The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, October 14, 1909, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

PEARY’S AGAINST Alleges Cook Did Not Reach North Pole. PROOF OF STATEMENT. Witnesses Quoted Are Cook's Eskimo Boys. NATIVES LAUSH AT CIO Point Out Limit of Explorer’s Jour ney on Carefully Prepared Map. New York, October 12. —The follow ing statement of Commander Robert E. Peary, which he submitted, to gether with the accompanying map. to the Peary Arctic Club in support of his contention that Dr. Cook did not, reach the North Pole, is now made public for the first time. The state ment and map have been copyrighted by the Peary Arctic Club. (Entered according to Act of congress, In the year 1909, by the Peary Arctic Club, in the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.) INTRODUCTION BY PEARY. Some of my reasons for saying that Dr. Cook did not go to the North Pole will be understood by those who read Che following statements of the two Eskimo boys who went with him, and who told me and others of my party where he did go. Several Eskimos who started with Dr. Cook from An oratok in February, 1908, were at Etah when I arrived there in August, 1908.1 They told me that Dr. Cook had with him, after they left, two Eskimo boys ; or young men, two sledges and some ! twenty dogs. The boys were I-took-a shoo and Ah-pe-lah. I had known them from their childhood. One was ■ about eighteen and the other about nineteen years of age. On my return from Cape Sheridan and at the very first settlement I touched (Nerke, near Cape Chalon) in August, 1909, and nine days before reaching Etah, the Eskimos told me. ! in a general way, where Dr. Cook had i been; that he had wintered in Jones ! Sound and that he had told the white i men at Etah that he had been a long i way north, but that the boys who were j with him, I-took-a-shoo and Ah-pe-lah, said that this was not so. The Eski mos laughed at Dr. Cook’s story. On reaching Etah, I talked with the Eski-I mos there and with the two boys and asked them to describe Dr. Cook’s jour ney to members of my party and my self. This they did in the manner stated below. (Signed) R. E. Peary, j SIGNED STATEMENT OF PEARY, , BARTLETT, McMILLAN, BORUP' AND HENSON, IN REGARD TO TESTIMONY OF COOK’S TWO ESKIMO BOYS. The two Eskimo boys, I-took-a-shoo and Ah-pe-lah, who accompanied Dr. Cook while he was away from Anora tok in 1908 and 1909, were questioned separately and independently, and were corroborated by Panikpah, the father of one of them (I-took-a-shoo). who was personally familiar with the first third and the last third of theiri journey, and who said that the route for the remaining third, as shown by ’ them, was as described to him by his son after his return with Dr. Cook. Notes of their statements were taken by several of us. and no one of us has any doubt that they told the truth. Their testimony was unshaken by j cross-examination, was corroborated! by other men in the tribe, and was elicited neither by threats nor prom ises. the two boys and their father talking of their journey and their ex rrerlences in the same way that they would talk of any hunting trip. To go more into details: One of the boys was called in. and. with a chart on the table before him, was asked tc show where he. had gone with Dr. Cook. This he did, pointing out with his finger on the map, but not making any marks upon it. As he went out. the other boy came in and was asked to show where he had gone with Dr. Cook. This he did, also without making any marks, and indicated the same route and the same details as did the first boy. When he was through, Panikpah. the father of I-took-a-shoo. a very in telligent man. who was in the party of Eskimos that came back from Dr. Cook from the northern end cf Nan sen’s Strait, who is familiar as a hunt er with the Jones Sound region, and who has been In Commander Peary's various expeditions for some fifteen years, came in and indicated the same localities and details as the two boys. Then the first boy was brought in again, and with a pencil he traced on the map their route, members of our party writing upon the chart whera, according to the boy’s statement, they EVIDENCE DR. COOK had killed deer, bear, some of their dogs, seal, walrus and musk-oxen. The second boy was then called in : and the