Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-9q27g Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-16T22:24:03.787Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The paranormal Arctic: Lady Franklin, Sophia Cracroft, and Captain and ‘Little Weesy’ Coppin

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2009

Ralph Lloyd-Jones
Affiliation:
Fulham Library, 598 Fulham Road, London SW6 5NX

Abstract

Although Jane Franklin has acquired a well-deserved reputation for stoicism and perseverance in the search for her missing husband (a central theme of nineteenth-century polar exploration), there remains evidence that she was prepared to resort to the surprising measure of the use of spirit mediums. The suggestion that she, or any Arctic explorers on the spot, had heeded such methods, led to a bitter public debate in the 1890s, involving survivors of the search for Franklin. Not only is it a particularly strange and absorbing story, but there also emerges evidence that Lady Franklin's papers may have been deliberately censored in order to preserve her credibility.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2001

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Coppin, W. 1851 a. Letterto Sophia Cracroft, 8 03 1851. Cambridge: SPRI MS 248/106: 215216.Google Scholar
Coppin, W. 1851b. Letter to Sophia Cracroft, 23 03 1851. Cambridge: SPRI MS 248/106: 255.Google Scholar
Cracroft, S. 18491857. Statements on the Franklin search. SPRI MS 248/267.Google Scholar
Cracroft, S. 1851. Letter to William Coppin, 6 03 1851. Cambridge: SPRI MS 248/106: 177180.Google Scholar
Franklin, J. 1851. Letterbook and notes on the Franklin search, 17 01–27 03 1851. Copies in Jane Franklin's and Sophia Cracroft's hands. Cambridge: SPRI MS 248/106.Google Scholar
Franklin, J. 1851b. Journal entry, Monday, 27 01 1851. Cambridge: SPRI MS 248/106: 7375.Google Scholar
Holland, C. 1982. Manuscripts in the Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge, England: a catalogue. New York and London: Garland Publishing.Google Scholar
Malley, A., and McLaughlin, M.. 1992. Captain William Coppin, ‘Neptune's brightest star’. Derry: Foyle Civic Trust.Google Scholar
Skewes, J.H. 1869. A complete and popular digest of the polity of Methodism, each subject alphabetically arranged. London: Elliot Stock.Google Scholar
Skewes, J.H. 1889. Sir John Franklin: the true secret of the discovery of his fate. A ‘revelation’. London: Bemrose &Sons.Google Scholar
Skewes, J.H. 1890. Sir John Franklin: the true secret of the discovery of his fate. A ‘revelation’. Second edition. London: Bemrose & Sons.Google Scholar
Snow, W.P. 1851. Voyage of the Prince Albert in search of Sir John Franklin; a narrative of every-day life in the Arctic seas. London: Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans.Google Scholar
Stone, I.R. 1987. ‘The contents of the kettles’: Charles Dickens, John Rae and cannibalism on the 1845 Franklin expedition. The Dickensian 84 (411): 716.Google Scholar
Stone, I.R. 1993a. An episode in the Franklin search: the Prince Albert expedition, 1850. Part 1. Polar Record 29 (169): 127142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone, I.R. 1993b. An episode in the Franklin search: the Prince Albert expedition, 1850. Part 2. Polar Record 29 (170): 197208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodward, F.J. 1951. Portrait of Jane, a life of Lady Franklin. London: Hodder & Stoughton.Google Scholar