Departure of Peary and the Roosevelt from New York 1905
Title:
Departure of Peary and the Roosevelt from New York 1905
Description:
Photographed July 16, 1905. American Mutoscope and Biograph Company Location: Dock on Hudson River, New York, N.Y. Camera: G.W. ''Billy'' Bitzer The camera pans to show the schooner ''Roosevelt'' docked at a covered pier on the Hudson River on Manhattan's west side. Then, from a camera position on board, men in straw hats and fashionably dressed ladies are seen boarding the ship [1:20]. Next, the famous polar explorer Rear Admiral Robert Peary appears on the gangway in a dark jacket, mustache and straw hat [2:29]. He tips his hat, consults his watch, then, just before the film ends, motions to order the departure. On this expedition he achieved the ''farthest north'' record, but failed to reach the North Pole. Completed only four months prior to this film, the ''Roosevelt'' was specially designed to withstand Arctic ice. She was 184 feet long, 35 and a half feet wide, with a hull over two and a half feet thick. Fully loaded the ship weighed 1,500 tons while drawing only 16.2 feet. In addition to sail power, the ship was driven by a 1000 horsepower steam engine, which could produce short bursts of even greater power to get the ship through thick ice. The ''Roosevelt'' served Peary on this expedition as well as the following one in 1908-1909. Sold numerous times to a variety of commercial concerns, the ''Roosevelt'' was abandoned to the elements on a mud flat in Cristobal, Panama in 1937, where she eventually rotted away. Robert Edwin Peary (May 6, 1856 February 20, 1920) was an American explorer who claimed to have been the first person, on April 6, 1909, to reach the geographic North Pole. Peary's claim was widely credited for most of the 20th century, though it was criticized even in its own day and is today widely doubted. THE 1905-06 EXPEDITION Peary's next expedition was supported by a $50,000 gift by George Crocker. Peary then used the money for a new ship. Peary's new ship Roosevelt battled its way through the ice between Greenland and Ellesmere Island to an American hemisphere farthest north by ship. The 1906 ''Peary System'' dogsled drive for the pole across the rough sea ice of the Arctic Ocean started from the north tip of Ellesmere at 83° north latitude. The parties made well under 10 miles (16 km) a day until they became separated by a storm, so Peary was inadvertently without a companion sufficiently trained in navigation to verify his account from that point northward. With insufficient food and with the negotiability of the ice between himself and land an uncertain factor, he made the best dash he could and barely escaped with his life off the melting ice. On April 20th, he was no further north than 86°30' latitude yet he claimed to have the next day achieved a Farthest North world record at 87°06' and returned to 86°30' without camping, an implied trip of at least 72 nautical miles (83 statute miles) between sleeps, even assuming undetoured travel. After returning to the Roosevelt in May, Peary in June began weeks of further agonizing travel by heading west along the shore of Ellesmere, discovering Cape Colgate, from the summit of which he claimed in his 1907 publications he had seen a previously undiscovered far-north ''Crocker Land'' to the northwest on June 24th of 1906. Yet his diary for this time and place says ''No land visible'' and Crocker Land was in 1914 found to be non-existent by Donald MacMillan and Fitzhugh Green. On December 15, 1906 the National Geographic Society, which was primarily known for publishing a popular magazine, certified Peary's 1905-6 expedition and Farthest with its highest honor, the Hubbard Gold Medal; no major professional geographical society followed suit. - excerpt from wikipedia ''The Roosevelt embodies all that a most careful study of previous polar ships and my own years of personal experience could suggest. With the sturdiness of a battleship and the shapely lines of a Maine-built schooner, I regard her the fittest icefighter afloat. As I write these lines, I see her slowly but surely forcing a way through the crowding ice. I see the black hull hove out bodily onto the surface of the ice by a cataclysm of the great floes. I see her squeezed as by a giant's hand against a rocky shore till every rib and timber is vocal with the strain. And I see her out in the North Atlantic lying to for days through a wild autumn northeaster, rudderless, with damaged propeller, and shattered stern post, a scrap of double reefed foresail keeping her up to the wind, riding the huge waves like a seagull till they are tired out.'' - Robert Peary, Secrets of Polar Travel (New York: The Century Co. 1917) p.28-31. Recommended reading: The Rise of New York Port 1815-1860 - Robert Greenhalgh Albion (This book is unsurpassed for a study of New York's history as a port city in the first half of the nineteenth century)
Author:
TigerRocket
Tags:
