CHAPTER VI
POLAR CANADA
THE northern seacoast of America was first
reached in 1771 by Samuel Hearne, who, in search
of copper and to extend trade, attained the mouth
of the Coppermine River. His successor, Alexan-
der Mackenzie, reached the delta of the Mackenzie
River in July, 1798. The tracing of the coast
between these two isolated points was due to the
energy of that great explorer, John Franklin, in
two land journeys, 1819-1822 and 1825-1827
(Franklin: “First and Second Journey to the
Shores of Polar Ocean.” 1824 and 1828).
Under conditions of almost insuperable difficul-
ties and of extreme hardships, with his indomitable
assistants George Back and John Richardson,
Franklin from his headquarters at Fort Enterprise,
64° 25’ N., 113° W,, filled in the coast line from
the Coppermine east to Dease Strait, in the expe-
dition of 1819-1822. The explorations of 182%
were made from a station on Great Bear Lake.
Richardson traced the unknown coast between the
Mackenzie and the Coppermine. Franklin, work-
ing westward from the Mackenzie, followed the
coast to Return Reef, 149° W. Thomas Simpson
[57]