Marin Independent Journal

`Enterprisi­ng woman explorer'

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The incredible life story and extraordin­ary accomplish­ments of San Rafael native Louise Arner Boyd are worthy of the term “legendary.” Last week, the Marin History Museum celebrated the anniversar­y of Boyd's birthday with tours of her family's former estate (now split between the Boyd Gate House and the San Rafael Elks Lodge) while hosting a two-day exhibit of photograph­s and artifacts from her life and expedition­s. Boyd was born in San Rafael on Sept. 16, 1887, to John and Louise Boyd, heirs to the Bodie gold mine bonanza. Under her parents' loving care, she developed a strong sense of self-confidence and an unquenchab­le curiosity while chasing after her two older brothers at their San Rafael home and large ranch at the foot of Mount Diablo. At 13, her idyllic world ended abruptly when both of her teenage brothers died within months of each other of a congenital heart condition. She spent the next 20years caring for her grieving parents and learning to manage her father's business at a time when few women were entrusted with such responsibi­lities.

After her parents' deaths in 1919-20, Boyd began to pursue her own interests

unfettered from the restrictio­ns and expectatio­ns that family and society placed on

women of that era.

She traveled extensivel­y in the United States and Europe,

journaling and learning the nascent art of photograph­y.

In 1924, while visiting Norway, she sailed to the island of Spitzberge­n in the Arctic Ocean and beheld the wonders of the pack ice that she had longed to see. This experience changed Boyd's life as she would eventually organize, finance and lead multiple scientific expedition­s to Greenland with the assistance of the American Geographic­al Society (AGS), botanist Alice Eastwood and numerous Scandinavi­an and European Arctic experts.

The AGS published two books for Boyd based on her expedition­s and she was awarded the prestigiou­s Cullum Geographic­al Medal in 1938 by the AGS.

In 1934, she was chosen as delegate to the Internatio­nal Geographic­al Congress in Warsaw, Poland. While there, she traveled the countrysid­e, photograph­ing and chroniclin­g the customs, economy and daily life of Poland's rural peasants. The AGS published her third book, “Polish Countrysid­es,” based on her notes and photograph­s. During World War II, she worked for the U.S. Intelligen­ce Service as an “expert consultant” and led a secret Arctic expedition for the National Bureau of Standards that was essential to understand­ing radio transmissi­ons in high latitudes and the feasibilit­y of building a landing field at York Sound in Canada's Northwest Territorie­s.

Later in life, Boyd traveled widely throughout the world while putting her wealth to work for many local charities in Marin and San Francisco. In 1955, she chartered a plane for a record-setting flight over the North Pole, becoming the first woman to accomplish that feat. With her fortune all but spent, Boyd sold the family's San Rafael home in 1963and lived in San Francisco until her death in 1972. She was cremated and had her ashes scattered over Point Barrow, Alaska. Geography historian J.K. Wright summed up Boyd's legacy when he wrote that Boyd was “the world's most enterprisi­ng woman explorer.”

History Watch is written by Scott Fletcher, a volunteer at the Marin History Museum, marinhisto­ry.org. Images included in History Watch are available for purchase by calling 415-382-1182 or by email at info@ marinhisto­ry.org.

 ?? COURTESY OF MARIN HISTORY MUSEUM ?? Louise Arner Boyd signs the American Geographic­al Society's Fliers' and Explorers' Globe in 1938.
COURTESY OF MARIN HISTORY MUSEUM Louise Arner Boyd signs the American Geographic­al Society's Fliers' and Explorers' Globe in 1938.

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