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Cook as hunting guide for the wealthy
With millionaire big game hunter John Bradley they slaughtered arctic beasts

Cook needed wealthy backers
Cook never could get a real arctic expedition together. He had booked a couple of disastrous tour groups that went to Greenland and promptly had to be rescued. He was good at promoting, but not at organizing or leading an expedition. It has been theorized that Cook had to fake the McKinley climb to raise the kind of money he needed to stage his brilliant North Pole hoax.

Cook slipped away
When Fred's phony Mt. McKinley claim was questioned by scientific societies in New York he needed to get out of town. He slipped away with millionaire gambler Bradley's yacht after leaving a letter with the Explorers Club stating that he was going to the North Pole. He had been buttering up Bradley, as a source of cash, by naming a mountain peak after him near McKinley. Bradley became Cook's co-conspirator in the deliberate hoax by which he tried to "steal the thunder" of Peary's final Polar assault. Bradley gave Cook $10,000 to buy supplies for his North Pole scam and took him as a guide in exchange for his help murdering animal trophies.

Bradley loved big game hunting and at that time there were no laws or any regulations on arctic species. If one had a yacht, money, and time they could literally harvest all the polar bear skins and ivory walrus tusks they wanted. These items were highly prized and very valuable.  A narwhal tusk was worth $1,000. Walrus ivory $90 each. (Note: gold was $20/oz. back then)

NOTE: When Peary was headed for the Pole in 1908 he found Cook's stash of  $10,000 worth of arctic fox pelts and some ivory in an Eskimo village. Peary took these items on the grounds that Cook was missing and presumed dead.

Valuable ivory and pelts
Arctic Fox pelts
(blue fox pelts for ladies furs)
Polar bear furs (some bears were 9 feet tall)
Walrus ivory tusks (2 to 3 feet long)
Narwhal ivory tusks (6 feet or more)
Seal skins (hats, gloves, boots)

Fred could speak some Eskimo language, so he enlisted the "little people", as Fred called them, to skin the beasts they killed. Fred also helped Bradley accumulate a fortune in ivory walrus & narwhal tusks from the "boreal pigmies". They traded trinkets such as handkerchiefs and tin cups for these valuable items. Cook gloats about this in his book.

Bradley then dumped Fred at an Eskimo camp and left. The next year Fred "discovered" new land and made up a story about how he reached the North Pole. In reality, his Eskimo companions quickly ratted him out. They knew they had never been more than 12 miles from land. They said Fred took them south - not north!

John Bradley gave Cook his chance


Cook, ready to kill something.


© 2000 Rusty Robinson