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Louise Arner Boyd

Louise Arner Boyd (September 16, 1887 – September 14, 1972) was an American explorer of Greenland and the Arctic, who wrote extensively of her scientific expeditions. She became the first woman to fly over the North Pole in 1955, after privately chartering a DC-4 and crew that included aviation pioneers Thor Solberg and Paul Mlinar.

Louise Arner Boyd
Louise Boyd in 1928.
Born(1887-09-16)September 16, 1887
DiedSeptember 14, 1972(1972-09-14) (aged 84)
Occupation(s)Explorer of Greenland and the Arctic
Known forFirst woman to fly over the North Pole
AwardsChevalier Cross of the Order of Saint Olav

During World War II, Boyd led a scientific expedition to obtain data on radio-wave transmission in the Arctic regions and worked on secret assignments for the U.S. Department of the Army.

Early life edit

Born in San Rafael, California to John Franklin Boyd (part-owner of the Bodie, California gold mine) and Louise Cook Arner, Boyd grew up in Marin County and the hills of Oakland playing and competing with her two older brothers, Seth and John. The Boyds were leading citizens of the era and their children's early years, though privileged and relatively carefree, included a well-rounded education that was punctuated every summer by an extended stay on their ranch in the Oakland Hills. It was here where Boyd and her brothers rode horses, explored Mount Diablo, fished, hunted, camped, and generally led a rugged and adventurous life.

When Boyd was a teenager, both of her brothers died from heart disease within a few months of each other, brought on by childhood bouts of rheumatic fever. Her parents were devastated and began to lean heavily on Boyd for care and comfort. It was at this time that the Boyds bequeathed to the City of San Rafael their former gatehouse and some of the family property as a memorial to their two sons which is known today as Boyd park. The Victorian-style building is presently the home of the Marin History Museum.

Career edit

Early travels edit

After her brother's deaths, Boyd traveled extensively with her parents making numerous trips to Europe. It was at this time that she developed a keen interest in photography. In the spring of 1919, Boyd took a train to Buffalo, New York, purchased a touring car, and accompanied by her chauffeur, drove across the United States at a time when there was no highway system and roads were often gravel and dirt. This would be the first of many cross-country trips that Boyd would take and detail in her many journals. Upon her parents death in 1919 and 1920, Boyd inherited the family fortune after caring for her parents in the last few years of their lives.

Expeditions in Europe and the Arctic edit

In the early 1920s, Boyd used her inheritance to travel. On a trip to Norway in 1924, she saw the Polar Ice Pack for the first time. This experience proved instrumental in her life and she immediately began planning her own Arctic adventure. In 1925, she was presented to the King and Queen of England, an honor bestowed on few American women. In 1926, she chartered the supply ship Hobby, which had been used by famous arctic explorer Roald Amundsen for a hunting and filming trip to the Arctic. She was accompanied by her friends, the Count & Countess Ribadavia. She gained international notoriety for her exploits (and hunting of polar bears) and was dubbed by newspapers around the world, as the, “Arctic Diana” and “The Girl Who Tamed the Arctic”. The Count of Ribadavia published a book with photographs by Boyd in 1927 titled, Chasses Et Aventures Dans Les Regions Polaires.

 
Boyd chartered the Hobby, a supply ship of Tromsø for her trips in 1926 and 1928

In 1928, Boyd was planning a second pleasure trip aboard the Hobby when it was learned that the famous Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen had failed to return in an attempt to find and rescue the Italian explorer Umberto Nobile whose balloon expedition to the arctic had recently gone missing. Boyd offered her services and the 'Hobby' to the Norwegian government to search for Amundsen, saying, “How could I go on a pleasure trip when those 22 lives were at stake?” Although she traveled about 10,000 miles (16,100 km) across the Arctic Ocean she found no trace of him. Nevertheless, the Norwegian government awarded her the Chevalier Cross of the Order of Saint Olav. "She was the first American woman to receive the order and the third woman in the world to be so honored."

