inspiring fiction by Mark Twain and Jules Verne, and, more recently, the 2018 AMC series “The Terror” — driven in part by rumors that the crew resorted to cannibalism. The wreckage lay quiet until 2014, when a remotely controlled underwater vehicle picked up the silhouette of the Erebus near King William Island. Two years later, a tip from a local Inuit hunter led to the discovery of the Terror in the ice-cold water of Terror Bay.

John Gregory’s descendants would not learn about his fate until more than 175 years after he sent the letter home from Greenland. Some sailors had been identified after being found in marked graves. But recently, Gregory’s DNA and a sample from a descendant born in 1982 were matched, making him the first explorer from the trip whose remains have been positively identified through DNA and genealogical analyses — a process similar to that used in recent years to identify murder suspects and victims in cold cases.

Last week, Jonathan Gregory, 38, who lives in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, got an email from researchers in Canada confirming that the cheek swab he had sent to them confirmed that he was a direct descendant of John Gregory.

He had heard about his family’s connection to the expedition, but until the DNA match, “it was really theory.” (Though he goes by Joe, the similarity between their names “all makes sense,” Mr. Gregory said.)

KEEP READING

Paul Cayard: Leading the US Sailing Team >> Scuttlebutt Sailing News

Paul Cayard: Leading the US Sailing Team >> Scuttlebutt Sailing News

"Cliffy' Lobster boat takes shape - Apprenticeshop

 The Apprenticeshop in Rockland, Maine, is a traditional boat-building school.  Each student builds their own boat - usually a ten foot rowing skiff like the one in the foreground of the current header on this blog.

But the school takes on larger commissions.  One I have presented before - the Dublin Bay 24 - is in an advanced state , though paused by covid19.  I last reported on the lobster boat project at the early stage - building the stem - in February 2020, just before covid 19 hit. But substantial progress is being made on the 26' lobster boat named Cliffy for a local builder, commissioned by South Thomaston boat building legend Harold "Dynamite: Payson. Rick Kraft, a fine woodworker, graduated last year but stayed on as  a Fellow.  He gave me the closeup tour of how this traditional local boat is coming together.




The longitudinal pieces - called ribands -
hold the ribs (frames) in shape 
while the boat is planked.

As the boat is planked the ribands come off.
The first plank is called the garboard. It runs lengthwise 
along the keel, from the stem to the stern.
Too long for one planked, it has to be spliced.

The transom is solid oak.


The lateral pieces are called floor timbers.

The frames (ribs) are split to enable them to bend.