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John Gregory (engineer)

John Gregory (6 September 1806—c. May 1848) was an English railway and naval engineer. He served as engineer aboard HMS Erebus during the 1845 Franklin Expedition, which sought to explore uncharted parts of what is now Nunavut, including the Northwest Passage, and make scientific observations. The ships were outfitted with former railway locomotive engines which served as auxiliary power units, which is why Gregory, who had never been to sea, served on the expedition. All expedition personnel perished in uncertain conditions, mostly on and around King William Island. In 2021, Gregory's remains became the first of the expedition to be identified using DNA analysis.

John Gregory
Born(1806-09-06)September 6, 1806
DiedMay 1848 (aged 41)
Occupation(s)Railway and naval engineer
Known forMember of Franklin's lost expedition; identification of remains via DNA analysis in 2021

Biography edit

Early life edit

John Gregory was born 6 September 1806 in Salford, Lancashire (now part of Greater Manchester), the eldest child of William Gregory, a grocer, and his wife Frances. He was baptized in the Church of St. Michaels, Angel Meadow, a chapel of ease in the most notorious slum of the city during the nineteenth century. His father William was literate, and John likely learned to read and write from a young age.[1] Historian Ralph Lloyd-Jones had in 2018 supposed a 1790 birth date for John Gregory based on genealogical research.[2] In 2021, a team led by Douglas R. Stenton verified that this was an error, as the 1790 John Gregory, a son of John and Mary Gregory, died in infancy and was buried on 1 April 1791.[3]

Life and career edit

John Gregory married Hannah Wilson at St. Michael's Church in Ashton-under-Lyme (Hannah's birthplace) on 14 April 1823.[2][3] Their first child, Edward John Gregory, was baptized on 15 June 1823, only two months after the wedding.[3] The allotment books of Erebus mistakenly referred to their marriage date as 1822.[4]

Gregory was employed by Lambeth-based engineering company Maudslay, Sons & Field, a prominent manufacturer of boilers and steam engines. He and his family lived at 7 Ely Place, London in 1845.[3]

Franklin expedition edit

Preparations edit

HMS Erebus and HMS Terror were the first wooden warships of the Royal Navy to be converted into steam driven screw ships, modifications made for the attempt at the Northwest Passage at the suggestion of former Arctic explorer and Comptroller of Steam Machinery Sir William Edward Parry. Henry Maudslay of Maudslay, Sons & Field was contracted to supply the propulsion systems, and being unable to procure new engines, used preexisting ones taken from the railway: "Croydon" and "Archimedes," two six-wheel steam locomotives built in 1838—1839 by engineering company G & J Rennie for the London and Croydon Railway.[5]

In addition to the engines, Maudslay, Sons & Field provided two men to maintain them: James Thompson on Terror and John Gregory on Erebus. On Gregory's naval book it was written: "This Engineer was recommended by Messrs Maudslay to serve in one of the Vessels employed in the Arctic Expedition having been accustomed to locomotive Engines. His pay to be double that allowed to 1st Class Engineers (Woolwich 6th May 1845) Admiralty 13 May/45."[2] Both Thompson and Gregory were hired on only one week's notice, after substandard performance tests conducted in the weeks leading up to the ships' departure in May 1845.[3] Gregory allotted £13 of his wages per month to his wife Hannah.[3]

As Engineer, Gregory was a warrant officer alongside Boatswain Thomas Terry and Carpenter John Weekes on Erebus, with their Terror counterparts being Engineer James Thompson, Boatswain John Lane, and Carpenter Thomas Honey.[6] Warrant officers served as heads of specialist technical branches aboard ship and reported directly to the captain.[7]

Leaving England edit

The expedition was Gregory's first time at sea. On 9 July 1845, two weeks after Erebus and Terror departed Greenhithe, Kent, he wrote a letter to his wife in which he described his first time seeing whales and icebergs.[8] The letter was sent from Greenland before the expedition sailed into the Canadian Arctic, and was the last contact Gregory had with his family. The letter concluded with the line “Give my kind Love to Edward, Fanny, James, William, and kiss baby for me – and accept the same yourself."[9] The letter is held in the Scott Polar Research Institute Archives at the University of Cambridge.[10]

