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Percy Fawcett

Percy Harrison Fawcett DSO (18 August 1867 – during or after 1925) was a British geographer, artillery officer, cartographer, archaeologist, and explorer of South America. Fawcett disappeared in 1925 (along with his eldest son, Jack, and one of Jack's friends, Raleigh Rimell) during an expedition to find an ancient lost city which he and others believed existed in the jungles of Brazil.[1]


Percy Harrison Fawcett

Fawcett in 1911
Born
Percy Harrison Fawcett

(1867-08-18)18 August 1867
Torquay, Devon, United Kingdom
Disappeared29 May 1925 (aged 57)
Mato Grosso, Brazil
Occupation(s)Artillery officer, archaeologist, geologist, explorer
Spouse
Nina Agnes Paterson
(m. 1901)
Children3
Military career
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service/branchBritish Army
Years of service1886–1910
c.1914–1919
RankLieutenant-Colonel
UnitRoyal Artillery
Battles/warsWorld War I
AwardsDistinguished Service Order
3 × Mentioned in despatches

Life

Early life

Percy Fawcett was born on 18 August 1867 in Torquay, Devon, England, to Edward Boyd Fawcett and Myra Elizabeth (née MacDougall).[2] Fawcett received his early education at Newton Abbot Proprietary College, alongside the sportsman and journalist Bertram Fletcher Robinson. Fawcett's father, who had been born in India, was a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society (RGS), while his elder brother, Edward Douglas Fawcett (1866–1960), was a mountain climber, an Eastern occultist, and the author of philosophical books and popular adventure novels.[3]

Fawcett attended the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich as a cadet, and was commissioned as a lieutenant of the Royal Artillery on 24 July 1886. This same year, Fawcett met his future wife, Nina Agnes Paterson, whom he married in 1901 and had two sons, Jack (1903-?1925) and Brian (1906–1984), and one daughter, Joan (1910–2005).[4] On 13 January 1896, he was appointed adjutant[5] of the 1st Cornwall (Duke of Cornwall's) Artillery Volunteers,[6] and was promoted to captain on 15 June 1897.[7] He later served in Hong Kong, Malta, and Trincomalee, Ceylon.[8]

Fawcett joined the RGS in 1901, in order to study surveying and mapmaking. Later, he worked for the British Secret Service in North Africa while pursuing the surveyor's craft. He served for the War Office on Spike Island in County Cork from 1903 to 1906, where he was promoted to major on 11 January 1905.[9] He became friends with authors Sir Henry Rider Haggard and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle; the latter used Fawcett's Amazonian field reports as an inspiration for his novel The Lost World.[10]

Early expeditions

Fawcett's first expedition to South America was in 1906 (he was seconded for service there on 2 May[11]) when at the age of 39 he travelled to Brazil to map a jungle area at the border of Brazil and Bolivia at the behest of the Royal Geographical Society. The Society had been commissioned to map the area as a third party unbiased by local national interests. He arrived in La Paz, Bolivia, in June. While on the expedition in 1907, Fawcett claimed to have seen and shot a 62-foot (19 m) long giant anaconda, a claim for which he was ridiculed by scientists. He reported other mysterious animals unknown to zoology, such as a small cat-like dog about the size of a foxhound, which he claimed to have seen twice, and the giant Apazauca spider which was said to have poisoned a number of locals.[12][13]

Fawcett made seven expeditions between 1906 and 1924. He was mostly amicable with the locals through gifts, patience, and courteous behaviour. In 1908, he traced the source of the Rio Verde (Brazil) and in 1910 made a journey to Heath River (on the border between Peru and Bolivia) to find its source, having retired from the British army on 19 January. In 1911, Fawcett once again left his home and family to return to the Amazon and chart hundreds of miles of unexplored jungle, accompanied by his trusted, longtime exploring companion, Henry Costin, and biologist and polar explorer James Murray. He also developed a theory that the ruins of an ancient city, which he named “Z,” lay hidden in the jungle.[14]

After a 1913 expedition, he supposedly claimed to have seen dogs with double noses. These may have been double-nosed Andean tiger hounds.[15]

Based on documentary research, Fawcett had by 1914 formulated ideas about a "lost city" he named "Z" (Zed) somewhere in the Mato Grosso region of Brazil. He theorized that a complex civilization once existed in the Amazon region and that isolated ruins may have survived.[16] Fawcett also found a document known as Manuscript 512, written after explorations made in the sertão of the state of Bahia, and housed at the National Library of Rio de Janeiro. It is believed to be by Portuguese bandeirante João da Silva Guimarães [pt], who wrote that in 1753 he'd discovered the ruins of an ancient city that contained arches, a statue, and a temple with hieroglyphics; the city is described in great detail without providing a specific location. This city became a secondary destination for Fawcett, after "Z". (See Fawcett's own book Exploration Fawcett.)

At the beginning of the First World War Fawcett returned to Britain to serve with the Army as a Reserve Officer in the Royal Artillery, volunteering for duty in Flanders, and commanding an artillery brigade despite being nearly 50 years old. He was promoted from major to lieutenant-colonel on 1 March 1918,[17] and received three mentions in despatches from Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, in November 1916,[18] November 1917,[19] and November 1918,[20] and was also awarded the Distinguished Service Order in June 1917.[21]

After the war, Fawcett returned to Brazil to study local wildlife and archaeology. In 1920, he made a solo attempt to search for "Z" but ended it after suffering from a fever and shooting his pack animal.[16]

Final expedition

In 1924, with funding from a London-based group of financiers known as 'the Glove',[22] Fawcett returned to Brazil with his eldest son Jack and Jack's best and longtime friend, Raleigh Rimell, for an exploratory expedition to find "Z". Fawcett left instructions stating that if the expedition did not return, no rescue expedition should be sent lest the rescuers suffer his fate.[citation needed]

Fawcett was a man with years of experience traveling and had taken equipment such as canned foods, powdered milk, guns, flares, a sextant, and a chronometer. His travel companions were both chosen for their health, ability, and loyalty to each other; Fawcett chose only two companions in order to travel lighter and with less notice to native tribes, as some were hostile towards outsiders.[citation needed]

On 20 April 1925, his final expedition departed from Cuiabá. In addition to his two principal companions, Fawcett was accompanied by two Brazilian laborers, two horses, eight mules, and a pair of dogs. The last communication from the expedition was on 29 May 1925 when Fawcett wrote, in a letter to his wife delivered by a native runner, that he was ready to go into unexplored territory with only Jack and Raleigh. They were reported to be crossing the Upper Xingu, a southeastern tributary river of the River Amazon. The final letter, written from Dead Horse Camp, gave their location and was generally optimistic.[citation needed]

In January 1927, the Royal Geographical Society declared and accepted the men as lost, close to two years after the party's last message. Soon after the society's declaration, there was an outpouring of volunteers to attempt to locate the lost explorers. Many expeditions attempting to find Fawcett failed. At least one lone searcher died in the attempt.

