Who Discovered the North Pole?
A century ago, explorer Robert Peary earned fame for discovering the North Pole, but did Frederick Cook get there first?
- By Bruce Henderson
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2009, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 7)
Two days later, at Battle Harbour, farther down the Labrador coast, Peary sent the Times a 200-word summary and added: "Don't let Cook story worry you. Have him nailed." The next day, the Times ran his abbreviated account.
Arriving in Nova Scotia on September 21, Peary left the Roosevelt to take a train to Maine. At one stop en route, he met with Thomas Hubbard and Herbert Bridgman, officers of the Peary Arctic Club, a group of wealthy businessmen who financed Peary's expeditions in exchange for having his discoveries named for them on maps. The three men began to shape a strategy to undermine Cook's claim to the pole.
When they reached Bar Harbor, Maine, Hubbard had a statement for the press on Peary's behalf: "Concerning Dr. Cook...let him submit his records and data to some competent authority, and let that authority draw its own conclusions from the notes and records....What proof Commander Peary has that Dr. Cook was not at the pole may be submitted later."
The same day that Peary arrived in Nova Scotia, September 21, Cook arrived in New York to the cheers of hundreds of thousands of people lining the streets. He issued a statement that began, "I have come from the Pole." The next day he met with some 40 reporters for two hours at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel. Asked if he objected to showing his polar diary, Cook "showed freely" a notebook of 176 pages, each filled with "fifty or sixty lines of penciled writing in the most minute characters," according to accounts in two Philadelphia papers, the Evening Bulletin and the Public Ledger. Asked how he fixed his position at the pole, Cook said by measuring the sun's altitude in the sky. Would he produce his sextant? Cook said his instruments and records were en route to New York and that arrangements had been made for experts to verify their accuracy.
Four days later, he received a wire from Harry Whitney. "Peary would allow nothing belonging to you on board," it read. "...See you soon. Explain all."
Cook would later write that he was seized by "heartsickness" as he realized the implications of Whitney's message. Still, he kept giving interviews about his trek, providing details on his final dash to the pole and his year-long struggle to survive the return journey. Peary had told an Associated Press reporter in Battle Harbour that he would wait for Cook to "issue a complete authorized version of his journey" before making his own details public. Peary's strategy of withholding information gave him the advantage of seeing what Cook had by way of polar descriptions before offering his own.
In the short term, however, Cook's fuller accounts helped him. With the two battling claims for the pole, newspapers polled their readers on which explorer they favored. Pittsburgh Press readers supported Cook, 73,238 to 2,814. Watertown (N.Y.) Times readers favored Cook by a ratio of three to one. The Toledo Blade counted 550 votes for Cook, 10 for Peary. But as September turned to October, Peary's campaign against Cook picked up momentum.
First, the Peary Arctic Club questioned Cook's claim to have scaled Mount McKinley in 1906. For years a blacksmith named Edward Barrill, who had accompanied Cook on the climb, had been telling friends, neighbors and reporters about their historic ascent. But the Peary Arctic Club released an affidavit signed by Barrill and notarized on October 4 saying the pair had never made it all the way to the top. The document was published in the New York Globe—which was owned by Peary Arctic Club president Thomas Hubbard, who declared that the McKinley affair cast doubt on Cook's polar claim.
On October 24, the New York Herald reported that before the affidavit was signed, Barrill had met with Peary's representatives to discuss financial compensation for calling Cook a liar. The paper quoted Barrill's business partner, C. C. Bridgeford, as saying Barrill had told him, "This means from $5,000 to $10,000 to me." (Later, Cook's McKinley claim would be challenged by others and in more detail. Now, many members of the mountaineering community dismiss the notion that he reached the summit.)
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Related topics: Explorers Theories and Discovery Early 20th Century Arctic Ocean
Additional Sources
"Did Peary Reach the Pole?" by Wally Herbert, National Geographic, September 1988.
