ISBN 0966576292  
My Arctic Journal, by Josephine Peary
"The first woman arctic explorer, Josephine Peary, wrote her journal during the 1891–1892 Greenland expedition. Today it is a classic in arctic literature."
An introduction by the author’s grandson
Edward Peary Stafford
2003 front cover design is inspired from 1893 original where The Dipper points to the North Star.
1893 front cover, stars enhanced to make them more visible
 

 
 
 
Back cover
 
Original photos digitally colorized by hand airbrushing. The lower three in the right column were printed, in the 1893 edition, on color tinted paper—the first two yellow and the bottom one blue.
Artifacts collected from the natives as a collection to bring home for museum display. The Eskimos had no wood, but used bone, ivory tusks, stone, and animal leather to fabricate an array of sophisticated tools.
Mrs. Peary carried her own Colt revolver and hunted for meat with her Winchester lever action rifle.
   
Title page. At the end of the book is her husbands account of the trek he and Astrup accomplished to the end of Greenland. Astrup published his own book in 1895. His photos and illustrations have been incorporated into this new edition.
  This is a truly remarkable body of prose. On the following pages will be found on one readily apparent level the record of a sensitive, intelligent woman reacting to a primitive people and a remote, hostile environment. But on a second level, just below the surface, lie the germinating seeds of many of the critical aspects of Arctic exploration for the succeeding twenty years.
A pair of Narwhals
Jo Peary, age twenty-eight, three years married to a naval engineer of high ambition and singleness of purpose, is uprooted of her own volition and transported to an arctic wilderness more remote than the craters of the Moon are today, whose inhabitants balance continuously on the razor’s edge of mere survival. The only Caucasian woman for hundreds of miles, far ahead of her time in resourcefulness, courage and stamina, she provides physical and emotional support to her injured husband, gains the respect and affection of the natives, cooks for six men (who she calls her “boys”) through the three-month arctic darkness, and with her own rifle and shotgun brings down deer and fowl for the expedition larder. This in itself is first class adventure illuminated by intelligent and articulate perception.

On the second level Mrs. Peary, in this personal story of the first serious Peary expedition1, unwittingly reveals human and material factors that will directly affect the course of history. In relating her association with the Eskimos (the word Inuit was not yet in use), she previews the use of native methods of travel, clothing, hunting and shelter and the rewarded use of the Eskimos themselves, which were controlling factors in her husband’s eventual attainment of the Pole 18 years later.

In her descriptions of the men of the party and their activities she gives us glimpses of characteristics that will govern their actions for good and evil in later years. Of primary importance is the thorough and meticulous planning of all aspects of the expedition by Peary himself, a lifelong professional practice that will see its


apogee in the military style coordinated use of multiple sledging parties that ultimately achieved the Pole. But she also tells of the remote and abrasive Verhoeff, the only casualty of the expedition, who loses his life in a crevasse on a prohibited one-man trek across a glacier.

More significantly she tells of Matthew Henson, who had first served with Lieutenant Peary in Nicaragua (surveying a possible route for a canal), now a trusted and respected assistant to both Pearys. His carpentry skill helps to construct their fortress for winter survival, Redcliff House, as well as the expedition sledges. Josephine records his valued friendship with the natives and his dependability as a hunter, and in his sharing of routine duties, in the positioning of supplies for the coming exploration of the ice cap, sees him in all respects as a peer of the other expedition assistants.

In an era when racial discrimination was the norm, the reader must refer to the publisher’s introduction to learn that Henson was “colored” since Josephine never mentions this, nor refers to Matt in any way other than as a respected expedition member. In Peary’s absence on The Great White Journey, it is Matt who acts as her guardian and companion on hunting and scouting forays along the frozen coast. Here Henson is already displaying the energy, skills and loyalty that will make him increasingly indispensable to Peary and lead directly to the day the two men will stand together, with four Eskimo helpers, as the first human beings to reach a Pole of the Earth.

And of equal though opposite significance she tells of Frederick Cook, a volunteer from Brooklyn, New York who acts as the expedition’s physician despite only having completed a 2-year course of study. Cook treats sufferers from the “grippe” (a form of influenza) but when Peary is away on his expedition he goes off on an overstocked hunting trip loaded with crucial supplies of food and ammunition only to return ten days later with nothing of either, nor with any fresh meat to show for the expenditure.

Nor does the affable Cook enhance his popularity when he carelessly discharges a heavy caliber rifle through the ceiling, narrowly missing Henson who was sunning himself on the roof. Later it will be Cook who, after faking the first ascent of Mt. McKinley, and from Patagonia attempting to pass off another man’s work as his own2, perpetrates the greatest fraud in the history of exploration by claiming, that with only two lightly loaded sledges of supplies and two Eskimos, to have visited the North Pole a year before Peary, thus hoping to pervert history to his advantage and cheat his former mentor of a lifetime of effort, sacrifice and achievement.

Thus in this seemingly straight-forward personal narrative of a year in the far north we can see the genesis of high accomplishment: the determination of the insularity of Greenland, the mapping of hundreds of miles of unexplored arctic coastlines, the first soundings of the Polar Sea (later used and confirmed by the USS NAUTILUS on her own submerged journey to 90 North) and ultimately the Discovery of the Pole for the United States of America.

But unfortunately in My Arctic Journal we can also see the genesis of a bitter polar controversy that raged for several months in 1909 until Cook’s lies were exposed and Peary given full credit for his historic achievement. Sadly, fading traces of that great fraud still smirch the public record, kept alive by the finances of a trust fund created my Cook’s vindictive daughter and by those who would deny the truth for their own private purposes.

Jo Peary, with characteristic courage, would bear her first child on these same forbidding Greenland shores the following year, support and inspire her explorer husband through another half dozen expeditions until final victory, and outlive him by more than thirty years.

My Arctic Journal provides a unique insight into a lost culture in a forbidding land as seen by an adventurous and articulate young woman, and foretells heroic deeds and high accomplishments through the determined teamwork of Robert Peary and Matthew Henson.

Ed Stafford
July, 2003
Copyright © 2007 Russell R. Robinson