two went over the chart to-' gether, the second boy suggesting some changes as noted hereafter. Finally, Panikpah, the father, was again called in to verify details of the portions of the route with which he was personally familiar. The bulk of the boys’ testimony was not taken by Commander Peary, nor in his presence, a fact that obviates any possible claim that they were awed by him. Certain questions on independent lines from the direct narrative of the »R. COOK’S ROUTE TO COMMANDER PEARY’S OFFICSAL i/TA’MENT ■ UM ■ dWiMilTn ill liUlilll'lliXKMt. . » .11 . .r .rjvr rr »u . .. • - I.uiirr. <- tay iaqr..ny now aww so- ww n ’> w wl ’j a 7 A"! —H —V—-T \< \ \ Jvj 82 7L' n A / I TIACSHOWING DR.COOK'S ACTUAI' W-'AoX—*- A Z ;> / I ROUTS. CORRECT COPY FROM A- ' -9 \ 5 O IxAA fl ' ORIbtNAL BY THE TWO firUNM c ~ - k.V AS’ // /fi \\\ \ / / A .fc- .• v >.• V i'm I ■'« pMh t jLANP'A : —-C fe A I A" a wm W WcS \ / wiXbK (Sen <2jg> xLI ’ ; -.X\ fL nWtSW ' I NJLANP AM-. "Ac ' ; o / 7A,, - ' »■ J ¥ / - L'- ; \ rs - ’X-'VC { i ~~ ' i 1 I I 11! i v l t uh wo pg »o > 11 F I C?NdR£3S, tN ’rK£ AR t»09.9V THS PgAW AncrtT'ctbff j TH&' CWFsCC Of' J 5 THS OFCOUGBtBt; AT , The accompanying map is reproduced exactly from the original submitted by Commander Peary with his oltn lai statement by which he hopes to prove that Dr. Frederick A. Cook never reached the north pole. The map pur ports to have been traced out in the presence of the two Eskimos who were with Dr Cook and. aeem'dlng to Peary, is based upon their actual statements as to Cook’s entire journey. The dotted lines in the small map in the upper left hand corner is the route which Dr. Cook says he took on his journey to and from the pole after leaving Cape Thomas Hubbard. The irregular line extending northeast from Isachsen Land is the edge of the land ice. I.evond which. Peary declares, Dr. Cook did not venture. Eskimo boys were suggested by Com mander Peary to some of us, and were put by us to the Eskimo boys. Still later, Commander Peary asked the Eskimo boys two or three casual questions on minor points that had occurred to him. During the taking of this testimony, it developed that Dr. Cook had told these boys, as he told Mr. Whitney and Billy Pritchard, the cabin boy, that they must not tell Commander Peary or any of us anything about their journey, and the boys stated Dr. Cook had threatened them if they should tell anything. Tbe narrative of these Eskimos is as follows: They, with Dr. Cook, Francke and nine other Eskimos, left Anoratok, crossed Smith’s Sound to Cape Sabine, slept in Commander Peary’s old house in Payer Harbor, then went through Rice Strait to Buchanan Bay. After a few marches Francke and three Eski mos returned to Anoratok. Dr. Cook, with the others, then pro ceeded up Flagler Bay. a branch of Buchanan Bay, and crossed Ellesmere Land through the valley pass at the head of Flagler Bay, indicated by Com mander Peary in 1898. and utilized by Sverdrup in 1899. to the head of Sver drup’s “Bay Fiord” on the west side of Ellesmere Land. Their route then lay out through this fiord, thence north through Sverdrup's “Heuerka Sound” and Nansen Strait. On their way they killed musk-oxen and bear, and made caches, arriving eventually at a point on the west side of Nansen Strait (shore of Axel Hei berg Land of Sverdrupi. south of Cape Thomas Hubbard. A cache was formed here and the four Eskimos did not go beyond this pH nt. Two others. Koolootlngwah and Inughito. went on one more march with Dr. Cook and the two boys, help ed to build the snow igloo, then re turned without sleeping. (These two Eskimos brought beck a THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1909 letter from Dr. Cook to Frr.ncke, dnt ed the 17th of March. The two mer rejoined the other four men who hat! been left behind, and the six returned to Anoratok, arriving May 7th. This Information was obtained not from th< two Eskimo boys, but from the six men who returned and from Franckr himself, and was known to us in the summer of 1908, when the Rooserelt first arrived at Etah, The information is inserted here as supplementary te the narrative of the two boys.) After sleeping at the camp where the last two Eskimos turned back. Dr. Cook and the two boys went in a northerly or northwesterly direction with two sledges and twenty odd dogs, one more