newyorkcity, new, york, city, nycny, nyc, ny, manhattan, hudson, north, river, westside, waterfront, robert, peary, polar, arctic, exploration, boat, schooner, ship, roosevelt, dock, docked, departure, steam, power, engine, motor, actuality, actualities, 1905, american, mutscope, biograph, g.w., billy, blitzer,
Departure of Peary and the Roosevelt from New York 1905
Description:
Photographed July 16, 1905. American Mutoscope and Biograph Company Location: Dock on Hudson River, New York, N.Y. Camera: G.W. ''Billy'' Bitzer The camera pans to show the schooner ''Roosevelt'' docked at a covered pier on the Hudson River on Manhattan's west side. Then, from a camera position on board, men in straw hats and fashionably dressed ladies are seen boarding the ship [1:20]. Next, the famous polar explorer Rear Admiral Robert Peary appears on the gangway in a dark jacket, mustache and straw hat [2:29]. He tips his hat, consults his watch, then, just before the film ends, motions to order the departure. On this expedition he achieved the ''farthest north'' record, but failed to reach the North Pole. Completed only four months prior to this film, the ''Roosevelt'' was specially designed to withstand Arctic ice. She was 184 feet long, 35 and a half feet wide, with a hull over two and a half feet thick. Fully loaded the ship weighed 1,500 tons while drawing only 16.2 feet. In addition to sail power, the ship was driven by a 1000 horsepower steam engine, which could produce short bursts of even greater power to get the ship through thick ice. The ''Roosevelt'' served Peary on this expedition as well as the following one in 1908-1909. Sold numerous times to a variety of commercial concerns, the ''Roosevelt'' was abandoned to the elements on a mud flat in Cristobal, Panama in 1937, where she eventually rotted away. Robert Edwin Peary (May 6, 1856 February 20, 1920) was an American explorer who claimed to have been the first person, on April 6, 1909, to reach the geographic North Pole. Peary's claim was widely credited for most of the 20th century, though it was criticized even in its own day and is today widely doubted. THE 1905-06 EXPEDITION Peary's next expedition was supported by a $50,000 gift by George Crocker. Peary then used the money for a new ship. Peary's new ship Roosevelt battled its way through the ice between Greenland and Ellesmere Island to an American hemisphere farthest north by ship. The 1906 ''Peary System'' dogsled drive for the pole across the rough sea ice of the Arctic Ocean started from the north tip of Ellesmere at 83° north latitude. The parties made well under 10 miles (16 km) a day until they became separated by a storm, so Peary was inadvertently without a companion sufficiently trained in navigation to verify his account from that point northward. With insufficient food and with the negotiability of the ice between himself and land an uncertain factor, he made the best dash he could and barely escaped with his life off the melting ice. On April 20th, he was no further north than 86°30' latitude yet he claimed to have the next day achieved a Farthest North world record at 87°06' and returned to 86°30' without camping, an implied trip of at least 72 nautical miles (83 statute miles) between sleeps, even assuming undetoured travel. After returning to the Roosevelt in May, Peary in June began weeks of further agonizing travel by heading west along the shore of Ellesmere, discovering Cape Colgate, from the summit of which he claimed in his 1907 publications he had seen a previously undiscovered far-north ''Crocker Land'' to the northwest on June 24th of 1906. Yet his diary for this time and place says ''No land visible'' and Crocker Land was in 1914 found to be non-existent by Donald MacMillan and Fitzhugh Green. On December 15, 1906 the National Geographic Society, which was primarily known for publishing a popular magazine, certified Peary's 1905-6 expedition and Farthest with its highest honor, the Hubbard Gold Medal; no major professional geographical society followed suit. - excerpt from wikipedia ''The Roosevelt embodies all that a most careful study of previous polar ships and my own years of personal experience could suggest. With the sturdiness of a battleship and the shapely lines of a Maine-built schooner, I regard her the fittest icefighter afloat. As I write these lines, I see her slowly but surely forcing a way through the crowding ice. I see the black hull hove out bodily onto the surface of the ice by a cataclysm of the great floes. I see her squeezed as by a giant's hand against a rocky shore till every rib and timber is vocal with the strain. And I see her out in the North Atlantic lying to for days through a wild autumn northeaster, rudderless, with damaged propeller, and shattered stern post, a scrap of double reefed foresail keeping her up to the wind, riding the huge waves like a seagull till they are tired out.'' - Robert Peary, Secrets of Polar Travel (New York: The Century Co. 1917) p.28-31. Recommended reading: The Rise of New York Port 1815-1860 - Robert Greenhalgh Albion (This book is unsurpassed for a study of New York's history as a port city in the first half of the nineteenth century)
