Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T14:51:51.750Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘It proves falsehood absolutely . . .’ The lost notebook of Dr. Frederick A. Cook

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 January 2014

Robert M. Bryce*
Affiliation:
12404 Linganore Ridge Dr. Monrovia, MD 21770, USA ([email protected])

Abstract

With the completion of a careful study of a photographic copy of the original notebook Frederick Cook kept on his attempt to reach the North Pole in 1908, now in Copenhagen, Denmark, many new details have been added that allow a more accurate account of his actual movements and timetable than has been possible previously. Because some records were altered or destroyed by Cook, however, a complete account still necessarily contains an element of speculation, which must be the case when based on the only records that exist of an unwitnessed assertion. But this uncertainty can be controlled to a reasonable degree by the notebook's remaining content in concert with the several other accounts Cook wrote of his expedition. One thing is sure, however: Cook was far behind his published timetable. At the outset, he set his start date back by one full week. He failed to report a number of delays in his journey and left out a lengthy detour that prevented him from reaching land's end at Cape Thomas Hubbard until well past 1 April 1908. This ruled out any chance to reach the North Pole in 1908. Frederick Cook was no fool; he was a veteran explorer. He knew any attempt that late in the season would be suicide. Furthermore his efforts to lay caches that would separate his own return route from that of his Inuit support party indicate that not only had he already given up the idea of making a serious attempt, but also that he was preparing for his eventual hoax of claiming to have reached the North Pole on 21 April 1908 long before he reached the Arctic Ocean.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Copenhagen University. 1914. Aarbog for Københavns Universitet Kommunitetet og den polytekniske Læreanstalt, indeholdende Meddelelser for det academiske Aar 1909–1910. [Yearbook for the Copenhagen University community and the Polytechnic College, containing announcements for the academic year 1909–1910]. Copenhagen: Copenhagen University.Google Scholar
Bryce, R.M. 1997. Cook and Peary, the polar controversy, resolved. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books.Google Scholar
Bryce, R.M. 2013. The lost polar notebook of Dr. Frederick A. Cook. Monrovia, MD: Openlead Books.Google Scholar
Cook, F.A. 1907. Diary 3 July 1907–17 February 1908. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress Frederick Albert Cook papers.Google Scholar
Cook, F.A. 1908a. Photographic copy of diary 19 February 1908 –13 June 1908. Copenhagen: Det Kongelige Bibliotek.Google Scholar
Cook, F.A. 1908b. Diary 25 May 1907 –1909. Washington, D.C: Library of Congress Frederick Albert Cook papers.Google Scholar
Cook, F.A. 1908c. Diary [circa 1908–1909]. Washington, D.C: Library of Congress Frederick Albert Cook papers.Google Scholar
Cook, F.A. 1908d. Diary 1 September 1908 –18 June 1909. Washington, D.C: Library of Congress Frederick Albert Cook papers.Google Scholar
Cook, F.A. 1908e. Diary 19 February 1908 –4 September 1909. Washington, D.C: Library of Congress Frederick Albert Cook papers.Google Scholar
Cook, F.A. 1912. Meine eroberung des Nordpols. Hamburg: Janssen.Google Scholar
Cook, F.A. 1913. My attainment of the pole. (3rd Edn). New York: Mitchell Kennerley.Google Scholar
Franke, R. 1914. Erlebnisse eines Deutschen im hohen Norden. Hamburg: Janssen.Google Scholar
Goodsell, J. W. 1908. Diary 1908. College Park, MD: The National Archives and Record Administration (NARA) II. The Peary Family Papers, RG401: Records of the Peary Arctic Club North Polar Expedition of 1908.Google Scholar
Hall, T.H. 1920. Has the North Pole been discovered? Vol. II. Omaha, NB: Privately printed.Google Scholar
Hanson, E.P. 1941. Stefansson: prophet of the north. New York: Harper.Google Scholar
Holland, C. 1994. Arctic exploration and development c.500 bc to 1915. New York and London: Garland Publishing, Inc. (Garland reference library of the humanities 930).Google Scholar
Peary, R.E. 1907. Nearest the pole. New York: Doubleday.Google Scholar
Peary, R.E. 1908. Records of the Peary Arctic Club North Polar Expedition of 1908. College Park, MD: The National Archives and Record Administration (NARA) II. The Peary Family Papers, RG401.Google Scholar
Peary, R.E. 1910. The discovery of the North Pole. Camden, NJ: Victor Talking Machine Co. (Phonograph record No.70012).Google Scholar
Sverdrup, O. 1904. New land. London: Longmans.Google Scholar
Winchester, J.W. 1911, Dr. Cook, Faker. Pacific Monthly, March 1911.Google Scholar