قراءة كتاب Explorers and Travellers
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MEN OF ACHIEVEMENT
EXPLORERS AND
TRAVELLERS
BY
GENERAL A. W. GREELY, U.S.A.
GOLD MEDALLIST OF ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY AND SOCIÉTÉ DE
GÉOGRAPHIE, PARIS
NEW YORK
CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
1894
Copyright, 1893, by
CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
TROW DIRECTORY
PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY
NEW YORK
PREFACE
The compiler of a series of sketches of American Explorers and Travellers experiences at the very outset a serious embarrassment from the superabundant wealth of original material at his command. The history of America for two hundred years after the voyage of Joliet has been the history of courageous, persistent, and successful exploration, wherein the track of the explorer, instantly serving as a trail for the pioneer, has speedily broadened into the wagon-road of invading immigrants.
Explorations and journeys of such an extent as in other and older lands would have excited praise and merited reward have been so frequent in this continent as to pass almost unnoticed. Hence the scope of this modest volume is necessarily confined to explorations of great importance or peculiar interest, and when made by men of American birth who are no longer living.
In deference to the author’s advisers, two exceptions have been made—Du Chaillu and Stanley, Americans by adoption—otherwise African exploration, so wondrously successful in this generation and so fruitful in its results, would have been unrepresented. Again, the unparalleled growth and progress of our American republic owes no small debt to the wealth of physical vigor and strong intellectuality contributed by its sturdy emigrants. These men, American in idea, purpose, and action, whose manhood outgrew the slow evolution of freedom in their natal country, merit recognition. What thousands of other naturalized citizens have industrially wrought of the wonderful and great in this country, these selected representatives have equalled in African exploration.
A chronological arrangement appeared best suited to these sketches, which from Joliet to Frémont exhibit the initiation, growth, and development of geographic discovery in the interior and western portions of the United States. Since the sketches rest very largely on original narratives some current errors at least have been avoided.
Generalization and criticism have been made always with reference to later exploration, which necessarily enhances or diminishes the importance of any original work.
CONTENTS
PAGE | ||
I. | Louis Joliet, Re-discoverer of the Mississippi, | 9 |
II. | Peter le Moyne, Sieur d’Iberville, Founder of Louisiana, | 41 |
III. | Jonathan Carver, the Explorer of Minnesota, | 71 |
IV. | Captain Robert Gray, the Discoverer of the Columbia River, | 88 |
V. | Captain Meriwether Lewis and Lieut. William Clark, First Trans-Continental Explorers of the United States, | 105 |
VI. | Zebulon Montgomery Pike, Explorer of the Sources of the Mississippi and Arkansas Rivers, | 163 |
VII. | Charles Wilkes, the Discoverer of the Antarctic Continent, | 194 |
VIII. | John Charles Frémont, the Pathfinder, | 212 |
IX. | Elisha Kent Kane, Arctic Explorer, | 240 |
X. | Isaac Israel Hayes, and the Open Polar Sea, | 272 |
XI. | Charles Francis Hall, and the North Pole, | 293 |
XII. | George Washington De Long, and the Siberian Arctic Ocean, | 312 |
XIII. | Paul Belloni Du Chaillu, Discoverer of the Dwarfs and Gorillas, | 330 |
XIV. | Stanley Africanus and the Congo Free State, |