In the Canadian Arctic edit

The ships spent the first winter at Beechey Island, where three men (John Torrington, John Hartnell, and William Braine) died and were buried. The ships were trapped in ice northwest of King William Island in 1846.[11] In April 1848, the ships were still beset by the ice, in the northern Victoria Strait and twenty-one men including John Franklin had died. On 22 April 1848, Francis Crozier and one-hundred-four more surviving officers and men deserted the ships, moved equipment including small boats across twenty-eight kilometres of sea ice and encamped on the northwest corner of King William Island, only a few kilometres south of Victory Point. Four days later, they set off to find the Back River and help from a Hudson Bay Company post on the Canadian mainland.[12]

John Gregory survived three years trapped aboard Erebus and was one of the survivors led by Crozier south along King William Island. He was among at least twenty-three sailors who were left with two ship's boats in Erebus Bay. He died seventy-five kilometres south of the landing site, on the shore of Erebus Bay.[13] Douglas Stenton estimated he died in May 1848.[3][9] Two other men had died with him.[8]

Remains and identification edit

History of the remains edit

The first person to search the area where Gregory's body lay was W. R. Hobson of Francis Leopold McClintock's expedition in 1859.[14][15] He found in Erebus Bay a ship's boat resting on its sledges, large quantities of supplies and personal effects, and the partial remains of two skeletons. In 1861, Netsilik Inuit travelled there to find useful artefacts, finding two boats and large quantities of skeletal remains.[14] Neither McClintock's party nor the Inuit buried any of the remains.[12] An expedition consisting of Frederick Schwatka, William Henry Gilder, Heinrich Klutschak, Frank E. Melms, and Ipirvik ("Joe Ebierbing") explored the same area in 1879.[14][16] Schwatka buried the human remains he found, including those that would later be identified as belonging to John Gregory.[14]

Modern archaeological expeditions in Erebus Bay started in 1982 and identified five major sites (NhLi-1, NgLj-1, NgLj-2, NgLj-3, and NgLj-39) consisting of over five hundred bones representing at least twenty-one Franklin expedition men.[12] Gregory's skull was rediscovered by amateur historian Barry Ranford in 1993, who had initially believed it to be a bleached plastic bottle while sledging along King William Island.[17] The skull was photographed by Andrew Gregg and appeared in a 1995 CBC Television special hosted by Carol Off.[17] By 1997, enough of the bones were visible from the surface due to disturbance that they were interred in a cairn with a commemorative plaque.[13] The remains were excavated in 2013 in order to extract DNA.[18] Using the skull as a base, a facial reconstruction of John Gregory was made by Diana Tretkov prior to the identification of the remains.[11] The remains were reburied on-site in 2014.

