Lot Archive
A named Arctic Medal to Admiral Sir Francis Leopold McClintock, K.C.B., together with a handsome leather-bound McClintock family photograph album
Arctic Medal 1818-55, named on the edges in contemporary engraved sans serif capitals (Enterprise 1848-9 / Assistance 1850-1 / F. L. McClintock / Intrepid 1852-4 / Fox 1857-9); together with a handsome family Photograph Album bound in full leather with silver plaque set in front cover, this finely engraved with McClintock crest and motto ‘Virtute et Labore’ and gothic monogram ‘TEMcC’, containing 34 Carte de Visite photographs, some anotated, including two of Admiral McClintock and one of his uncle, John McClintock, 1st Baron Rathdonnell, another loose CDV and three loose cabinet photographs including one of Edward VII by Bassano, binding lacking brass catches, generally distressed but worthy of sympathetic restoration, medal good very fine £3000-4000
Two other named Arctic Medals are known to McClintock - (Lieut F. L. McClintock HMS Enterprise) and (F. Leopold McClintock Captain R.N.). The present medal and photograph album were acquired some years ago by a collector (now deceased) from a family source in South Africa.
Francis Leopold McClintock was born at Dundalk, Co. Louth, on 8 July 1819, son of H. McClintock, of the 3rd Dragoon Guards. He joined the Navy in 1831 and first went to sea aboard H.M.S. Samarang as a first-class volunteer at the age of 12. Over the next 14 years, he slowly made his way up through the system, seeing service in such diverse placesas the Gulf of California, Brazil, the Irish Sea, the Channel, the Caribbean, Newfoundland, Bermuda, and the Rio de la Plata. He was made lieutenant on 29 July 1845. In 1847, McClintock was recommended to Sir James Clark Ross, who was fitting out Investigator and Enterprise for the first of the Navy’s seaborne searches for the missing Franklin expedition.
McClintock was appointed second lieutenant aboard Enterprise under Ross’s command. The two ships wintered at Port Leopold on northeastern Somerset Island, and from there in the spring of 1849, Ross and McClintock made the expedition’s major sledging trip. Travelling west along the north coast of Somerset Island, they searched the west coast as far south as 72’38’N, the round trip of some 800 km taking 40 days.
The summer of 1850 found McClintock back in the Arctic again as first lieutenant aboard HMS Assistance under Captain Erasmus Ommanney, this ship being one of Captain Horatio Austin’s four-ship squadron that wintered in the strait between Griffiths and Cornwallis islands. In the spring of 1851, McClintock led one of the many sledge parties that fanned out from the ships. Leaving the ships on 15 April, he headed west along the south coasts of Cornwallis, Bathurst, Byam Martin, and Melville islands and reached Cape James Ross situated on the southwest tip of Melville Island. Rounding the shores of Dundas Peninsula, he then cut back across that peninsula to the south coast before he headed for home, reaching the ships on 4 July. He had covered a distance of 1,240 km in 80 days. Largely as a result of this achievement, McClintock was given his first command during the following Franklin search expedition, that led by Captain Edward Belcher in 1852-54. McClintock commanded the steam tender Intrepid, which was to support HMS Resolute, under Captain Henry Kellett. The two ships wintered at Dealy Island, off the south coast of Melville Island.
In the spring of 1853, McClintock led a party that achieved the distinction of making one of the two longest man-hauled sledge trips accomplished in the Canadian Arctic. McClintock crossed the “waist” of Melville Island to Hecla and Griper Bay, then coasted west to the island’s northwest tip. Crossing Fitzwilliam Strait, he discovered and explored Prince Patrick Island, as well as the north coasts of Eglinton Island and the west and south coasts of Emerald Isle. In total he covered 2,125 km in 105 days. This record would be surpassed only by Lieutenant George Mecham’s journey of 2,138 km in 84 days in the spring of 1854. Subsequently, after a second wintering in the pack off Cape Cockburn, KeIlett and McClintock, on direct orders from Belcher, were forced reluctantly to abandon their ships, which were still in excellent condition. McClintock was fully exonerated by the inevitable court martial on their return to England, and, indeed, on 11 October 1854 he was promoted to the rank of post-captain.
In the spring of 1857, Jane Franklin was fitting out a private expedition to investigate the stories that John Rae had recently heard from the Pelly Bay Inuit of white men having been seen on King William Island. She chose Captain Leopold McClintock to command the yacht Fox, which sailed from Aberdeen that summer. Beset in the ice of Melville Bay, the Fox drifted south for the full length of Baffin Bay and Davis strait over the winter of 1857-58. Once his ship was freed, McClintock headed north again and entered Lancaster Sound where the expedition spent its second winter at the east end of Bellot Strait. During a sledge journey in February 1859 McClintock met a group of Inuit at Cape Victoria on the west coast of Boothia Peninsula who possessed a variety of silverware and other relics from the missing ships. They reported that one ship had been crushed by the ice to the west of King William Island. McClintock planned his spring sledge trips on the basis of this report. On 2 April he and his second-in-command, Lieutenant William Hobson,set off westward, each with a man-hauled sledge and a dog sledge. Meeting the same group of Inuit, they now learned that two ships had been seen west of King William Island. On reaching Cape Victoria, McClintock and Hobson separated. In what was clearly a magnanimous gesture to his junior officer in view of the Inuit reports, Hobson was ordered to search the west coast of King William Island. McClintock’s party, meantime, was to proceed clockwise around the coast of King William Island. At two Inuit camps on the east coast of the island, McClintock recovered silverware that clearly had come from Erebus and Terror, as well as various articles made from wood salvaged from the missing ships. On the south coast he found a skeleton later identified as that of Harry Peglar, captain of the foretop aboard Terror. A short distance west of Cape Herschel, McClintock found a message left by Hobson in a cairn six days earlier with the exciting news that in a cairn at Point Victory he had found a record left by Lieutenant Graham Gore on 25 April 1848, outlining in frustratingly meagre detail the final outcome of the Franklin expedition, including the information that Franklin had died on 11 June 1847 and concluding with the stunning information that the officers and men of Erebus and Terror had abandoned their ships and were about to start south by sledge and boat via the Back River. Encouraged by this message, McClintock continued his search. On 29 May he reached the western tip of King William Island, which he named Cape Crozier; on the 30th he discovered a ship’s boat mounted on a heavy sledge (earlier found by Hobson on his way back north); it contained two skeletons as well as a strange assortment of abandoned equipment and clothing. By 19 June, McClintock was back at Bellot Strait, and Fox reached London on 23 September 1859. For having led the expedition that solved the baffling mystery of Franklin’s fate, McClintock was knighted, granted the freedom of the City of London, awarded honorary degrees by the universities of Oxford, Glasgow, and Dublin, and elected a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and the Royal Society.
Sir Leopold’s later career was very distinguished. He reached the rank of admiral in 1884, just before retirement, and was created K.C.B. in 1891. During his retirement, he took a keen interest in Antarctic exploration and was a leading member of the committee responsible for the design of Scott’s ship Discovery, used on his National Antarctic Expedition of 1901-1904. Sir Leopold died on 17 November 1907 at the age of 88 and is buried in Kensington Cemetery, Hanwell. He will be remembered by history as the man who refined the technique of arctic exploration by man-hauling to an amazingly high degree, despite the staggering inherent limitations of the technique, and as the man who solved - as far as it ever has been - the mystery of the fate of the Franklin expedition.
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