INDEX. 



(J41 



^•fc-to-a's superstition, 110; tradition of Oo-oo- 

 took on Parry's slii]), 112. 



E-vit-shuny boats tlic dogs, 18;{ ; consults " Sid- 

 ney" for tlu! safety of her children, 188. 



Explorations I'or the North-svcst Passage, lables 

 of English and American, xxvi-xxviii; for 

 the relief of Franklin, xxix-xxxii; results, 

 xxxiii, xxxviii. 



Feasts, lunnit, 80, 90, 129, 214, 216, 369, 425, 428. 



Field, C. W., Hall's telegram to, 4 ; assists Hall, 

 41. 



Fisher, Captain, 428. 



Floats used by Ou-e-la iu capturing a whale, 191. 



" Fool's gold," Frobisher, 18. 



Fox, Arctic, caught in his own trap, 88, 374. 



Fox Channel, Oong-er-luk^s sketch of, 354. 



Fort Hope of Dr. Eae, Hall arrives at, 192 ; 212, 

 223, 226. 



Franklin, Sir John, voj^age in the Trent, xxvi ; 

 laud expeditions, xxvii ; expedition of 1845, 

 xxviii ; death on the Erebus, (McClintock's 

 record, ) xxxiii ; relics of, xxiii ; monument 

 iu Waterloo Place, xxxiii ; in Westminster 

 Abbey, xxxiv. 



Franklin, Lady, desires Hall to go a third time 

 for the records, xvi ; correspondence with 

 Hall throiigh Mr. Grinnell in 1869, xvii-xxiii ; 

 in 1865,283; monument erected by her in 

 Westminster Abbey, xxxiv. 



Franklin, Dr. Benjamin, letter to Cadwallader 

 Colden on the expedition of 1753 in the 

 Argo, xxxix. 



Frobisher, Sir Martin, sails to discover North- 

 west Passage, 7 ; Hall's abstract of his voy- 

 ages, 15-17 ; narrative of his voyages by 

 Collinsou, 12. 



Frozen Strait of Middleton thought by Hall to 

 be never frozen, 185. 



Furs, selection of, by the women first, 69. 



Fury and Hecla Strait visited, 331-353. 



Gales, 66, 79, 94, 127, 131, 136, 145, 150, 161, 176, 

 206, 238, 314, 324, 337, 379. 



Game abundant, 178 ; on the journey from King 

 William's Land, 412. 



Geographical Society, American, Hall's paper 

 read before, 8; letter to the President of, 

 367. 



Geographical Society, Royal, of London, re- 

 ceives relics from Hall, 10 ; paper read be- 

 fore, 13. 



Geological collections from Hall's first expedi- 

 S. Ex. 27 41 



Geological collections— Continued. 



tion donated to New York Lyceum, reported 



• upon by Stevens and Egleston, 10; donated 

 to Amherst College and discussed by Pro- 

 fessor Enjcrson, Appendix III. 



Gift'ord Eiver visited, 352. 



Greenwood, Miles, receives a telegram from 

 Hall, 4. 



Grinnell, H., loans his correspondence, xii ; let- 

 ter from Lady Franklin, xvii-xxi ; from 

 Hall, xxi ; his expeditious under De Haven 

 and Kane, XXX, xxxi ; states the value of 

 Arctic explorations, xxxvii ; telegram from 

 Hall, 4; interview with Hall, 26-28; sends 

 supplies to him, 42, 283, 327. 



Grinnell Lake, 342, 395. 



Groton, Conn., burial-place of Eskimos, 447. 



Hall, Charles Francis, his three expeditious, xi ; 

 purchase of his manuscripts by the Navy 

 Department, xi ; resolution of U. S. Senate, 

 xii; his expeditious compared, xiii; mo- 

 tives for the first two expeditions, xvi ; let- 

 ter from Lady Franklin to Mr. Grinnell, 

 xvii-xxi; reijfies, xxi-xxiii; appeal and 

 lecture, 1860, xxiv ; notes of early voyages, 

 xxxix-xlv ; his Arctic authorities, xlvi-1. 



Eeturns from his first expedition, 4 ; pro- 

 poses to visit England, 5 ; abstract of La 

 Perouse's voyage, 5, 6 ; again studies Arctic 

 authorities, 8; reads a paper before the 

 American Geographical Society, New York. 

 8 ; sends Frobisher relics to England, 8 ; cor- 

 responds with Barrow, Becher, and Mark- 

 ham, 11 ; his paper read at a meeting of the 

 Eoyal Geographical Society, London, 13; 

 abstract of the Frobisher expeditions, 15-17. 



Lectures for his second expedition, 23-25 ; 

 asks aid from Congress, 25 ; interview with 

 Mr. Hem-y Grinutil, 26; private notes, 26; 

 plans submitted to Grinnell and Chapell, 

 28-32; correspondence about whaling, 34; 

 letter to Professor Bache, 35 ; defers his voy- 

 age, 38; renews his appeal, 39; receives aid, 

 41 ; sails from New London, 42. 



Sails from St. John's, 48 ; aids in captur- 

 ing two polar bears, 50-54 ; lands at Depot 

 Island, 56; hires Riulolph, 57; arrives at 

 Whale Point, 59; makes a cache, 60; meets 

 the lunuits, 62 ; second encampment, 63 ; 

 talks with natives about l"^-ankliu, 64 ; re- 

 lieves the suft'ering, 66, 80 ; moves his tupik, 

 67 ; goes into winter quarters, 75. 