Many people assumed that local Indians killed them, as several tribes were nearby at the time: the Kalapalos, the last tribe to have seen them, the Arumás, the Suyás, and the Xavantes whose territory they were entering. According to explorer John Hemming, Fawcett's party of three was too few to survive in the jungle and his expectation that his Indian hosts would look after them was likely to have antagonized them by failing to bring any gifts to repay their generosity.[23] Twenty years later, a Kalapalo chief called Comatzi told his people how the unwelcome strangers were killed,[24] but others have thought they got lost and died of starvation,[24][25] and the bones provided by Comatzi turned out not to be those of Fawcett.[26] Edmar Morel and Nilo Vellozo reported that Comatzi's predecessor, Kalapalos Chief Izarari, had told them he had killed Fawcett and his son Jack, seemingly by shooting them with arrows after Fawcett allegedly attacked him and other Indians when they refused to give him guides and porters to take him to their Chavante enemies, and Rolf Blomberg said Izarari had told him that Raleigh Rimell had already died of fever in a camp of Kurikuro Indians.[27] A somewhat different version came from Orlando Villas-Bôas, who reported that Izarari had told him that he had killed all three white men with his club the morning after Jack Fawcett had allegedly consorted with one of his wives, when he claimed that Percy Fawcett had slapped him in the face after the chief refused his demand for canoes and porters to continue his journey.[27]

The Kalapalo have an oral story of the arrival of three explorers which states that the three went east, and after five days the Kalapalo noticed that the group no longer made campfires. The Kalapalo say that a very violent tribe most likely killed them. However, both of the younger men were lame and ill when last seen, and there is no proof that they were murdered. It is plausible that they died of natural causes in the Brazilian jungle.[24][25][26]

In 1927, a nameplate of Fawcett's was found with an Indian tribe. In June 1933, a theodolite compass belonging to Fawcett was found near the Baciary Indians of Mato Grosso by Colonel Aniceto Botelho. However, the nameplate was from Fawcett's expedition five years earlier and had most likely been given as a gift to the chief of that Indian tribe. The compass was proven to have been left behind before he entered the jungle on his final journey.[28][29][30]

Dead Horse Camp

Dead Horse Camp, or Fawcett's Camp, is one of the major camps that Fawcett made on his final journey. This encampment was his last known location.[31] From Dead Horse Camp, Fawcett wrote to his wife about the hardships that he and his companions had faced, his coordinates, his doubts in Raleigh Rimell, and Fawcett's plans for the near future. He concludes his message with, "You need have no fear of any failure..."[31]

One question remaining about Dead Horse Camp concerns a discrepancy in the coordinates Fawcett gave for the camp. In the letter to his wife, he wrote: "Here we are at Dead Horse Camp, latitude 11 degrees 43' South and longitude 54 degrees 35' West, the spot where my horse died in 1920" (11°43′S 54°35′W / 11.717°S 54.583°W / -11.717; -54.583). However, in a report to the North American Newspaper Alliance he gave the coordinates as 13°43′S 54°35′W / 13.717°S 54.583°W / -13.717; -54.583.[32] The discrepancy may have been a typographical error. However, he may have intentionally concealed the location to prevent others from using his notes to find the lost city.[33] It may have also been an attempt to dissuade any rescue attempts; Fawcett had stated that if he disappeared, no rescue party should be sent because the danger was too great.[32]

Posthumous controversy and speculations

Henry Costin's opinion

Explorer Henry Costin accompanied Fawcett on five of his previous expeditions. Costin expressed his doubt that Fawcett would have perished at the hands of native Indians, as he typically enjoyed good relations with them. He believed that Fawcett had succumbed to either a lack of food or exhaustion.[25]

Rumours and unverified reports

During the ensuing decades, various groups mounted several rescue expeditions, without success. They heard only various rumours that could not be verified.

While a fictitious tale estimated that 100 would-be-rescuers died on several expeditions attempting to discover Fawcett's fate,[34] the actual toll was only one—a sole man who ventured after him alone.[35] One of the earliest expeditions was commanded by American explorer George Miller Dyott. In 1927, he claimed to have found evidence of Fawcett's death at the hands of the Aloique Indians, but his story was unconvincing. From 1930 to 1931, Aloha Wanderwell used her seaplane to try to land on the Paraguay River in the state of Mato Grosso to find him. After an emergency landing and living with the Bororo tribe for six weeks, Aloha and her husband Walter flew back to Brazil, with no luck. A 1951 expedition unearthed human bones that were found later to be unrelated to Fawcett or his companions.[citation needed]

Fawcett's alleged bones

In 1951, Orlando Villas-Bôas, activist for indigenous peoples, supposedly received the actual remaining skeletal bones of Fawcett and had them analysed scientifically. The analysis allegedly confirmed the bones were Fawcett's, but his son Brian Fawcett (1906–1984) refused to accept this. Villas-Bôas claimed that Brian was too interested in making money from books about his father's disappearance. Later scientific analysis confirmed that the bones were not Fawcett's.[36][26] As of 1965, the bones reportedly rested in a box in the flat of one of the Villas-Bôas brothers in São Paulo.[37]

In 1998, English explorer Benedict Allen went to talk to the Kalapalo Indians, said by Villas-Bôas to have confessed to having killed the three Fawcett expedition members. An elder of the Kalapalo, Vajuvi, claimed during a filmed BBC interview with Allen that the bones found by Villas-Bôas 45 years before were not really Fawcett's.[38][39] Vajuvi also denied that his tribe had any part in the Fawcetts' disappearance.[citation needed] No conclusive evidence supports the latter statement.[citation needed]

