Capt. William Robert Hobson, RN

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Capt. William Robert Hobson, RN

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Nassau, New Providence, Bahamas
Death: October 11, 1880 (49)
Pitminster, Somerset, England (United Kingdom)
Place of Burial: England
Immediate Family:

Son of Capt. William Hobson, RN and Eliza Ann Hobson
Husband of Constance Louisa Hobson
Father of Taikiriri Pat Hobson
Brother of Eliza Rendel; Mary Esther Hobson; Emma Churchill Brady; Margaret Anna Hobson and Wi Hobson

Occupation: Navy Captain
Managed by: Jason Scott Wills
Last Updated:

About Capt. William Robert Hobson, RN

Captain Hobson’s son, who entered the navy, was, as Commander Hobson, a companion with Sir Leopold McClintock during his memorable search for Sir John Franklin. Source: Otago Witness (17 December 1896, p. 5) http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&d=OW1896121...

William joined the Navy in 1845 and was promoted to mate in 1852, in the interim serving aboard a number of ships on fairly routine duties. Early in 1853 he was appointed mate aboard Rattlesnake, which had been ordered to take supplies to Plover, waiting at Point Barrow, Alaska, in support of McClure's Investigator and Collinson's Enterprise. These latter ships had entered the Arctic via Bering Strait in 1850 to search for the Franklin expedition from the west. ... In February, Hobson, with two seamen and nine dogs, set off on a sledge journey northward across the Seward Peninsula to Chamisso Island. This had been set as the rendezvous for Frederick Beechey in Blossom and John Franklin during the latter's second land expedition in 1825-1827, and hence it was thought that Franklin might have headed here again. Hobson's task was to check for signs of Franklin at Chamisso Island. He returned to Rattlesnake on 27 March, having reached his goal and finding no sign of Franklin. ... On the basis of this arctic experience, McClintock chose Hobson as his second-in-command for his search expedition aboard Fox. Sailing from Aberdeen on 2 July 1857, Fox made her way north to Melville Bay, where she was caught in the pack ice and drifted for eight months before she could break free. The Fox found more secure winter quarters the next year at Port Kennedy, near the east end of Bellot Strait, and Hobson led several depot-laying trips to the west side of Boothia Peninsula. During a reconnaissance trip in February 1859, McClintock encountered Inuit near Cape Victoria who possessed various relics from the missing Erebus and Terror, and reported that one of them had been crushed west of King William Island. On the basis of this information McClintock and Hobson set off, each leading a party that included one man-hauled sledge and one dog sledge. ... Heading west across Ross Strait, Hobson and his men reached the coast of King William Island. Near Cape Felix they found a cairn and the remains of a camp; by the clothing and equipment scattered around, Hobson deduced it had been a hunting or observatory camp occupied for quite some time by a party from Erebus and Terror. Three days later they found another cairn, originally built by James Ross, and inside it, in a cylinder, the only record that has ever been found describing, in frustratingly brief terms, the final outcome of the Franklin expedition, including the information that Franklin had died in 1847 and ending with the horrifying announcement that the survivors were about to start to walk south to the nearest fur trade post. ... Hobson and his men continued south on 7 May. For nearly two weeks they struggled south along the barren west coast of King William Island despite almost constant blizzards. ... Hobson reached Simpson's cairn at Cape Herschel on the 19th. Next, he crossed Simpson Strait to the mainland and continued some distance farther east, finally turning back on the 21st. ... For his achievements on King William Island, made in the face of vile weather and despite a progressively incapacitating attack of scurvy, Hobson deserves better than the passing recognition that has been accorded to him. Source: http://arctic.journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/arctic/index.php/arctic/ar...

See also: http://www.pdavis.nl/ShowBiog.php?id=1485

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Capt. William Robert Hobson, RN's Timeline

1831
September 16, 1831
Nassau, New Providence, Bahamas
1875
1875
Kaitaia, Northland, New Zealand
1880
October 11, 1880
Age 49
Pitminster, Somerset, England (United Kingdom)
October 11, 1880
Age 49
England (United Kingdom)