Identification edit

The skull belonging to Gregory was found at NgLj-3 with one of his molars being given the designation NgLj-3:34 and subjected to genetic and isotopic analysis.[19] The archaeological DNA of twenty-nine expedition personnel has been analyzed as of 2021, with twenty-three coming from sites in Erebus Bay.[3] Seventeen self-identified descendants of expedition personnel have submitted DNA samples for comparison. The first sixteen found no matches, but the seventeenth matched with John Gregory.[3] Jonathan Gregory (b. 1982) from Port Elizabeth, South Africa, John Gregory's great-great-great-grandson was confirmed a DNA match to NgLj-3:34 in 2021 by a team of researchers from University of Waterloo, Lakehead University, and Trent University.[8][11] Gregory was the first expedition member to be identified using DNA analysis.[3] Gregory is the sixth expedition member to have his remains identified by any means, after John Torrington, John Hartnell, William Braine, John Irving, and Harry Goodsir.[19] As of 2021, no other remains have been matched with DNA samples.[19] The identification of Gregory has been described as one of the most important developments in Franklin expedition research in 2021.[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Russell, Potter A. (21 June 2021). "Found! John Gregory". Visions of the North. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Lloyd-Jones, Ralph (2018). "Franklin's men and their families: New evidence from the Allotment Books". Polar Record. 54 (4): 267–274. doi:10.1017/s0032247418000451. ISSN 0032-2474. S2CID 134217554.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Stenton, Douglas R.; Fratpietro, Stephen; Keenleyside, Anne; Park, Robert W. (2021). "DNA identification of a sailor from the 1845 Franklin northwest passage expedition". Polar Record. 57. doi:10.1017/s0032247421000061. ISSN 0032-2474. S2CID 233412371.
  4. ^ Hutchinson, Gillian (2017). Sir John Franklin's Erebus and Terror Expedition: Lost and Found. Camden: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 74. ISBN 978-1-4729-4870-0. OCLC 1021810699.
  5. ^ Battersby, William; Carney, Peter (2011). "Equipping HM Ships Erebus and Terror, 1845". The International Journal for the History of Engineering & Technology. 81 (2): 192–211. doi:10.1179/175812111X13033852943147. ISSN 1758-1206. S2CID 110275603.
  6. ^ Woodman, David C. (2015). Unravelling the Franklin Mystery: Inuit Testimony (Second Edition) (2nd ed.). Montréal: McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 327–329. ISBN 978-0-7735-8217-0. OCLC 953666769.
  7. ^ (PDF). National Museum of the Royal Navy. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2015.
  8. ^ a b c Pietsch, Bryan (5 May 2021). "His Ship Vanished in the Arctic 176 Years Ago. DNA Has Offered a Clue". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  9. ^ a b Rosen, Yereth (20 May 2021). "DNA analysis links great-great-great-grandson to Franklin Expedition victim". Nunatsiaq News. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  10. ^ "John Gregory collection - Archives Hub". Archive Hub. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  11. ^ a b c d Davidson, Janet (23 August 2021). "DNA confirmed identity of engineer on HMS Erebus — and raises more questions in Franklin Expedition mystery". CBC News. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  12. ^ a b c Stenton, Douglas R. (2018). "Finding the dead: bodies, bones and burials from the 1845 Franklin northwest passage Expedition". Polar Record. 54 (3): 197–212. doi:10.1017/s0032247418000359. ISSN 0032-2474. S2CID 133972993.
  13. ^ a b "First member of ill-fated 1845 Franklin expedition is identified by DNA analysis". University of Waterloo News. 6 May 2021. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  14. ^ a b c d Stenton, Douglas R.; Park, Robert W. (31 May 2017). "History, Oral History and Archaeology: Reinterpreting the "Boat Places" of Erebus Bay". Arctic. 70 (2): 203. doi:10.14430/arctic4649. ISSN 1923-1245.
  15. ^ Edgar, Courtney. "Using DNA testing to Identify Franklin expedition explorer". Arctic Focus. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  16. ^ Potter, Russell A. (2016). Finding Franklin: the untold story of a 165-year search. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 120–123. ISBN 978-0-7735-9961-1. OCLC 959865229.
  17. ^ a b Potter, Russell A (5 May 2021). "The backstory of John Gregory's Skull". Visions of the North. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  18. ^ Turner, Logan (7 May 2021). "DNA used to ID sailor from doomed 1845 Franklin Expedition with living relative". CBC News. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  19. ^ a b c Keenleyside, Anne; Stenton, Douglas R.; Newman, Karla (2021). "The integration of isotopic and historical data to investigate the identification of crewmembers of the 1845 Franklin expedition". Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. 40: 103200. Bibcode:2021JArSR..40j3200K. doi:10.1016/j.jasrep.2021.103200. ISSN 2352-409X. S2CID 240256345.