Villas-Bôas story

Danish explorer Arne Falk-Rønne journeyed to the Mato Grosso during the 1960s. In a 1991 book, he wrote that he learned of Fawcett's fate from Orlando Villas-Bôas,[40] who had heard it from one of Fawcett's murderers. Allegedly, Fawcett and his companions had a mishap on the river and lost most of the gifts they'd brought along for the Indian tribes. Continuing without gifts was a serious breach of protocol; since the expedition members were all more or less seriously ill at the time, the Kalapalo tribe they encountered decided to kill them. The bodies of Jack Fawcett and Raleigh Rimell were thrown into the river; Colonel Fawcett, considered an old man and therefore distinguished, received a proper burial. Falk-Rønne visited the Kalapalo tribe and reported that one of the tribesmen confirmed Villas-Bôas's story about how and why Fawcett had been killed.

Fawcett's signet ring

In 1979, Fawcett's signet ring was found in a pawnshop. A new theory is that Fawcett and his companions were killed by bandits and the bodies were disposed of in a river while their belongings were despoiled.[41]

Russian documentary

In 2003, a Russian documentary film, The Curse of the Incas' Gold / Expedition of Percy Fawcett to the Amazon (Russian: Проклятье золота инков / Экспедиция Перси Фоссета в Амазонку), was released as a part of the television series Mysteries of the Century (Тайны века). Among other things, the film emphasizes the recent expedition of Oleg Aliyev to the presumed approximate place of Fawcett's last whereabouts and Aliyev's findings, impressions, and presumptions about Fawcett's fate. The film concludes that Fawcett may have been looking for the ruins of El Dorado, a city built by more advanced people from the other side of the Andes, and that the expedition members were killed by an unknown primitive tribe that had no contact with modern civilization.[42]

Commune in the jungle

On 21 March 2004, The Observer reported that television director Misha Williams, who had studied Fawcett's private papers, believed that Fawcett had not intended to return to Britain but rather meant to found a commune in the jungle, based on theosophical principles and the worship of his son Jack.[43] Williams explained his research in some detail in the preface to his play AmaZonia, first performed in April 2004.[44]

In popular culture

In Charles MacLean's 1982 novel The Watcher, the protagonist believes himself to be a reincarnation of Percy Fawcett.[45]

In 2005, The New Yorker staff writer David Grann visited the Kalapalo tribe and reported that it had apparently preserved an oral history about Fawcett, among the first Europeans the tribe had ever seen. The oral account said that Fawcett and his party had stayed at their village and then left, heading eastward. The Kalapalos warned Fawcett and his companions that if they went that way they would be killed by the "fierce Indians" who occupied that territory, but Fawcett insisted upon going. The Kalapalos observed smoke from the expedition's campfire each evening for five days before it disappeared. The Kalapalos said they were sure the fierce Indians had killed them.[16] The article also reports that a monumental civilisation known as Kuhikugu may have actually existed near where Fawcett was searching, as discovered recently by archaeologist Michael Heckenberger and others.[46] Grann's findings are further detailed in his book The Lost City of Z (2009).

In 2016, James Gray wrote and directed a film adaptation of Grann's book, with Charlie Hunnam starring as Fawcett.

Episode 133 of British horror podcast The Magnus Archives features a fictional account given by Fawcett describing the events which occurred on his final expedition.

In 2022, Vox released a 6 minute and 54 second long short documentary film onto YouTube as part of their 'Atlas' video series investigating Fawcett's journeys in the Amazon, discussing his mistakes, and the reality of the 'Lost Cities' through modern technology.[47]

Works

  • Fawcett, Percy and Brian Fawcett (1953), Exploration Fawcett, Phoenix Press (2001 reprint), ISBN 1-84212-468-4
  • Fawcett, Percy and Brian Fawcett (1953), Lost Trails, Lost Cities, Funk & Wagnalls ASIN B0007DNCV4
  • Fawcett, Brian (1958), Ruins in the Sky, Hutchinson of London

