A native of Portland, Maine, civil engineer for the U.S. Navy, in 1892 he led the first team to cross Greenland by dogsled, conclusively proving that it is an island. In 1902, he reached the northernmost point in Greenland, Capra Morris Jesup, at 83 degrees, 38 minutes north latitude. The dream of reaching the North Pole, 90 degrees north, now seemed within reach.
He had competition. Roald Amundsen, from Norway, accomplished in 1906 what explorers had been trying to do for 400 years: He successfully sailed the Northwest Passage. But his attempts to reach the North Pole had fallen short.
Frederick Cook, from the Catskill Mountains of New York, claimed to have reached the Pole on April 22, 1908. All the evidence he gathered was examined, and a commission at the University of Copenhagen, in the capital of Denmark, the country with jurisdiction over Greenland, concluded that he hadn't made it. Cook lived until 1940, still insisting that he had.
On a 1906 expedition, Peary got as far as 86 degrees, 30 minutes. In 1908, at age 52, he set out again. On April 6, 1909, according to his own readings, he woke up at his camp at 89 degrees, 57 minutes north, about 3 miles away.
He sent his chief scout, Matthew Henson, a 42-year-old black navigator from Southern Maryland, ahead to see if he could find a safe path. He returned, saying, "I think I'm the first man to sit on top of the world," Peary was unhappy at being denied the ultimate credit, but he was satisfied that Henson knew what he was talking about, and ordered the expedition to go to the location Henson found. Peary knew that, as commanding officer, he would get most of the credit, had pictures of the group taken at the alleged Pole, and ordered their return.
Matthew Henson
Based on the evidence Peary had with him, he officially got the credit. Cook was still sure he was first. Amundsen still believed that neither of them had gotten there, and that he could still be the first. But he put that goal on hold, and switched to trying to be the first to reach the South Pole. Two years later, he did that.
Convinced to the end that they had made it, Peary died in 1920; Henson, in 1955.
On May 9, 1926, Richard E. Byrd attempted to fly over the North Pole in an airplane. He was widely credited with achieving this, but his claim subsequently became subject to doubt.
Three days later, on May 12, 1926, the airship Norge carried Amundsen and 15 other men over the North Pole, en route from Spitsbergen, Norway to Alaska, the first achievement of the Pole about which there is no controversy.
The first person definitely to set foot on the Pole was the Russian Aleksandr Kuznetsov, who landed an aircraft there on April 23, 1948. Byrd lived until 1957; Kuznetsov, until 1966.
On August 3, 1958, a U.S. Navy submarine, the USS Nautilus, was the first to sail under the ice pack to reach the North Pole. On March 17, 1959, the USS Skate became the first submarine to surface at the North Pole.
The team of Ralph Plaisted, Walt Pederson, Gerry Pitzl and Jean-Luc Bombardier is regarded by most polar authorities to be the first to succeed in a surface traverse by snowmobile across the ice to the North Pole, on April 20, 1968, making the first confirmed surface conquest of the Pole before being airlifted out.
On April 6, 1969, 60 years to the day after Peary's claimed reach, British explorer Sir Wally Herbert became the first person to indubitably reach the Pole on foot, having sledged from Alaska. His expedition was supported by air drops.
In 1989, based on the available evidence, including his own experience, Herbert determined that Peary hadn't made it, though he had set what was then a record, coming within 60 miles. Unlike Cook, however, Herbert determined that circumstances had messed with Peary's measures, and that his claim, unlike Cook's, was more flawed than fraud.
One more thing must be said: It's almost as if, as soon as it became generally accepted that Henson, not Peary, was the first man at the North Pole, that's when people began saying that Peary never actually got to the Pole.
Almost as if they still don't want Henson, the black man, to get the credit.
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April 6, 1909 was a Tuesday. Baseball season hadn't started yet. Football was out of season. Professional basketball barely even existed. And the hockey season ended on March 13, with the Ottawa Senators winning the Stanley Cup. So there were no scores on this historic day.
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