Boyd is primarily known for leading a series of scientific expeditions to the east and north coast of Greenland in the 1930s. Boyd photographed, surveyed and collected hundreds of botanical specimens, under the tutelage of her good friend, Alice Eastwood of the California Academy of Sciences. The American Geographical Society published her findings and photographs from the 1933 and 1935 expeditions in a book titled The Fiord Region of East Greenland. An area near the Gerard de Geer Glacier was later named Louise Boyd Land. For her leadership and scientific work, Boyd was awarded the prestigious by the American Geographical Society (AGS) a few years later in 1938.

In August 1934, after being elected as a delegate to the International Geographical Congress in Warsaw, Poland, Boyd set out on a 3-month journey across the Polish countryside photographing and recording the customs, dress, economy and culture of the many ethnic Poles, Ukrainians, Byelorussians and Lithuanians. The journey, by car, rail, boat and on foot took her first from Lviv to Kovel (these towns are in Ukraine today), and then to KobrinPinskKletskNesvizhSlonim (now in Belarus). She finished the journey in Vilno. Her travel narrative was supplemented with over 500 photographs and published by the American Geographical Society in 1937 as Polish Countrysides.[1]

World War II edit

Upon the outbreak of World War II, the knowledge Boyd had gained through her six previous expeditions to Greenland and the Arctic was considered strategically significant to the war effort. The United States government requested that she refrain from publishing the book she was writing about her 1937 and 1938 expeditions, and asked her to lead a geophysical expedition along the west coast of Greenland and down the coast of Baffin Island and Labrador for the Department of Commerce National Bureau of Standards. She was appointed as the Bureau's consulting expert on a dollar a year basis.

At her own expense, Boyd chartered and outfitted the schooner Effie M. Morrissey. This schooner, owned and commanded by captain Robert Bartlett, had been successfully running yearly scientific expeditions to the Arctic since 1926. The principal purpose of the 1941 Bureau of Standards expedition was to obtain data on radio-wave transmission in the Arctic regions traversed. The ionosphere, geomagnetism and aurorae were studied. The Effie M. Morrissey sailed from Washington DC on June 11, 1941, with Boyd leading a scientific party of four men (including a physician) and a crew of eleven under the command of Capt. Bartlett. The expedition returned to Washington, D.C. on November 3, 1941 with valuable data.[2]

During the remainder of the war, Boyd worked on secret assignments for the U.S. Department of the Army, and in 1949 was awarded a Department of Army Certificate of Appreciation.[3]

Her earlier book that had been held from publication, The Coast of Northeast Greenland, was published after the war, in 1948.

Later life and death edit

Later in life Louise Boyd was an active and well-known Marin figure and hostess while serving as a member of the Executive Committee of the San Francisco Symphony. She also accumulated many academic honors receiving an honorary law degree from the University of California, Berkeley and from Mills College. In 1960 Boyd became the first woman to be elected to the board of the American Geographical Society. She was also made an honorary member of the California Academy of Science. Near the end of her life, Boyd fell on hard financial times having spent much of her fortune outfitting and chartering her many explorations. Eventually, she had to sell the family home, Maple Lawn in San Rafael, and took up permanent residence in San Francisco.

Boyd died in San Francisco on September 14, 1972, two days before her 85th birthday.

Publications edit

  • The Fiord Region of East Greenland. American Geographical Society. Special publication no. 18. New York, N. Y.: American Geographical Society. 1935. p. 369.
  • Polish Countrysides. American geographical society. Special publication,no. 20. New York: American Geographical Society. 1937. p. 235.
  • The coast of northeast Greenland, with hydrographic studies in the Greenland Sea. American Geographical Society. Special publication no. 30. New York: American Geographical Society. 1948. p. 339.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ American Geographical Society Special Publication No. 20 “Polish Countrysides” Photographs And Narrative by Louise A. Boyd with a contribution by Stanislaw Gorzuchowski, New York, American Geographical Society Broadway at 156th Street, 1937
  2. ^ U.S. Department of Commerce, Technical News Bulletin of the National Bureau of Standards, Washington, December 1941, Number 296.
  3. ^ "Woman Explorer Honored by Army. Miss Boyd Gets Award for Her Work as Consultant During the War's 'Critical Days'". New York Times. March 19, 1949. Retrieved 2011-11-02.

