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Voyages in Search of The North-West Passage

The Report of Thomas Wiars

Word Count: 418    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

r," wherein James Leeche was Master, one of the ships in the last voyage of Master Martin Frobishe

north-west, fair weather, they steered south-east and by south, and continued that course until the 12th day of September, when about 11 o'clock before noon they descried a land, which was from them about five leagues, and the southernmost part of it was south-east-by-east from them, and the northernmost next north-north-east, or north-east. The master accounted that Friesland, the south-east point of it, was from him at that instant, when he first descried this new island, north-west-by-north fifty leagues. They account this island to be twenty-five leagues long, and the longest way of it south-east and north-west. The southern part of it is in the latitude of fifty-seven degrees and one second part,

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Voyages in Search of The North-West Passage
Voyages in Search of The North-West Passage
“it was a Phantom Ship that made some voyages to different parts of the world which were recorded in early numbers of Charles Dickens’s “Household Words.” As preface to Richard Hakluyt’s records of the first endeavour of our bold Elizabethan mariners to find North–West Passage to the East, let me repeat here that old voyage of mine from No. 55 of “Household Words,” dated the 12th of April, 1851: The Phantom is fitted out for Arctic exploration, with instructions to find her way, by the north-west, to Behring Straits, and take the South Pole on her passage home.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter I3 Certain Other Reasons or Arguments to Prove a Passage4 The First Voyage of Master Martin Frobisher5 The Second Voyage of Master Martin Frobisher6 The Third and Last Voyage into Meta Incognita7 The Report of Thomas Wiars8 The First Voyage of Master John Davis9 The Second Voyage Attempted10 The Third Voyage North-Westward