The Daily Courier

Searchers find 2nd ship of Franklin expedition

2 ships lost during 1845 attempt to find Northwest Passage

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The second ship from Sir John Franklin’s doomed 19th-century search for the Northwest Passage has been located — right where an Inuit hunter said it would be.

“The ship is in remarkable condition,” Adrian Schimnowsk­i of the Arctic Research Foundation, one of the groups involved in the search, said Monday from the research ship that located the HMS Terror.

“It looks like it gently slipped to the seabed floor.”

The Terror, one of two British navy vessels sent in 1845 to try to find the Northwest Passage, was discovered Sept. 3 in 24 metres of water in Terror Bay, a small indentatio­n on the coast of King William Island west of the community of Gjoa Haven.

The well-preserved wreck of Franklin’s other ship, the Erebus, was found in 2014 about 11 metres below the surface in the Queen Maud Gulf, along the central Arctic coastline.

The ships were less than 100 kilometres apart.

Both were lost with all 129 crew. Their fate — until now — has proved one of the Arctic’s most enduring mysteries.

Schimnowsk­i said that mystery might have remained if not for a late-night conversati­on on one of the search vessels between himself and Sammy Kogvik, an Inuk and Canadian Ranger from Gjoa Haven.

The two were on the bridge of the Martin Bergmann, a research vessel, and Kogvik was telling Schimnowsk­i about the history of the shorelines they were sailing past. He started talking about something he’d seen seven years ago while snowmobili­ng across the sea ice of Terror Bay.

Kogvik recalled how he had looked behind him to check on his hunting partner when he spotted a large pole sticking up out of the ice. The two Inuit stopped and took pictures of what looked like a ship’s mast.

But when Kogvik got home to Gjoa Haven, he found he’d dropped his camera and lost the shots.

“He kept the story secret because he didn’t want people not to believe him,” Schimnowsk­i said

“As soon as he said the story, I knew from his eyes and the way he was speaking that he had something. I’d also heard similar stories in the past four years, so we quickly decided to change our course, to go in to Terror Bay.”

The crew searched for more than two hours without success. They decided to give up and head to the nearby community of Cambridge Bay using a different route out of the bay than they had entered with.

“Within 15 minutes of starting again, we found an artifact on screen,” Schimnowsk­i said. “It looked like the cross-section of a masted ship.

“It was very exciting. We had several happy dances on the bridge. There were hugs, tears . . .”

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