Further reading edit

  • Giffuni, Cathy. "A Bibliography of Louise Arner Boyd," Bulletin: Geography and Map Division, Special Libraries Association, No. 146, December 1986.
  • Fletcher, Scott. Librarian, San Domenico School, San Anselmo, CA.
  • Kafarowski, Joanna. The Polar Adventures of a Rich American Dame: A Life of Louise Arner Boyd. Dundurn Press, 2017.
  • "Louise Arner Boyd - American Polar Society Luminary". www.americanpolar.org/. American Polar Society. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
  • Fagg Olds, Elizabeth (1985). Women of the Four Winds (1st Mariner Books ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 9780395361993.
  • Kafarowski, Joanna (2018). "'From Boots On 'Til Boots Off': Collecting Greenland with Explorer Louise Arner Boyd". Collections: A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals. 14 (4): 475–494. doi:10.1177/155019061801400406. S2CID 198801775. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  • Kafarowski, J. (2018). La vida de Louise Arner Boyd 2021-11-12 at the Wayback Machine (Spanish edition). Madrid: Ediciones Casiopea.
  • Kafarowski, J. (2019). "Remembering the 20th Century's Leading Female Arctic Explorer." July/August, 2019. Saturday Evening Post.
  • Kafarowski, J. (2021). "Searching for Amundsen: Louise Arner Boyd aboard the Hobby." Winter issue. No. 177: 12-17. Sea History.
  • Kafarowski, J. (2022). "Greenland Beckons: Explorer Louise Arner Boyd aboard the Veslekari." Winter issue. No. 181: 24-29. Sea History.

External links edit

  • Encyclopedia of World Biography
  • A guide to the Louise A. Boyd arctic expedition maps, 1926–1955

