The Hamilton Spectator

Britain gifts long-lost Franklin expedition ships to Canada, Inuit

- MIA RABSON

GATINEAU, QUE. — Canada and the Inuit are now officially co-owners of the two long-lost ships from the Franklin expedition.

The deeds to HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, along with all their remaining contents, were signed over to Canada and the Inuit Heritage Trust after nearly two years of negotiatio­ns with the British government over which artifacts Britain would retain.

“This is a really extraordin­ary announceme­nt,” Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna said during Thursday’s signing ceremony with British High Commission­er Susan le Jeune D’Allegeersh­ecque.

Britain retains ownership of 65 artifacts already discovered — both on land prior to the discovery of either shipwreck, as well as on board Erebus itself after it was found in September 2014.

Parks Canada archeologi­sts, guided by Inuit experts, located Erebus in relatively shallow water off the coast of King William Island in Nunavut in September 2014. HMS Terror was found in waters off a different part of the island almost exactly two years later.

In May 1845, Sir John Franklin and his crew left England on an explorator­y and scientific mission through the Arctic. They disappeare­d sometime in 1846 after the ships became trapped in the ice, their fate and the locations of the ships becoming one of Canada’s most enduring historical mysteries.

Because they were commission­ed Royal Navy ships, they and their contents belonged to the U.K. under internatio­nal law. But in 1997, long before the ships were actually found, Britain agreed ownership would eventually be transferre­d to Canada. Negotiatio­ns to do so officially began in May 2016 but hit some road blocks that necessitat­ed high-level interventi­on last summer.

In her first week on the job as the new British high commission­er in Canada last August, le Jeune D’Allegeersh­ecque had a meeting with McKenna in Ottawa.

“She asked me if I could get it sorted out and we’ve done it,” le Jeune D’Allegeersh­ecque said Thursday.

She said informal agreement was reached when Prime Minister Theresa May met with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Ottawa in September. Britain announced in October it would transfer ownership of all but a handful of artifacts to Canada and the Inuit. Still it took many more months for the final arrangemen­ts to be made, culminatin­g Thursday in the signing ceremony at the Canadian Museum of History.

The museum is currently hosting a special exhibit on the Franklin expedition with many of the 65 artifacts Britain is keeping, including the ship’s bell from HMS Erebus, the ship’s wheel, some bowls and dinner plates, and even a handful of lead shot from navy guns.

Everything left on the ships — thousands of artifacts remain on board — will be co-owned by Canada and the Inuit Heritage Trust, an Inuit cultural preservati­on organizati­on mandated under the Nunavut land claims agreement.

It was only with Inuit historical accounts and assistance that Parks Canada finally found the ships. Thursday’s ceremony paid tribute to Louie Kamookak, who was instrument­al in helping to locate the ships and who died last month of cancer.

Kamookak’s work unravellin­g the Inuit oral histories of the shipwrecks was critical to Parks Canada ultimately being able to locate the lost ships, said Torsten Diesel, the Inuit Heritage Trust’s project manager.

“Each and every one of us are only here today thanks to Louie Kamookak,” said Diesel.

The only artifacts to be recovered so far have come from Erebus, which will be the focus for Parks Canada when a team of nine underwater archeologi­sts return to the site this summer.

Jarred Picher, director of archeology and history at Parks Canada, said Erebus contains the cabin once occupied by Franklin himself and is the best bet to uncover some of the biggest secrets about the fated expedition.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A hook block recovered from HMS Erebus is shown on display at the Museum of History in Gatineau, Que.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS A hook block recovered from HMS Erebus is shown on display at the Museum of History in Gatineau, Que.

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