#3632065 in Books Mcgill Queens Univ Pr 1994-11-16Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.50 x 6.50 x 1.75l; 2.00 #File Name: 0773512349464 pages
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Very comprehensive present for my father; John Ross !By JudeFollowing a visit to Greenwich Maritime Museum I was inspired to find a book and picture for my father. He is John Ross Staintin and he believes that there is a family link to John Ross and James Clarke Ross. I am really pleased with this comprehensive account of them both ! A considerable effort must have taken place to generate this book7 of 8 people found the following review helpful. Sympathetic -- but sharp-sighted -- bio of polar greatsBy Susan R. MatthewsSir James Clark Ross went from end of the world to the other in a little wooden ship (or so it seems to me; comparing the expedition craft of the early nineteenth century with the supertankers and aircraft carriers of today).His uncle; Captain John Ross; managed some of the most successful Arctic winterings-over of his time; as well as suffering some of the most appalling privations. (Captain John Ross' operant procedure for the prevention of scurvy deserves respect and praise.) At the same time neither of these gents was perfect in every respect; and Captain John Ross' career may be said never to have recovered from a premature decision he made to abandon a search for the Northwest Passage based on a disputed sighting of a mountain chain (later found to be non-existant) that would have made northerly progress impossible.This book presents the accomplishments; and errors; of uncle and nephew in full recognition of their human failings and failures of judgment; but appropriately credits them for their accomplishments -- which are unexpectedly significant when seen as a whole.It also traces the history of the animosity that existed between Captain John Ross and Secretary of the Admiralty John Barrow -- a relationship characterized by sometimes truly puzzling venom. It seems pretty funny now to read about the violence and vitriol with which the two of them spoke of each other in print; and there is probably something to be said about the cultural environment then versus now; but the conflict was very real; and had very real -- sometimes tragic -- repercussions.This book may be very profitably read either by itself -- for the entertainment and interest it provides -- or in conjunction with Fergus Fleming's "Barrow's Boys;" which also provides a window on the tension between Barrow and Captain John Ross (one is tempted to say; sometimes between Captain John Ross and the world).It is a biography that covers a remarkable span of Polar exploration during the glory years of Royal Navy expeditions. A readable and intriguing study of the careers of two of the English-speaking world's more influential Polar explorers!