louise, arner, boyd, september, 1887, september, 1972, american, explorer, greenland, arctic, wrote, extensively, scientific, expeditions, became, first, woman, over, north, pole, 1955, after, privately, chartering, crew, that, included, aviation, pioneers, th. Louise Arner Boyd September 16 1887 September 14 1972 was an American explorer of Greenland and the Arctic who wrote extensively of her scientific expeditions She became the first woman to fly over the North Pole in 1955 after privately chartering a DC 4 and crew that included aviation pioneers Thor Solberg and Paul Mlinar Louise Arner BoydLouise Boyd in 1928 Born 1887 09 16 September 16 1887San Rafael CaliforniaDiedSeptember 14 1972 1972 09 14 aged 84 San Francisco CaliforniaOccupation s Explorer of Greenland and the ArcticKnown forFirst woman to fly over the North PoleAwardsChevalier Cross of the Order of Saint Olav During World War II Boyd led a scientific expedition to obtain data on radio wave transmission in the Arctic regions and worked on secret assignments for the U S Department of the Army Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Early travels 2 2 Expeditions in Europe and the Arctic 2 3 World War II 3 Later life and death 4 Publications 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life editBorn in San Rafael California to John Franklin Boyd part owner of the Bodie California gold mine and Louise Cook Arner Boyd grew up in Marin County and the hills of Oakland playing and competing with her two older brothers Seth and John The Boyds were leading citizens of the era and their children s early years though privileged and relatively carefree included a well rounded education that was punctuated every summer by an extended stay on their ranch in the Oakland Hills It was here where Boyd and her brothers rode horses explored Mount Diablo fished hunted camped and generally led a rugged and adventurous life When Boyd was a teenager both of her brothers died from heart disease within a few months of each other brought on by childhood bouts of rheumatic fever Her parents were devastated and began to lean heavily on Boyd for care and comfort It was at this time that the Boyds bequeathed to the City of San Rafael their former gatehouse and some of the family property as a memorial to their two sons which is known today as Boyd park The Victorian style building is presently the home of the Marin History Museum Career editEarly travels edit After her brother s deaths Boyd traveled extensively with her parents making numerous trips to Europe It was at this time that she developed a keen interest in photography In the spring of 1919 Boyd took a train to Buffalo New York purchased a touring car and accompanied by her chauffeur drove across the United States at a time when there was no highway system and roads were often gravel and dirt This would be the first of many cross country trips that Boyd would take and detail in her many journals Upon her parents death in 1919 and 1920 Boyd inherited the family fortune after caring for her parents in the last few years of their lives Expeditions in Europe and the Arctic edit In the early 1920s Boyd used her inheritance to travel On a trip to Norway in 1924 she saw the Polar Ice Pack for the first time This experience proved instrumental in her life and she immediately began planning her own Arctic adventure In 1925 she was presented to the King and Queen of England an honor bestowed on few American women In 1926 she chartered the supply ship Hobby which had been used by famous arctic explorer Roald Amundsen for a hunting and filming trip to the Arctic She was accompanied by her friends the Count amp Countess Ribadavia She gained international notoriety for her exploits and hunting of polar bears and was dubbed by newspapers around the world as the Arctic Diana and The Girl Who Tamed the Arctic The Count of Ribadavia published a book with photographs by Boyd in 1927 titled Chasses Et Aventures Dans Les Regions Polaires nbsp Boyd chartered the Hobby a supply ship of Tromso for her trips in 1926 and 1928 In 1928 Boyd was planning a second pleasure trip aboard the Hobby when it was learned that the famous Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen had failed to return in an attempt to find and rescue the Italian explorer Umberto Nobile whose balloon expedition to the arctic had recently gone missing Boyd offered her services and the Hobby to the Norwegian government to search for Amundsen saying How could I go on a pleasure trip when those 22 lives were at stake Although she traveled about 10 000 miles 16 100 km across the Arctic Ocean she found no trace of him Nevertheless the Norwegian government awarded her the Chevalier Cross of the Order of Saint Olav She was the first American woman to receive the order and the third woman in the world to be so honored Boyd is primarily known for leading a series of scientific expeditions to the east and north coast of Greenland in the 1930s Boyd photographed surveyed and collected hundreds of botanical specimens under the tutelage of her good friend Alice Eastwood of the California Academy of Sciences The American Geographical Society published her findings and photographs from the 1933 and 1935 expeditions in a book titled The Fiord Region of East Greenland An area near the Gerard de Geer Glacier was later named Louise Boyd Land For her leadership and scientific work Boyd was awarded the prestigious Cullum Medal by the American Geographical Society AGS a few years later in 1938 In August 1934 after being elected as a delegate to the International Geographical Congress in Warsaw Poland Boyd set out on a 3 month journey across the Polish countryside photographing