See also

References

  1. ^ Heckenberger, Michael J. (2009). "Lost Cities of the Amazon". Scientific American. 301 (4): 64–71. Bibcode:2009SciAm.301d..64H. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican1009-64. PMID 19780454.
  2. ^ . Keverel Chess. 10 August 2011. Archived from the original on 3 April 2012.
  3. ^ "Fawcett, E Douglas". The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. 18 January 2017.
  4. ^ "No. 25615". The London Gazette. 10 August 1886. p. 3855.
  5. ^ "No. 26703". The London Gazette. 24 January 1896. p. 424.
  6. ^ "No. 26705". The London Gazette. 31 January 1896. p. 589.
  7. ^ "No. 26869". The London Gazette. 2 July 1897. p. 3635.
  8. ^ Fawcett, Percy (4 May 2010). Exploration Fawcett: Journey to the Lost City of Z. The Overlook Press. ISBN 978-1590208366.
  9. ^ "No. 27792". The London Gazette. 12 May 1905. p. 3426.
  10. ^ "THE LOST CITY OF Z: A TALE OF DEADLY OBSESSION IN THE AMAZON," Kirkus Reviews. (Dec. 1, 2008): "The British explorer Percy Fawcett’s exploits in jungles and atop mountains inspired novels such as Arthur Conan Doyle’s The Lost World".
  11. ^ "No. 27916". The London Gazette. 25 May 1906. p. 3657.
  12. ^ Fawcett, P. H. and Fawcett, B. Exploration Fawcett (1953)
  13. ^ "Apazauca spider". The Great Web of Percy Harrison Fawcett.
  14. ^ "No. 28330". The London Gazette. 18 January 1910. p. 434.
  15. ^ "Double-nosed dog not to be sniffed at". BBC News. 10 August 2007.
  16. ^ a b c Grann, David (19 September 2005). "The Lost City of Z". The New Yorker. Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  17. ^ "No. 31120". The London Gazette (Supplement). 10 January 1919. p. 674.
  18. ^ "No. 29890". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 January 1917. p. 208.
  19. ^ "No. 30421". The London Gazette (Supplement). 7 December 1917. p. 12912.
  20. ^ "No. 31077". The London Gazette (Supplement). 17 December 1918. p. 14926.
  21. ^ "No. 30111". The London Gazette (Supplement). 1 June 1917. pp. 5468–5470.
  22. ^ The London Illustrated News, 22 June 1924
  23. ^ John Hemming (1 April 2017). "The Lost City of Z is a very long way from a true story – and I should know". The Spectator. Retrieved 11 March 2019. Everyone in Amazonia knew that you could not cut trails and keep your team fed with fewer than eight men. ... His other dictum was that Indians would look after them. This was equally dangerous. The Xingu tribes pride themselves on generosity, but they expect visitors to reciprocate. All expeditions in the past four decades had brought plenty of presents such as machetes, knives, and beads. Fawcett had none. He committed other blunders that antagonized their hosts. So it was only a matter of days before they were all dead.
  24. ^ a b c John Hemming (1 April 2017). "The Lost City of Z is a very long way from a true story – and I should know". The Spectator. Retrieved 11 March 2019. Twenty years later, Chief Comatsi of the Kalapalo tribe gave a very detailed account of Fawcett's visit, reminding his assembled people of exactly how they had killed the unwelcome strangers. But the German anthropologist Max Schmidt, who was there in 1926, thought that they had plunged into the forests, got lost, and starved to death; this was also the view of a missionary couple called Young who were on another Xingu headwater. The Brazilian Indian Service regretted that Fawcett, who was obsessively secretive, had not asked for their help in dealing with the Indians. They felt he was killed because of the harshness and lack of tact that all recognised in him. (Note: Hemming spells the chief's name 'Comatsi', but most other sources spell it 'Comatzi'.)
  25. ^ a b c "Man Who Knew Fawcett". Lancashire Evening Post. 25 July 1931. p. 4. Retrieved 11 June 2018.
  26. ^ a b c "Izarari, Chief of the Kalapalos". The Great Web of Percy Harrison Fawcett. Retrieved 11 March 2019. Comatzi, the later chief of Kalapalos after Izarari's death, was after much persuasion induced to disclose the grave of the murderer explorer, and bones were dug up and examined by a team of experts of the Royal Anthropological Institute in London, but the results indicated that those bones were not of Fawcett and there is a doubt whether they belong to a white man. The bodies of the younger ones were thrown in the river, said Comatzi. At all events, they have not been found.
  27. ^ a b "Reports for Fawcett's assassination by Izarari". The Great Web of Percy Harrison Fawcett. Retrieved 11 March 2019. References for the summary & highlights of the following articles taken from: The Rolf Blomberg's book "Chavante, An expedition to the Tribes of the Mato Grosso", pages 70 & 71 (Blomberg's book was first published in 1958; various editions of it can be found here)
  28. ^ Wallechinsky, David; Wallace, Irving (1981). "History of the Search for Percy H. Fawcett, Part 2". Trivia-Library.com.
  29. ^ Cummins, Geraldine (March 1985). The Fate of Colonel Fawcett. Health Research Books. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-7873-0230-6.
  30. ^ Basso, Ellen B. (22 July 2010). The Last Cannibals: A South American Oral History. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-79206-7.
  31. ^ a b . Colonel Percy Fawcett's Search For the Lost city of Z. Archived from the original on 28 September 2010. Retrieved 9 June 2011.
  32. ^ a b . The Great Web of Percy Harrison Fawcett. Archived from the original on 11 February 2020. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
  33. ^ "The Continuing Chronicles of Colonel Fawcett". Retrieved 9 June 2011.
  34. ^ Grann, David (2010). The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon. New York: Vintage Books. p. 273. ISBN 978-1-4000-7845-5.
  35. ^ Hemming, John (1 April 2017). "The Lost City of Z is a very long way from a true story and I should know". The Spectator.
  36. ^ The upper jaw provides the clearest possible evidence that these human remains were not those of Colonel Fawcett, whose spare upper denture is fortunately available for comparison. Royal Anthropological Institute (London) (1951) "Report on the human remains from Brazil" as quoted by Grann (2009) p. 253
  37. ^ "1953 Col. Fawcett Peru Bolivia Brazil South America Lost Expedition El Dorado". eBay. Retrieved 21 July 2017.
  38. ^ Orcutt, Larry (2000). . Archived from the original on 5 April 2016. Retrieved 24 April 2006.
  39. ^ "Vajuvi said that they were the bones of his grandfather, Mugikia." Grann (2009) pp. 252–253
  40. ^ Falk-Rønne, Arne (16 March 2017). Dr. Klapperslange (in Danish). Lindhardt og Ringhof. ISBN 9788711714096.
  41. ^ PBS Secrets of the Dead_Lost in the Amazon
  42. ^ [Secrets of the century. The curse of the Inca gold. Expedition of Percy Fawcett to the Amazon.]. Filmix.net (in Russian). 2011. Archived from the original on 28 October 2016. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
  43. ^ Thorpe, Vanessa (21 March 2004). "Veil lifts on jungle mystery of the Colonel who vanished". The Observer.
  44. ^ Williams, Misha. AmaZonia (PDF).
  45. ^ "Percy Fawcett's Heart of Darkness". 17 April 2017.
  46. ^ For further info see the last chapter of Grann's book The Lost City of Z and Charles Mann's book 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus.
  47. ^ How the "lost cities" of the Amazon were finally found, retrieved 21 September 2022

Bibliography

  • Falk-Rønne, Arne. (1991). Klodens Forunderlige Mysterier. Roth Forlag.
  • Fleming, Peter. (1933) Brazilian Adventure, Charles Scribner's Sons ISBN 0-87477-246-X
  • Grann, David (2009) The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon ISBN 978-0-385-51353-1
  • Leal, Hermes (1996), Enigma do Coronel Fawcett, o verdadeiro Indiana Jones (Colonel Fawcett: The Real-Life Indiana Jones; Published in Portuguese)
  • La Gazette des Français du Paraguay, Percy Fawcett - Un monument de l'Exploration et de l'Aventure en Amérique Latine - Expédition du Rio Verde - bilingue français espagnol - numéro 6, Année 1, Asuncion Paraguay.
  • Scriblerius, C.S. (2015), "Percyfaw Code, the secret dossier" Published by Amazon.com.

