Lady Franklin Bay
{{Short description|Bay in Nunavut, Canada}}
{{Use Canadian English|date=August 2024}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2024}}
{{Distinguish|Franklin Bay}}
{{Infobox body of water
|name = Lady Franklin Bay
|location = Nares Strait
|coords = {{coord|81|35|N|65|00|W|region:CA-NU_type:waterbody_scale:500000|notes={{Cite cgndb|OAJMF|Lady Franklin Bay|date=August 24, 2024}}|display=inline,title|name=Lady Franklin Bay}}
|pushpin_map=Canada Nunavut
|countries = Canada
|oceans = Arctic Ocean
|width = {{cvt|16|km}}
|cities = Fort Conger (uninhabited)
}}
Lady Franklin Bay is an Arctic waterway in the Qikiqtaaluk Region, Nunavut, Canada. The bay is located in Nares Strait, northwest of Judge Daly Promontory and is an inlet into the northeastern shore of Ellesmere Island.
Fort Conger—formerly an Arctic exploration camp{{cite news|url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1900/11/10/108280908.pdf|title=PEARY IS AT FORT CONGER|date=November 10, 1900|newspaper=The New York Times|access-date=2009-05-06 | format=PDF}}—is located on its northern shore.
Geography
Lady Franklin Bay divides Grant Land to the north from Grinnell Land to the south.
Lady Franklin Bay is in a generally northeast to southwest direction, and as such it spreads inland about {{cvt|70|mi|order=flip}} from Hall Basin. The main bay contains one noted branch to the northwest known as Discovery Bay, and the interior lengths of Lady Franklin Bay extending southwest are sometimes shown on maps as Archer Fjord.
The landscape surrounding Lady Franklin Bay is generally barren rocks, with some very shallow glacial till held in place with frost and permafrost. At this location, about {{cvt|1100|mi|order=flip}} above the Arctic Circle, sunlight is limited to perhaps three months of a year, snowfall is light, and water in the bay is icebound from year to year, with just chance openings allowing only difficult navigation. The off-and-on icebound conditions are well known to exist in the sea during peak summer times as far as {{cvt|200|mi|order=flip}} south of the Bay entrance. However, the glaciers and icecaps of Ellesmere Island have not been known to inundate Lady Franklin Bay.
The main reach of this bay can be approached by ship if ice floe conditions allow, via Baffin Bay, to Smith Sound, to Kane Basin, through Kennedy Channel, and thus through Hall Basin to the entrance of the Bay. The historically favoured point for beginning such Polar trips has been St. John's.
The climate is a typical Arctic climate, with very light precipitation, short cold summers, and long cold winters in darkness. The summer natural food game observed at this Bay is limited to various mammals in the sea water, occasional muskox, and scattered sea birds seen overhead. Plants are limited to short season mosses and lichens.
History
Lady Franklin Bay is named for Lady Jane Franklin, wife of famous British explorer Sir John Franklin, who vanished from Baffin Bay beyond Lancaster Sound on {{HMS|Erebus|1826|6}} in 1845 while attempting to trace the Northwest Passage. Sir John was lost within the Queen Elizabeth Islands south of Ellesmere Island. Erebus and Terror were later found off the coast of King William Island, about {{cvt|1000|km}} south of the Queen Elizabeth Islands, in what is now known as HMS Erebus and HMS Terror National Historic Site{{cite web|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/canada/11134828/Canada-identifies-long-lost-British-explorer-ship.html|title=Canada identifies long lost British explorer ship|newspaper=The Daily Telegraph|date=2014-10-01|access-date=2014-10-02}}{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/12/hms-terror-wreck-found-arctic-nearly-170-years-northwest-passage-attempt |title=The Guardian:Ship found in Arctic 168 years after doomed Northwest Passage attempt |work=The Guardian |date=2016-09-12 |access-date=2016-09-12}} Lady Franklin subsequently became internationally well known by financing several different rescue expeditions to search for Sir John.
Lady Franklin Bay reached press headlines in the United States in the period 1880–1884 after the United States Army Signal Corps chose and specified that site for a base camp for the Lady Franklin Bay Expedition. In August 1881, a party of 25 military men led by First Lieutenant Adolphus Greely, as acting signal officer was successfully landed by the USS Proteus at Lady Franklin Bay to establish a meteorological-observation station as part of the First International Polar Year. A large frame structure was built on the northwest shore, and this home base camp was named Fort Conger.
References
{{Reflist}}
= Sources =
- Greely, A. W. (1886). Report of the U.S. Expedition to Lady Franklin Bay, 1885–86. 22. Gov. Pr. Off.
- Guttridge, L. F. (2000). The Ghosts of Cape Sabine. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
- Annual Report of the Superintendent of the U.S. Coast & Geodetic Survey. 15. (1883). Gov. Pr. Off.
- Annual Report of the Chief Signal Officer. (1883). Gov. Pr. Off.
- RG27 Records. U.S. Weather Bureau. Polar Expeditions. College Park: National Archives.
- Fort Conger, Greely Expedition. July–August 1882. New York Explorers Club.
{{Bays of Nunavut}}
{{Authority control}}