john, gregory, engineer, john, gregory, september, 1806, 1848, english, railway, naval, engineer, served, engineer, aboard, erebus, during, 1845, franklin, expedition, which, sought, explore, uncharted, parts, what, nunavut, including, northwest, passage, make. John Gregory 6 September 1806 c May 1848 was an English railway and naval engineer He served as engineer aboard HMS Erebus during the 1845 Franklin Expedition which sought to explore uncharted parts of what is now Nunavut including the Northwest Passage and make scientific observations The ships were outfitted with former railway locomotive engines which served as auxiliary power units which is why Gregory who had never been to sea served on the expedition All expedition personnel perished in uncertain conditions mostly on and around King William Island In 2021 Gregory s remains became the first of the expedition to be identified using DNA analysis John GregoryBorn 1806 09 06 September 6 1806Salford Lancashire EnglandDiedMay 1848 aged 41 King William Island CanadaOccupation s Railway and naval engineerKnown forMember of Franklin s lost expedition identification of remains via DNA analysis in 2021 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Life and career 2 Franklin expedition 2 1 Preparations 2 2 Leaving England 2 3 In the Canadian Arctic 3 Remains and identification 3 1 History of the remains 3 2 Identification 4 See also 5 ReferencesBiography editEarly life edit John Gregory was born 6 September 1806 in Salford Lancashire now part of Greater Manchester the eldest child of William Gregory a grocer and his wife Frances He was baptized in the Church of St Michaels Angel Meadow a chapel of ease in the most notorious slum of the city during the nineteenth century His father William was literate and John likely learned to read and write from a young age 1 Historian Ralph Lloyd Jones had in 2018 supposed a 1790 birth date for John Gregory based on genealogical research 2 In 2021 a team led by Douglas R Stenton verified that this was an error as the 1790 John Gregory a son of John and Mary Gregory died in infancy and was buried on 1 April 1791 3 Life and career edit John Gregory married Hannah Wilson at St Michael s Church in Ashton under Lyme Hannah s birthplace on 14 April 1823 2 3 Their first child Edward John Gregory was baptized on 15 June 1823 only two months after the wedding 3 The allotment books of Erebus mistakenly referred to their marriage date as 1822 4 Gregory was employed by Lambeth based engineering company Maudslay Sons amp Field a prominent manufacturer of boilers and steam engines He and his family lived at 7 Ely Place London in 1845 3 Franklin expedition editPreparations edit HMS Erebus and HMS Terror were the first wooden warships of the Royal Navy to be converted into steam driven screw ships modifications made for the attempt at the Northwest Passage at the suggestion of former Arctic explorer and Comptroller of Steam Machinery Sir William Edward Parry Henry Maudslay of Maudslay Sons amp Field was contracted to supply the propulsion systems and being unable to procure new engines used preexisting ones taken from the railway Croydon and Archimedes two six wheel steam locomotives built in 1838 1839 by engineering company G amp J Rennie for the London and Croydon Railway 5 In addition to the engines Maudslay Sons amp Field provided two men to maintain them James Thompson on Terror and John Gregory on Erebus On Gregory s naval book it was written This Engineer was recommended by Messrs Maudslay to serve in one of the Vessels employed in the Arctic Expedition having been accustomed to locomotive Engines His pay to be double that allowed to 1st Class Engineers Woolwich 6th May 1845 Admiralty 13 May 45 2 Both Thompson and Gregory were hired on only one week s notice after substandard performance tests conducted in the weeks leading up to the ships departure in May 1845 3 Gregory allotted 13 of his wages per month to his wife Hannah 3 As Engineer Gregory was a warrant officer alongside Boatswain Thomas Terry and Carpenter John Weekes on Erebus with their Terror counterparts being Engineer James Thompson Boatswain John Lane and Carpenter Thomas Honey 6 Warrant officers served as heads of specialist technical branches aboard ship and reported directly to the captain 