and recording the customs dress economy and culture of the many ethnic Poles Ukrainians Byelorussians and Lithuanians The journey by car rail boat and on foot took her first from Lviv to Kovel these towns are in Ukraine today and then to Kobrin Pinsk Kletsk Nesvizh Slonim now in Belarus She finished the journey in Vilno Her travel narrative was supplemented with over 500 photographs and published by the American Geographical Society in 1937 as Polish Countrysides 1 World War II edit Upon the outbreak of World War II the knowledge Boyd had gained through her six previous expeditions to Greenland and the Arctic was considered strategically significant to the war effort The United States government requested that she refrain from publishing the book she was writing about her 1937 and 1938 expeditions and asked her to lead a geophysical expedition along the west coast of Greenland and down the coast of Baffin Island and Labrador for the Department of Commerce National Bureau of Standards She was appointed as the Bureau s consulting expert on a dollar a year basis At her own expense Boyd chartered and outfitted the schooner Effie M Morrissey This schooner owned and commanded by captain Robert Bartlett had been successfully running yearly scientific expeditions to the Arctic since 1926 The principal purpose of the 1941 Bureau of Standards expedition was to obtain data on radio wave transmission in the Arctic regions traversed The ionosphere geomagnetism and aurorae were studied The Effie M Morrissey sailed from Washington DC on June 11 1941 with Boyd leading a scientific party of four men including a physician and a crew of eleven under the command of Capt Bartlett The expedition returned to Washington D C on November 3 1941 with valuable data 2 During the remainder of the war Boyd worked on secret assignments for the U S Department of the Army and in 1949 was awarded a Department of Army Certificate of Appreciation 3 Her earlier book that had been held from publication The Coast of Northeast Greenland was published after the war in 1948 Later life and death editLater in life Louise Boyd was an active and well known Marin figure and hostess while serving as a member of the Executive Committee of the San Francisco Symphony She also accumulated many academic honors receiving an honorary law degree from the University of California Berkeley and from Mills College In 1960 Boyd became the first woman to be elected to the board of the American Geographical Society She was also made an honorary member of the California Academy of Science Near the end of her life Boyd fell on hard financial times having spent much of her fortune outfitting and chartering her many explorations Eventually she had to sell the family home Maple Lawn in San Rafael and took up permanent residence in San Francisco Boyd died in San Francisco on September 14 1972 two days before her 85th birthday Publications editThe Fiord Region of East Greenland American Geographical Society Special publication no 18 New York N Y American Geographical Society 1935 p 369 Polish Countrysides American geographical society Special publication no 20 New York American Geographical Society 1937 p 235 The coast of northeast Greenland with hydrographic studies in the Greenland Sea American Geographical Society Special publication no 30 New York American Geographical Society 1948 p 339 See also editList of female explorers and travelersReferences edit American Geographical Society Special Publication No 20 Polish Countrysides Photographs And Narrative by Louise A Boyd with a contribution by Stanislaw Gorzuchowski New York American Geographical Society Broadway at 156th Street 1937 U S Department of Commerce Technical News Bulletin of the National Bureau of Standards Washington December 1941 Number 296 Woman Explorer Honored by Army Miss Boyd Gets Award for Her Work as Consultant During the War s Critical Days New York Times March 19 1949 Retrieved 2011 11 02 Further reading editGiffuni Cathy A Bibliography of Louise Arner Boyd Bulletin Geography and Map Division Special Libraries Association No 146 December 1986 Fletcher Scott Librarian San Domenico School San Anselmo CA Kafarowski Joanna The Polar Adventures of a Rich American Dame A Life of Louise Arner Boyd Dundurn Press 2017 Louise Arner Boyd American Polar Society Luminary www americanpolar org American Polar Society Retrieved January 14 2015 Fagg Olds Elizabeth 1985 Women of the Four Winds 1st Mariner Books ed Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 9780395361993 Kafarowski Joanna 2018 From Boots On Til Boots Off Collecting Greenland with Explorer Louise Arner Boyd Collections A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals 14 4 475 494 doi 10 1177 155019061801400406 S2CID 198801775 Retrieved 22 March 2019 Kafarowski J 2018 La vida de Louise Arner Boyd Archived 2021 11 12 at the Wayback Machine Spanish edition Madrid Ediciones Casiopea Kafarowski J 2019 Remembering the 20th Century s Leading Female Arctic Explorer July August 2019 Saturday Evening Post Kafarowski J 2021 Searching for Amundsen Louise Arner Boyd aboard the Hobby Winter issue No 177 12 17 Sea History Kafarowski J 2022 Greenland Beckons Explorer Louise Arner Boyd aboard the Veslekari Winter issue No 181 24 29 Sea History External links editMoss Jocelyn The Call of the Arctic Travels of Louise Boyd Marin County Historical Society Magazine vol XIV no 2 1987 Encyclopedia of World Biography A guide to the Louise A Boyd arctic expedition maps 1926 1955 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louise Arner Boyd amp oldid 1225239994, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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