A Negro Explorer at the North Pole

No Image
  • New York: Stokes., 1912
By Henson, Matthew A
8vo, publishers blue cloth with a photographic inset of Henson on the front cover, also illustrated with other photographs, 200 pp. Lettering on backstrip is faded, library copy, with rubber stamp on front paste down and endpaper, library record sheets on back endpaper and paste down, and some minor wear at extremities, especially on spine. Overall in very good condition. The book contains a Foreword by Robert E. Peary and an Introduction by Booker T. Washington. Henson was born just a few years after slavery ended on August 8, 1866 in Charles County Maryland. He went to sea when he was twelve or thirteen, and met Peary in 1887. He went with Peary to Nicaragua and seven northern expeditions. The two spent around 25 years traveling together, and Peary felt he couldn’t have made the trips without him. He was an excellent hunter and dog handler, and proved to be very effective in dealing with the Eskimos. While he achieved some modest fame after reaching the North Pole, perhaps because of prejudice he seems to have been ignored for years after the expeditions. However, in later life, his contribution was recognized, and he was made a member of the Explorer’s Club, received a medal from Congress, saluted by President Truman, and visited the White House as a guest of President Eisenhower. Henson died in New York in 1955. Dictionary of American Biography

MORE FROM THIS SELLER

Nicholas D. Riccio Rare Books & Prints

Nicholas D. Riccio

Florham Park, NJ 07932

Specializing in Americana, African Americana, Natural History, Travel & Exploration, Science & Medicine, Maps & Atlases