7 Leaving England edit The expedition was Gregory s first time at sea On 9 July 1845 two weeks after Erebus and Terror departed Greenhithe Kent he wrote a letter to his wife in which he described his first time seeing whales and icebergs 8 The letter was sent from Greenland before the expedition sailed into the Canadian Arctic and was the last contact Gregory had with his family The letter concluded with the line Give my kind Love to Edward Fanny James William and kiss baby for me and accept the same yourself 9 The letter is held in the Scott Polar Research Institute Archives at the University of Cambridge 10 In the Canadian Arctic edit The ships spent the first winter at Beechey Island where three men John Torrington John Hartnell and William Braine died and were buried The ships were trapped in ice northwest of King William Island in 1846 11 In April 1848 the ships were still beset by the ice in the northern Victoria Strait and twenty one men including John Franklin had died On 22 April 1848 Francis Crozier and one hundred four more surviving officers and men deserted the ships moved equipment including small boats across twenty eight kilometres of sea ice and encamped on the northwest corner of King William Island only a few kilometres south of Victory Point Four days later they set off to find the Back River and help from a Hudson Bay Company post on the Canadian mainland 12 John Gregory survived three years trapped aboard Erebus and was one of the survivors led by Crozier south along King William Island He was among at least twenty three sailors who were left with two ship s boats in Erebus Bay He died seventy five kilometres south of the landing site on the shore of Erebus Bay 13 Douglas Stenton estimated he died in May 1848 3 9 Two other men had died with him 8 Remains and identification editHistory of the remains edit The first person to search the area where Gregory s body lay was W R Hobson of Francis Leopold McClintock s expedition in 1859 14 15 He found in Erebus Bay a ship s boat resting on its sledges large quantities of supplies and personal effects and the partial remains of two skeletons In 1861 Netsilik Inuit travelled there to find useful artefacts finding two boats and large quantities of skeletal remains 14 Neither McClintock s party nor the Inuit buried any of the remains 12 An expedition consisting of Frederick Schwatka William Henry Gilder Heinrich Klutschak Frank E Melms and Ipirvik Joe Ebierbing explored the same area in 1879 14 16 Schwatka buried the human remains he found including those that would later be identified as belonging to John Gregory 14 Modern archaeological expeditions in Erebus Bay started in 1982 and identified five major sites NhLi 1 NgLj 1 NgLj 2 NgLj 3 and NgLj 39 consisting of over five hundred bones representing at least twenty one Franklin expedition men 12 Gregory s skull was rediscovered by amateur historian Barry Ranford in 1993 who had initially believed it to be a bleached plastic bottle while sledging along King William Island 17 The skull was photographed by Andrew Gregg and appeared in a 1995 CBC Television special hosted by Carol Off 17 By 1997 enough of the bones were visible from the surface due to disturbance that they were interred in a cairn with a commemorative plaque 13 The remains were excavated in 2013 in order to extract DNA 18 Using the skull as a base a facial reconstruction of John Gregory was made by Diana Tretkov prior to the identification of the remains 11 The remains were reburied on site in 2014 Identification edit The skull belonging to Gregory was found at NgLj 3 with one of his molars being given the designation NgLj 3 34 and subjected to genetic and isotopic analysis 19 The archaeological DNA of twenty nine expedition personnel has been analyzed as of 2021 with twenty three coming from sites in Erebus Bay 3 Seventeen self identified descendants of expedition personnel have submitted DNA samples for comparison The first sixteen found no matches but the seventeenth matched with John Gregory 3 Jonathan Gregory b 1982 from Port Elizabeth South Africa John Gregory s great great great grandson was confirmed a DNA match to NgLj 3 34 in 2021 by a team of researchers from University of Waterloo Lakehead University and Trent University 8 11 Gregory was the first expedition