External links

  • Forgotten Travellers: The Hunt for Colonel Fawcett Essay on Lt.-Col. Percy Harrison Fawcett
  • Virtual Exploration Society – Colonel Percy Fawcett
  • Colonel Fawcett
  • Mad Dreams in the Amazon Essay on Fawcett from The New York Review of Books
  • Lost in the Amazon: The Enigma of Col. Percy Fawcett PBS Secrets of the Dead documentary
  • by Paul Spiring
  • The Lost City of Z is a Long Way From a True Story and I Should Know by John Hemming in The Spectator
  • Newspaper clippings about Percy Fawcett in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

percy, fawcett, percy, harrison, fawcett, august, 1867, during, after, 1925, british, geographer, artillery, officer, cartographer, archaeologist, explorer, south, america, fawcett, disappeared, 1925, along, with, eldest, jack, jack, friends, raleigh, rimell, . Percy Harrison Fawcett DSO 18 August 1867 during or after 1925 was a British geographer artillery officer cartographer archaeologist and explorer of South America Fawcett disappeared in 1925 along with his eldest son Jack and one of Jack s friends Raleigh Rimell during an expedition to find an ancient lost city which he and others believed existed in the jungles of Brazil 1 Lieutenant ColonelPercy Harrison FawcettDSOFawcett in 1911BornPercy Harrison Fawcett 1867 08 18 18 August 1867Torquay Devon United KingdomDisappeared29 May 1925 aged 57 Mato Grosso BrazilOccupation s Artillery officer archaeologist geologist explorerSpouseNina Agnes Paterson m 1901 wbr Children3Military careerAllegianceUnited KingdomService wbr branchBritish ArmyYears of service1886 1910c 1914 1919RankLieutenant ColonelUnitRoyal ArtilleryBattles warsWorld War IAwardsDistinguished Service Order3 Mentioned in despatches Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1 2 Early expeditions 1 3 Final expedition 1 3 1 Dead Horse Camp 2 Posthumous controversy and speculations 2 1 Henry Costin s opinion 2 2 Rumours and unverified reports 2 3 Fawcett s alleged bones 2 4 Villas Boas story 2 5 Fawcett s signet ring 2 6 Russian documentary 2 7 Commune in the jungle 3 In popular culture 4 Works 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksLife EditEarly life Edit Percy Fawcett was born on 18 August 1867 in Torquay Devon England to Edward Boyd Fawcett and Myra Elizabeth nee MacDougall 2 Fawcett received his early education at Newton Abbot Proprietary College alongside the sportsman and journalist Bertram Fletcher Robinson Fawcett s father who had been born in India was a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society RGS while his elder brother Edward Douglas Fawcett 1866 1960 was a mountain climber an Eastern occultist and the author of philosophical books and popular adventure novels 3 Fawcett attended the Royal Military Academy Woolwich as a cadet and was commissioned as a lieutenant of the Royal Artillery on 24 July 1886 This same year Fawcett met his future wife Nina Agnes Paterson whom he married in 1901 and had two sons Jack 1903 1925 and Brian 1906 1984 and one daughter Joan 1910 2005 4 On 13 January 1896 he was appointed adjutant 5 of the 1st Cornwall Duke of Cornwall s Artillery Volunteers 6 and was promoted to captain on 15 June 1897 7 He later served in Hong Kong Malta and Trincomalee Ceylon 8 Fawcett joined the RGS in 1901 in order to study surveying and mapmaking Later he worked for the British Secret Service in North Africa while pursuing the surveyor s craft He served for the War Office on Spike Island in County Cork from 1903 to 1906 where he was promoted to major on 11 January 1905 9 He became friends with authors Sir Henry Rider Haggard and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle the latter used Fawcett s Amazonian field reports as an inspiration for his novel The Lost World 10 Early expeditions Edit Fawcett s first expedition to South America was in 1906 he was seconded for service there on 2 May 11 when at the age of 39 he travelled to Brazil to map a jungle area at the border of Brazil and Bolivia at the behest of the Royal Geographical Society The Society had been commissioned to map the area as a third party unbiased by local national interests He arrived in La Paz Bolivia in June While on the expedition in 1907 Fawcett claimed to have seen and shot a 62 foot 19 m long giant anaconda a claim for which he was ridiculed by scientists He reported other mysterious animals unknown to zoology such as a small cat like dog about the size of a foxhound which he claimed to have seen twice and the giant Apazauca spider which was said to have poisoned a number of locals 12 13 Fawcett made seven expeditions between 1906 and 1924 He was mostly amicable with the locals through gifts patience and courteous behaviour In 1908 he traced the source of the Rio Verde Brazil and in 1910 made a journey to Heath River on the border between Peru and Bolivia to find its source having retired from the British army on 19 January In 1911 Fawcett once again left his home and family to return to the Amazon and chart hundreds of miles of unexplored jungle accompanied by his trusted longtime exploring companion Henry Costin and biologist and polar explorer James Murray He also developed a theory that the ruins of an ancient city which he named Z lay hidden in the jungle 14 After a 1913 expedition he supposedly claimed to have seen dogs with double noses These may have been double nosed Andean tiger hounds 15 Based on documentary research Fawcett had by 1914 formulated ideas about a lost city he named Z Zed somewhere in the Mato Grosso region of Brazil He theorized that a complex civilization once existed in the Amazon region and that isolated ruins may have survived 16 Fawcett also found a document known as Manuscript 512 written after explorations made in the sertao of the state of Bahia and housed at the National Library of Rio de Janeiro It is believed to be by Portuguese bandeirante Joao da Silva Guimaraes pt who wrote that in 1753 he d discovered the ruins of an ancient city that contained arches a statue and a temple with hieroglyphics the city is described in great detail without providing a specific location This city became a secondary destination for Fawcett after Z See Fawcett s own book Exploration Fawcett At the beginning of the First World War Fawcett returned to Britain to serve with the Army as a Reserve Officer in the Royal Artillery volunteering for duty in Flanders and commanding an artillery brigade despite being nearly 50 years old He was promoted from major to lieutenant colonel on 1 March 1918 17 and received three mentions in despatches from Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig in November 1916 18 November 1917 19 and November 1918 20 and was also awarded the Distinguished Service Order in June 1917 21 After the war Fawcett returned to Brazil to