Author:
TigerRocket
Tags:
newyorkcity, new, york, city, nycny, nyc, ny, manhattan, hudson, north, river, westside, waterfront, robert, peary, polar, arctic, exploration, boat, schooner, ship, roosevelt, dock, docked, departure, steam, power, engine, motor, actuality, actualities, 1905, american, mutscope, biograph, g.w., billy, blitzer,
Popular searches: Cuba, Scuba Diving, Skydiving, Dubai, Niagara Falls, Rainforest, Surfing, Snowboarding, Sandboarding, Pyramids, Everest, Stonehenge, Bear Grylls
Related Videos:
![]() | Funeral of Hiram Cronk 1905 Photographed May 17-18, 1905. American Mutoscope and Biograph Company Location: Brooklyn, New York, NY Camera: GW ''Billy'' Bitzer Crowds of people line a thoroughfare in Brooklyn and watch a military procession. The march is lead by a full dress military band with only the drummer marking the pace [0:10]. Two uniformed riders lead a brigade of Rough Riders followed by Civil War dressed troops which accompany the horse drawn hearse baring the body of Hiram Cronk [1:40], and a long line of ... |
![]() | Northward Over the Great Ice A look at the ongoing exhibition at Bowdoin College's Peary-macmillan Arctic Museum celebrating the centennial of Admiral Robert E. Peary's successful 1908-09 expedition to the North Pole. |
![]() | Young Explorer Retraces Peary's Historic Journey to the North Pole One hundred years ago this month, April 6th, American explorer Robert Peary claimed to be the first man to reach the North Pole. Many have disputed the claim, saying his journey could not have been made in the time he claimed. But nearly a century later, a young British explorer named Tom Avery decided to recreate his historic journey using the same route, techniques and equipment that the American explorer had used in 1909. In a grueling 800 kilometer trek in 2005, Avery and his team ... |
![]() | SS Stockvik SS Stockvik, previously named St Canute and Sct Knud. A small part of video shot during the trip to it's new harbour in Sweden. |
![]() | What Happened on Twenty Third Street, New York City 1901 August 21, 1901. Thomas A. Edison Inc. Alfred C. Abadie (the swell), Florence Georgie (the girl) Filmmakers: Edwin S. Porter and George S. Fleming [?] This film is a very early effort at presenting a ''story'' on film, in this case a punch line of sorts when a young lady has a Marilyn Monroe moment over a sidewalk steam vent. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries it did not take much to make a man smile. A glimpse of stocking covered ankle or calf was enough. The early films ... |
![]() | Rough Voyage to Taiwan, Taichung (Put your sound down and enjoy the video) :-) This is a video a friend of mine made during our trip to Taichung, Taiwan. It was a lot of fun but later on when we went back to our cabins you can imagine what happened! haha You may ask, why are they jumping? The point was, if you jump in the right time you man make it amazingly and dangerous high! but fun! ( I am the one with a green shirt and light blue shorts, it wasn't that cold) Video taken by Mathias Dreher (big thanks!) PLEASE SUBSCRIBE ... |
![]() | Wrestlers at the New York Athletic Club (NYAC) 1905 Ca. November 7, 1905. American Mutoscope & Biograph Company Produced by Kennedy Laurie Dickson New York Athletic Club Private club at Central Park South and 6th Avenue, formed in 1868 by William B. Curtis, Henry E. Buermeyer, and John C. Babcock in the backroom of the Knickerbocker Cottage on 6th Avenue between 27th and 28th streets. On 11 November 1868 the club sponsored the New York Athletic games, the first indoor amateur athletic meet in the United States, in the unfurnished Empire ... |
![]() | Wreck of the Battleship Maine Created by Edison Manufacturing Co., 1898. Original main title lacking. Camera, William Paley. Duration: 0:49 at 16 fps. Materials listed originate from the paper print chosen best copy of two for digitization; for other holdings on this title, contact M/B/RS reference staff. Edison code name (for telegraphic orders): Umoristi. MAVIS 48460; Wreck of the battleship "Maine." Filmed ca. March 17-April 1, 1898, in Havana Harbor, Cuba. Sources used: Copyright catalog, motion pictures, 1894-1912 ... |
![]() | Expedition Bismarck Part 4/10 James Cameron's expedition Bismarck Disclaimer: I do not own or claim any rights to the videos presented in this channel. They are intended for informational purposes only. They are copyrighted to their rightful owners. |
![]() | Wolf dominance, Ellesmere July 09 This video was taken during biologists Dave Mech and Dean Cluff's Ellesmere Island Arctic Wolf Research Expedition July 3rd - 19th, 2009. |
Popular searches: Cuba, Scuba Diving, Skydiving, Dubai, Niagara Falls, Rainforest, Surfing, Snowboarding, Sandboarding, Pyramids, Everest, Stonehenge, Bear Grylls

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español