member to be identified using DNA analysis 3 Gregory is the sixth expedition member to have his remains identified by any means after John Torrington John Hartnell William Braine John Irving and Harry Goodsir 19 As of 2021 no other remains have been matched with DNA samples 19 The identification of Gregory has been described as one of the most important developments in Franklin expedition research in 2021 11 See also editBody identification List of people who disappeared mysteriously at sea List of unsolved deaths Personnel of Franklin s Lost Expedition for Gregory s shipmates Harry Goodsir a Franklin Expedition officer also identified with modern forensic techniques Harry Peglar a Franklin Expedition member whose personal effects are among its only written materials Bioarchaeology the study of human bones from archaeological sitesReferences edit Russell Potter A 21 June 2021 Found John Gregory Visions of the North Retrieved 25 December 2021 a b c Lloyd Jones Ralph 2018 Franklin s men and their families New evidence from the Allotment Books Polar Record 54 4 267 274 doi 10 1017 s0032247418000451 ISSN 0032 2474 S2CID 134217554 a b c d e f g h i j Stenton Douglas R Fratpietro Stephen Keenleyside Anne Park Robert W 2021 DNA identification of a sailor from the 1845 Franklin northwest passage expedition Polar Record 57 doi 10 1017 s0032247421000061 ISSN 0032 2474 S2CID 233412371 Hutchinson Gillian 2017 Sir John Franklin s Erebus and Terror Expedition Lost and Found Camden Bloomsbury Publishing p 74 ISBN 978 1 4729 4870 0 OCLC 1021810699 Battersby William Carney Peter 2011 Equipping HM Ships Erebus and Terror 1845 The International Journal for the History of Engineering amp Technology 81 2 192 211 doi 10 1179 175812111X13033852943147 ISSN 1758 1206 S2CID 110275603 Woodman David C 2015 Unravelling the Franklin Mystery Inuit Testimony Second Edition 2nd ed Montreal McGill Queen s University Press pp 327 329 ISBN 978 0 7735 8217 0 OCLC 953666769 Information sheet no 096 Naval Ranks PDF National Museum of the Royal Navy Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 a b c Pietsch Bryan 5 May 2021 His Ship Vanished in the Arctic 176 Years Ago DNA Has Offered a Clue The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 25 December 2021 a b Rosen Yereth 20 May 2021 DNA analysis links great great great grandson to Franklin Expedition victim Nunatsiaq News Retrieved 25 December 2021 John Gregory collection Archives Hub Archive Hub Retrieved 25 December 2021 a b c d Davidson Janet 23 August 2021 DNA confirmed identity of engineer on HMS Erebus and raises more questions in Franklin Expedition mystery CBC News Retrieved 25 December 2021 a b c Stenton Douglas R 2018 Finding the dead bodies bones and burials from the 1845 Franklin northwest passage Expedition Polar Record 54 3 197 212 doi 10 1017 s0032247418000359 ISSN 0032 2474 S2CID 133972993 a b First member of ill fated 1845 Franklin expedition is identified by DNA analysis University of Waterloo News 6 May 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 a b c d Stenton Douglas R Park Robert W 31 May 2017 History Oral History and Archaeology Reinterpreting the Boat Places of Erebus Bay Arctic 70 2 203 doi 10 14430 arctic4649 ISSN 1923 1245 Edgar Courtney Using DNA testing to Identify Franklin expedition explorer Arctic Focus Retrieved 25 December 2021 Potter Russell A 2016 Finding Franklin the untold story of a 165 year search Montreal McGill Queen s University Press pp 120 123 ISBN 978 0 7735 9961 1 OCLC 959865229 a b Potter Russell A 5 May 2021 The backstory of John Gregory s Skull Visions of the North Retrieved 25 December 2021 Turner Logan 7 May 2021 DNA used to ID sailor from doomed 1845 Franklin Expedition with living relative CBC News Retrieved 25 December 2021 a b c Keenleyside Anne Stenton Douglas R Newman Karla 2021 The integration of isotopic and historical data to investigate the identification of crewmembers of the 1845 Franklin expedition Journal of Archaeological Science Reports 40 103200 Bibcode 2021JArSR 40j3200K doi 10 1016 j jasrep 2021 103200 ISSN 2352 409X S2CID 240256345 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Gregory engineer amp oldid 1184895919, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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