study local wildlife and archaeology In 1920 he made a solo attempt to search for Z but ended it after suffering from a fever and shooting his pack animal 16 Final expedition Edit In 1924 with funding from a London based group of financiers known as the Glove 22 Fawcett returned to Brazil with his eldest son Jack and Jack s best and longtime friend Raleigh Rimell for an exploratory expedition to find Z Fawcett left instructions stating that if the expedition did not return no rescue expedition should be sent lest the rescuers suffer his fate citation needed Fawcett was a man with years of experience traveling and had taken equipment such as canned foods powdered milk guns flares a sextant and a chronometer His travel companions were both chosen for their health ability and loyalty to each other Fawcett chose only two companions in order to travel lighter and with less notice to native tribes as some were hostile towards outsiders citation needed On 20 April 1925 his final expedition departed from Cuiaba In addition to his two principal companions Fawcett was accompanied by two Brazilian laborers two horses eight mules and a pair of dogs The last communication from the expedition was on 29 May 1925 when Fawcett wrote in a letter to his wife delivered by a native runner that he was ready to go into unexplored territory with only Jack and Raleigh They were reported to be crossing the Upper Xingu a southeastern tributary river of the River Amazon The final letter written from Dead Horse Camp gave their location and was generally optimistic citation needed In January 1927 the Royal Geographical Society declared and accepted the men as lost close to two years after the party s last message Soon after the society s declaration there was an outpouring of volunteers to attempt to locate the lost explorers Many expeditions attempting to find Fawcett failed At least one lone searcher died in the attempt Many people assumed that local Indians killed them as several tribes were nearby at the time the Kalapalos the last tribe to have seen them the Arumas the Suyas and the Xavantes whose territory they were entering According to explorer John Hemming Fawcett s party of three was too few to survive in the jungle and his expectation that his Indian hosts would look after them was likely to have antagonized them by failing to bring any gifts to repay their generosity 23 Twenty years later a Kalapalo chief called Comatzi told his people how the unwelcome strangers were killed 24 but others have thought they got lost and died of starvation 24 25 and the bones provided by Comatzi turned out not to be those of Fawcett 26 Edmar Morel and Nilo Vellozo reported that Comatzi s predecessor Kalapalos Chief Izarari had told them he had killed Fawcett and his son Jack seemingly by shooting them with arrows after Fawcett allegedly attacked him and other Indians when they refused to give him guides and porters to take him to their Chavante enemies and Rolf Blomberg said Izarari had told him that Raleigh Rimell had already died of fever in a camp of Kurikuro Indians 27 A somewhat different version came from Orlando Villas Boas who reported that Izarari had told him that he had killed all three white men with his club the morning after Jack Fawcett had allegedly consorted with one of his wives when he claimed that Percy Fawcett had slapped him in the face after the chief refused his demand for canoes and porters to continue his journey 27 The Kalapalo have an oral story of the arrival of three explorers which states that the three went east and after five days the Kalapalo noticed that the group no longer made campfires The Kalapalo say that a very violent tribe most likely killed them However both of the younger men were lame and ill when last seen and there is no proof that they were murdered It is plausible that they died of natural causes in the Brazilian jungle 24 25 26 In 1927 a nameplate of Fawcett s was found with an Indian tribe In June 1933 a theodolite compass belonging to Fawcett was found near the Baciary Indians of Mato Grosso by Colonel Aniceto Botelho However the nameplate was from Fawcett s expedition five years earlier and had most likely been given as a gift to the chief of that Indian tribe The compass was proven to have been left behind before he entered the jungle on his final journey 28 29 30 Dead Horse Camp Edit Dead Horse Camp or Fawcett s Camp is one of the major camps that Fawcett made on his final journey This encampment was his last known location 31 From Dead Horse Camp Fawcett wrote to his wife about the hardships that he and his companions had faced his coordinates his doubts in Raleigh Rimell and Fawcett s plans for the near future He concludes his message with You need have no fear of any failure 31 One question remaining about Dead Horse Camp concerns a discrepancy in the coordinates Fawcett gave for the camp In the letter to his wife he wrote Here we are at Dead Horse Camp latitude 11 degrees 43 South and longitude 54 degrees 35 West the spot where my horse died in 1920 11 43 S 54 35 W 11 717 S 54 583 W 11 717 54 583 However in a report to the North American Newspaper Alliance he gave the coordinates as 13 43 S 54 35 W 13 717 S 54 583 W 13 717 54 583 32 The discrepancy may have been a typographical error However he may have intentionally concealed the location to prevent others from using his notes to find the lost city 33 It may have also been an attempt to dissuade any rescue attempts Fawcett had stated that if he disappeared no rescue party should be sent because the danger was too great 32 Posthumous controversy and speculations EditHenry Costin s opinion Edit Explorer Henry Costin accompanied Fawcett on five of his previous expeditions Costin expressed his doubt that Fawcett would have perished at the hands of native Indians as he typically enjoyed good relations with them He believed that Fawcett had succumbed to either a lack of food or exhaustion 25 Rumours and unverified reports Edit During the ensuing decades various groups mounted several rescue expeditions without success They heard only various rumours that could not be verified While a fictitious tale estimated that 100 would be rescuers died on several expeditions attempting to discover Fawcett s fate 34 the actual toll was only one a sole man who ventured after him alone 35 One of the earliest expeditions was commanded by American explorer George Miller Dyott In 1927 he claimed to have found evidence of Fawcett s death at the hands of the Aloique Indians but his story was unconvincing From 1930 to 1931 Aloha Wanderwell used her seaplane to try to land on the Paraguay River in the state of Mato Grosso to find him After an emergency landing and living with the Bororo tribe for six weeks Aloha and her husband Walter flew back to Brazil with no luck