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{{Identified_Infobox|name=John Gregory|missing_from=England|disappeared=1846|discovered=1859|identified=c. April 2021|span=c. 162 years|cod=Exposure|title1=John Gregory|sex={{M}}|age=c. 43 - 47|location=Erebus Bay, Nunavut}}
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{{Identified_Infobox|name=John Gregory|missing_from=England|disappeared=1846|discovered=1859|identified=c. April 2021|span=c. 162 years|cod={{Exp}}|title1=John Gregory|sex={{M}}|age=c. 43 - 47|location=Erebus Bay, Nunavut}}
   
 
'''John Gregory''' was a 19th century engineer who perished in John Franklin's voyage to explore the Arctic.
 
'''John Gregory''' was a 19th century engineer who perished in John Franklin's voyage to explore the Arctic.

Revision as of 18:41, 13 May 2021


John Gregory was a 19th century engineer who perished in John Franklin's voyage to explore the Arctic.

Case

Gregory was an engineer onboard HMS Erebus, one of the two ships used for Sir John Franklin's expedition to map the last unnavigated part of the Northwest Passage in the Canadian Arctic. His ship, along with HMS Terror, departed England on May 19, 1845. Gregory's last contact with his family is a letter to his wife and five Hannah and their five children sent from Greenland on July 9, 1845. The letter stated: “Give my kind Love to Edward, Fanny, James, William, and kiss baby for me — and accept the same yourself.”

The expedition became icebound in Victoria Strait near King William Island in 1846. Sir John Franklin and several other crew members died by April 1848. Survivors attempted to reach Canada. Gregory’s remains, along with those of two other men, were found on the southwest shore of King William Island in 1859, about 50 miles south of the site where the ships became stuck. Their deaths are estimated to have occurred within a month of leaving the ship.

Gregory was identified in 2021 after DNA extracted from his teeth and bones was matched to his great-great-great grandson Jonathan Gregory of Port Elizabeth, South Africa.

Sources