march, when they encoun tered rough ice and a lead of open wa ter. They did not enter this rough i e. nor cross the lead, but turned xve t ward or southwestward a short d! tance and returned to Heiberg Land at a point west of where they had left the cache and where the four men had turned back. Here they remained four or five sleeps, and during that time I-took-a shoo went back io the cache and got his gun which he had left there, and a few items of supplies. When asked why only a few supplies were taken from the cache, the boys replied that only a small amount of provisions had been used in the few days since they left tbe cache, and that their sledges still had all they could carry, so that they could not take more. After being informed of the boys’ narrative thus far, Commander Peary suggested as» l ies of questions to he put to the boys in regard to this trip from tbe land out and back to it. These questions and answers were as follows: Did they cross many open leads or much open water during this time? Ans. None. Did they make any caches out on the ice? Ans. No. Did they kill any bear or S'-al while out on the ice north of Cape Thomas Hubbard? Ans. No. I>id they kill or lose any of their dogs while on' ", the ice? Ans. No. With how many sledges did they start? Ans. Two. How many dogs did they have? Ans. Did not remember exactly, tint some thing over twenty. How many sledges did tliey have ■ when they got back to land? Ans. ; Two. Did they have any provisions left ou 1 their sledges when they came back to - land? Ans. Yes: the sledges still had I about all they could carry, so they were I able to take but a few things from the cache. From here they then went southwest , along the northwest coast of Heiberg Land to a point indicated on the map J - i (Sverdrup’s Cape Northwest). From here they went west across the ice, which was level and covered : with snow, offering good going, to a ‘ low island which they had seen from ■ the shore of Heiberg Land al Cape Northwest. On this island they camp ea for one sleep. The size and position of this island, as drawn by the first hoy, was criti cised by the second boy as being too large and too far to the west, the sec ond boy calling the attention of the first to the fact that the position of the island was more nearly In line with the point where they had left Heiberg Land (Cape Northwest) and the channel between Amund Ringnes Land and Ellel Ringnes Land. Tins criticism and correction was ac cepted by the first boy, who started to change the position of the island, but was stopped, as Commander Peary had given Instructions that no changes or erasures were to be made in the route as drawn by the Eskimos on the chart. From this island they could see two lands beyond (Sverdrup’s Ellef Ring nes and Amund Ringnes Lands). From the Island they journeyed to ward the left hand one of. these two lands (Amund Ringnes Land), passing a small island which they did not visit. Arriving at the shore of Am*nd Ringnes Land, the Eskimos killed a deer as indicated on the chart. The above itall' lsed portion of the statement of the E 'dino boys covers ~~ • the period of time In wh! -h Dr. Cook claims to have p ne to the I*o’t and back, and the entire time during which be could possibly have made any at tempts to go to It. The answers of the Eskimo boys to Commander Peary’s series of inde pendent questions, showing that they killed no game, made no caches, lost no dogs, and returned to the land with loaded sledges, makes their attainment of the Pole on the trip North of Cape Thomas Hubbard a physical and math ematical impossibility, as it would de mand the subsistence of three men and over twenty dogs during a jour ney of ten hundred and forty geograph ical miles on less than two sledge loads Os supplies. If it is suggested that perhaps Dr. Cook got mixed and that he reached the Pole, or thought he did. between the time of leaving the nori Invest coast of Heiberg Land at Cape Northwest, and Ids arrival at Ringnes Lnud, where they killed the deer, we must thou add to the date of Dr. cook’s letter of March 17th, al or near Cape Thomas Hubbard, the subsequent four or five sleeps at that point, and the number of days required to march from Cape Thomas Hubbard to Cape Northwest (a distance of some sixty nautical milost, which would advance his date