A 1951 expedition unearthed human bones that were found later to be unrelated to Fawcett or his companions citation needed Fawcett s alleged bones Edit In 1951 Orlando Villas Boas activist for indigenous peoples supposedly received the actual remaining skeletal bones of Fawcett and had them analysed scientifically The analysis allegedly confirmed the bones were Fawcett s but his son Brian Fawcett 1906 1984 refused to accept this Villas Boas claimed that Brian was too interested in making money from books about his father s disappearance Later scientific analysis confirmed that the bones were not Fawcett s 36 26 As of 1965 the bones reportedly rested in a box in the flat of one of the Villas Boas brothers in Sao Paulo 37 In 1998 English explorer Benedict Allen went to talk to the Kalapalo Indians said by Villas Boas to have confessed to having killed the three Fawcett expedition members An elder of the Kalapalo Vajuvi claimed during a filmed BBC interview with Allen that the bones found by Villas Boas 45 years before were not really Fawcett s 38 39 Vajuvi also denied that his tribe had any part in the Fawcetts disappearance citation needed No conclusive evidence supports the latter statement citation needed Villas Boas story Edit Danish explorer Arne Falk Ronne journeyed to the Mato Grosso during the 1960s In a 1991 book he wrote that he learned of Fawcett s fate from Orlando Villas Boas 40 who had heard it from one of Fawcett s murderers Allegedly Fawcett and his companions had a mishap on the river and lost most of the gifts they d brought along for the Indian tribes Continuing without gifts was a serious breach of protocol since the expedition members were all more or less seriously ill at the time the Kalapalo tribe they encountered decided to kill them The bodies of Jack Fawcett and Raleigh Rimell were thrown into the river Colonel Fawcett considered an old man and therefore distinguished received a proper burial Falk Ronne visited the Kalapalo tribe and reported that one of the tribesmen confirmed Villas Boas s story about how and why Fawcett had been killed Fawcett s signet ring Edit In 1979 Fawcett s signet ring was found in a pawnshop A new theory is that Fawcett and his companions were killed by bandits and the bodies were disposed of in a river while their belongings were despoiled 41 Russian documentary Edit In 2003 a Russian documentary film The Curse of the Incas Gold Expedition of Percy Fawcett to the Amazon Russian Proklyate zolota inkov Ekspediciya Persi Fosseta v Amazonku was released as a part of the television series Mysteries of the Century Tajny veka Among other things the film emphasizes the recent expedition of Oleg Aliyev to the presumed approximate place of Fawcett s last whereabouts and Aliyev s findings impressions and presumptions about Fawcett s fate The film concludes that Fawcett may have been looking for the ruins of El Dorado a city built by more advanced people from the other side of the Andes and that the expedition members were killed by an unknown primitive tribe that had no contact with modern civilization 42 Commune in the jungle Edit On 21 March 2004 The Observer reported that television director Misha Williams who had studied Fawcett s private papers believed that Fawcett had not intended to return to Britain but rather meant to found a commune in the jungle based on theosophical principles and the worship of his son Jack 43 Williams explained his research in some detail in the preface to his play AmaZonia first performed in April 2004 44 In popular culture EditIn Charles MacLean s 1982 novel The Watcher the protagonist believes himself to be a reincarnation of Percy Fawcett 45 Main article The Lost City of Z book In 2005 The New Yorker staff writer David Grann visited the Kalapalo tribe and reported that it had apparently preserved an oral history about Fawcett among the first Europeans the tribe had ever seen The oral account said that Fawcett and his party had stayed at their village and then left heading eastward The Kalapalos warned Fawcett and his companions that if they went that way they would be killed by the fierce Indians who occupied that territory but Fawcett insisted upon going The Kalapalos observed smoke from the expedition s campfire each evening for five days before it disappeared The Kalapalos said they were sure the fierce Indians had killed them 16 The article also reports that a monumental civilisation known as Kuhikugu may have actually existed near where Fawcett was searching as discovered recently by archaeologist Michael Heckenberger and others 46 Grann s findings are further detailed in his book The Lost City of Z 2009 In 2016 James Gray wrote and directed a film adaptation of Grann s book with Charlie Hunnam starring as Fawcett Episode 133 of British horror podcast The Magnus Archives features a fictional account given by Fawcett describing the events which occurred on his final expedition In 2022 Vox released a 6 minute and 54 second long short documentary film onto YouTube as part of their Atlas video series investigating Fawcett s journeys in the Amazon discussing his mistakes and the reality of the Lost Cities through modern technology 47 Works EditFawcett Percy and Brian Fawcett 1953 Exploration Fawcett Phoenix Press 2001 reprint ISBN 1 84212 468 4 Fawcett Percy and Brian Fawcett 1953 Lost Trails Lost Cities Funk amp Wagnalls ASIN B0007DNCV4 Fawcett Brian 1958 Ruins in the Sky Hutchinson of LondonSee also EditList of people who disappeared mysteriously pre 1970 Category Lost explorersReferences Edit Heckenberger Michael J 2009 Lost Cities of the Amazon Scientific American 301 4 64 71 Bibcode 2009SciAm 301d 64H doi 10 1038 scientificamerican1009 64 PMID 19780454 E Douglas Fawcett 1866 1960 Keverel Chess 10 August 2011 Archived from the original on 3 April 2012 Fawcett E Douglas The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction 18 January 2017 No 25615 The London Gazette 10 August 1886 p 3855 No 26703 The London Gazette 24 January 1896 p 424 No 26705 The London Gazette 31 January 1896 p 589 No 26869 The London Gazette 2 July 1897 p 3635 Fawcett Percy 4 May 2010 Exploration Fawcett Journey to the Lost City of Z The Overlook Press ISBN 978 1590208366 No 27792 The London Gazette 12 May 1905 p 3426 THE LOST CITY OF Z A TALE OF DEADLY OBSESSION IN THE AMAZON Kirkus Reviews Dec 1 2008 The British explorer Percy Fawcett s exploits in jungles and atop mountains inspired novels such as Arthur Conan Doyle s The Lost World No 27916 The London Gazette 25 May 1906 p 3657 Fawcett P H and Fawcett B Exploration Fawcett 1953 Apazauca spider The Great Web of Percy Harrison Fawcett No 28330 The London Gazette 18 January 1910 p 434 Double nosed dog not to be sniffed at BBC News 10 August 2007 a b c Grann David 19 September 2005 The Lost City of Z The New Yorker Retrieved 23 December 2016 No 31120 The London Gazette Supplement 10 January 1919 p 674 No 29890 The London Gazette Supplement 2 January 1917 p 208 No 30421 The London Gazette Supplement 7 December 1917 p 12912 No 31077 The London Gazette Supplement 17 December 1918 p 14926 No 30111 The London Gazette Supplement 1 June 1917 pp 5468 5470 The London Illustrated News 22 June 1924 John Hemming 1 April 2017 The Lost City of Z is a very long way from a true story and I should know The Spectator Retrieved 11 March 2019 Everyone in Amazonia knew that you could not cut trails and keep your team fed with fewer than eight men His other dictum was that Indians would look after them This was equally dangerous The Xingu tribes pride themselves on generosity but they expect visitors to reciprocate All expeditions in the past four decades had brought plenty of presents such as machetes knives and beads Fawcett had none He committed other blunders that antagonized their hosts So it was only a matter of days before they were all dead a b c John Hemming 1 April 2017 The Lost City of Z is a very long way from a true story and I should know The Spectator Retrieved 11 March 2019 Twenty years later Chief Comatsi of the Kalapalo tribe gave a very detailed account of Fawcett s visit reminding his assembled people of exactly how they had killed the unwelcome strangers But the German anthropologist Max Schmidt who was there in 1926 thought that they had plunged into the forests got lost and starved to death this was also the view of a missionary couple called Young who were on another Xingu headwater The Brazilian Indian Service regretted that Fawcett who was obsessively secretive had not asked for their help in dealing with the Indians They felt he was killed because of the harshness and lack of tact that all recognised in him Note Hemming spells the chief s name Comatsi but most other sources spell it Comatzi a b c Man Who Knew Fawcett Lancashire Evening Post 25 July 1931 p 4 Retrieved 11 June 2018 a b c Izarari Chief of the Kalapalos The Great Web of Percy Harrison Fawcett Retrieved 11 March 2019 Comatzi the later chief of Kalapalos after Izarari s death was after much persuasion induced to disclose the grave of the murderer explorer and bones were dug up and examined by a team of experts of the Royal Anthropological Institute in London but the results indicated that those bones were not of Fawcett and there is a doubt whether they belong to a white man The bodies of the younger ones were thrown in the river said Comatzi At all events they have not been found a b Reports for Fawcett s assassination by Izarari The Great Web of Percy Harrison Fawcett Retrieved 11 March 2019 References for the summary amp highlights of the following articles taken from The Rolf Blomberg s book Chavante An expedition to the Tribes of the Mato Grosso pages 70 amp 71 Blomberg s book was first published in 1958 various editions of it can be found here Wallechinsky David Wallace Irving 1981 History of the Search for Percy H Fawcett Part 2 Trivia Library com Cummins Geraldine March 1985 The Fate of Colonel Fawcett Health Research Books p 14 ISBN 978 0 7873 0230 6 Basso Ellen B 22 July 2010 The Last Cannibals A South American Oral History University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 79206 7 a b Colonel Fawcett s Last Words Colonel Percy Fawcett s Search For the Lost city of Z Archived from the original on 28 September 2010 Retrieved 9 June 2011 a b Dead Horse Camp Fawcett s Camp The Great Web of Percy Harrison Fawcett Archived from the original on 11 February 2020 Retrieved 26 May 2022 The Continuing Chronicles of Colonel Fawcett Retrieved 9 June 2011 Grann David 2010 The Lost City of Z A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon New York Vintage Books p 273 ISBN 978 1 4000 7845 5 Hemming John 1 April 2017 The Lost City of Z is a very long way from a true story and I should know The Spectator The upper jaw provides the clearest possible evidence that these human remains were not those of Colonel Fawcett whose spare upper denture is fortunately available for comparison Royal Anthropological Institute London 1951 Report on the human remains from Brazil as quoted by Grann 2009 p 253 1953 Col Fawcett Peru Bolivia Brazil South America Lost Expedition El Dorado eBay Retrieved 21 July 2017 Orcutt Larry 2000 Colonel Percy Harrison Fawcett Archived from the original on 5 April 2016 Retrieved 24 April 2006 Vajuvi said that they were the bones of his grandfather Mugikia Grann 2009 pp 252 253 Falk Ronne Arne 16 March 2017 Dr Klapperslange in Danish Lindhardt og Ringhof ISBN 9788711714096 PBS Secrets of the Dead Lost in the Amazon Tajny veka Proklyatie zolota inkov Ekspediciya Persi Fosseta v Amazonku Secrets of the century The curse of the Inca gold Expedition of Percy Fawcett to the Amazon Filmix net in Russian 2011 Archived from the original on 28 October 2016 Retrieved 19 April 2016 Thorpe Vanessa 21 March 2004 Veil lifts on jungle mystery of the Colonel who vanished The Observer Williams Misha AmaZonia PDF Percy Fawcett s Heart of Darkness 17 April 2017 For further info see the last chapter of Grann s book The Lost City of Z and Charles Mann s book 1491 New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus How the lost cities of the Amazon were finally found retrieved 21 September 2022Bibliography EditFalk Ronne Arne 1991 Klodens Forunderlige Mysterier Roth Forlag Fleming Peter 1933 Brazilian Adventure Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 0 87477 246 X Grann David 2009 The Lost City of Z A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon ISBN 978 0 385 51353 1 Leal Hermes 1996 Enigma do Coronel Fawcett o verdadeiro Indiana Jones Colonel Fawcett The Real Life Indiana Jones Published in Portuguese La Gazette des Francais du Paraguay Percy Fawcett Un monument de l Exploration et de l Aventure en Amerique Latine Expedition du Rio Verde bilingue francais espagnol numero 6 Annee 1 Asuncion Paraguay Scriblerius C S 2015 Percyfaw Code the secret dossier Published by Amazon com External links EditForgotten Travellers The Hunt for Colonel Fawcett Essay on Lt Col Percy Harrison Fawcett Virtual Exploration Society Colonel Percy Fawcett Colonel Fawcett Mad Dreams in the Amazon Essay on Fawcett from The New York Review of Books Lost in the Amazon The Enigma of Col Percy Fawcett PBS Secrets of the Dead documentary B Fletcher Robinson amp The Lost World by Paul Spiring The Lost City of Z is a Long Way From a True Story and I Should Know by John Hemming in The Spectator Newspaper clippings about Percy Fawcett in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Percy Fawcett amp oldid 1135655524 Henry Costin, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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