of departure from the land to at least the 25th of March, and be pre pared to accept the claim that Dr. Cook went from Cape Northwest (about latitude eighty and a half de grees North) to the Pole, a distance of five hundred and seventy geographical miles, tn twenty seven days. After killing the deer they then trav elled south along the east side of Ring nes Land to the point Indicated on the chart, where they killed another deer. They then went east across the south part of Crown Prince Gustav Sea to the south end of Heiberg Land, then down through Norwegian Bay, where they secured some bears, but not until after they hud killed some of their dogs, to the east side of Graham Is land: then eastward Io the little bay marked “Eld s Fiord” on Sverdrup’s chart; then southwest to Hell’s Gate and Simmon’s Peninsula. sSmilg BAKING POWDER W. Absolutely Pure A /Al Makes U>e finest, most dell- (W Aw clous biscuit, cake and pastry; conveys to food X the most healthful of fruit properties Jv I YOU I Are Solicted to Investigate the/Merits of the THE BANK OF MENLO At the close of last week’s business the books : showed the deposits to be larger than at any other ; similar time in the history of the institution, and ; that they had more than doubled within a months ; time. ; The Bank invites your business, offering accur- ; acy, promptness, courtesy, fair dealing, exception ; al safety, and ability to serve you. ; Hero for the first time during the entire journey, excepi as nlrerdy noted off Cape Thomas 11. Hubbard, they encountered open wnter. On this point the boys wore clear, emphatic, and un shakable. They spent a good deal of time in tills region, and finally aban doned their dogs and one sledge, took to their boat, crossed Hell’s Gate to North Kent, up into Norfolk Inlet, then back along the north coast of Colin Archer Peninsula to Cape Vera, where they obtained fresh e 'ler duck eggs. Here they cut the remaining sledge off, t mil is shortened it.asltwas awkward to transport with the boat, and near here they killed a walrus. The statement in regard to the fresh eider duck eggs permits the approxi mate determination of the date at this time as about the first of July. (This statement also serves, if indeed any thing more than the Inherent straight forwardness and detail of their narra tive were needed, to substantiate the accuracy and truthfulness of the boys’ statement. This locality of Cape Vera Is mentioned in Sverdrup's narrative as the place where during his stay In that region he obtained eider ducks’ eggs.i From Cape Vera tliey went on down into the southwest angle of Jones Sound, where they killed a seal; thence east along the south coast of the Sound, killing three bears at the point noted on the map, to the peninsula known as Capo Spnrbo on the map, about midway on the south side of Jones Sound. Here they killed some musk-oxen and, continuing east, killed four more at the place indicated on the chart, and were finally stopped by tile pack lee at the mouth of Jones Sound. From here they turned back to Cape Sparbo, where they' wintered and killed many musk-oxen. After the sun returned in 1909 they started, pushing their sledge, across Jones Sound to Cape Tennyson; thence along the coast to Clarence Head (pass ing inside of two small Islands not shown on the chart, but drawn on It by the boys), where they killed a boar; thence across the broad bight in the const to Cadogan Fiord; thence around Cape Isabella and up to Commander Peary’s old house in Payer Harbor near Cape Snbine, where they found a seal cached for them by Panikpah, I-took-a-shoo’s father. From here they crossed Smith Sound on the Ice, ar riving at Anoratok. (Signed) R. E. PKanr, U. K. N. Robert A. Baivh.ktt. Master S.S. /foo«co«U. D. H, McMtUAN. Geoiuie Honor, Matthew A. llemsoh. Schooner’s Crew Released. Progreso, PJex.—The crew of the American fishing schooner Colt, seized by the Mexican authorities for poaching, who have been in Jail since September 24, have been released. The ship is held. Captain Joseph Schlease, commanding the vessel, states that he and his men had at first been refused the request, to neo the American consul. The captalo states that his vessel was damaged In a storm and carried to the coast of Mexico, ami that he put In port for repairs and immediately was seized by a gunboat.