The Big Nail: The Story of the Cook Peary Feud by Theon Wright, John Day, 1970









Comments (35)
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"From Indian Harbour, Labrador"????? Peary sent the message from Battle Harbour, Labrador, a village on an island an hour from Mary's Harbour on the mainland. I've been there. I've been in the room where he held his press conference. I've seen the pictures of him holding that press conference with the New York Times. The pictures match the room in its present condition perfectly. Battle Harbour was the perfect location because it was a communication center, despite being in an obscure part of the planet. What's this about "Indian Harbour"? BTW, Battle Harbour is a wonderful place to visit.
Posted by Richard Warnke on June 29,2012 | 09:24 PM
Did Robert have 1 wife and 1 Eskimo lady friend.was there 1 chi ld by his wife? and another by his Lady Friend.????
Posted by on June 7,2012 | 09:01 PM
boring and too long
Posted by on May 16,2012 | 10:45 AM
matthew henson was a tag along servant and nothing more. He didnt imagine what or know what explore meant. There is conclusive evidence that Cook made it in the 1890's. The second exploration involved Pearson and four inuits and henson as the servant.
Posted by mike smith on April 10,2012 | 06:00 PM
Neither Cook nor Peary reached the North Pole. Proving that Cook did not reach the North Pole is not the absolute prove then that Peary had to of reached the North Pole. Peary was certain by this time as to what was likely at the Noth Pole and falsified his notes. How could a person lower himself to do so? Peary had to of known this was his last attempt and that the documentation was needed.
Posted by Fred on December 4,2011 | 09:45 PM
In response to the question: "Why is this about which white man gets the glory?" - it's not: it's about which TEAM got there first. If Cook's claim is true, then Peary's Team did NOT make it first. But I believe Peary's Team beat Cook's. Therefore, Peary, Henson, Ootah, Egingwah, Ooqueah, and Seegloo ALL deserve the glory.
Posted by John on November 7,2011 | 05:12 PM
I think neither of them were the first. There is often a person who dosnt do things "officially" or repots it to "world records" who are the first. But Cook seems like the first in this particular race. Nice article
Posted by Jay on September 24,2011 | 03:36 AM
Why is this about which white man gets the glory? As trail breaker on the Peary team, Matthew Henson was the first person to set foot on the North Pole. In an interview for the Boston American newspaper, Matthew Henson described how Peary didn‘t seem aware that they had reached the top: “Because of his crippled feet, {Peary} had ridden on the sledges the greater part of the journey. Riding, one cannot so well judge of distance traversed. He made no observation in the five days, merely knew we had 132 miles to go and he supposed that we could nearly make it in the five days of marching”…”Well, Mr. Peary” I spoke up, cheerfully enough, “We are now at the Pole, are we not?” “I do not suppose that we can swear we are exactly at the Pole” was his evasive answer. “Well, I have kept track of the distance and we have made exceptional time, I replied.”
Matthew Henson was not just a servant or assistant to Peary. According to Donald MacMillan, a member of the successful expedition and of several others, Robert Peary was totally dependent on Henson. “He never would have reached the Pole without Henson, MacMillan wrote.
“Matt was of more real value than the combined services of all of us. With years of experience, an expert dog driver, a master mechanic, physically strong, most popular with the Eskimos, talking the language like a native, clean, full of grit, he went to the Pole because Peary couldn’t get along without him”.
Henson claimed that Peary stopped speaking to him after reaching the top-only expressing fury when Henson went on a lecture tour. Though he kept his film and illustrations, Henson also said that Peary took his other records and never returned them. Matthew Henson was honored by Congress and Presidents Truman and Eisenhower as co-discoverer of the North Pole. So, why doesn't the Smithsonian put aside the matter of Peary versus Cook and focus instead on the man who was really first to set foot on the North Pole: Matthew Henson?
Posted by ASHEY on September 20,2011 | 08:56 PM
i think that being that Peary's wife came along and had journals with all sorts of Information to prove their whereabouts. Isay Peary had the upperhand and back ground of many years of experience to prove He was there before all.
Posted by Sonia on March 31,2011 | 03:17 PM
Why is this about which white man gets the glory? As trail breaker on the Peary team, Matthew Henson was the first person to set foot on the North Pole. In an interview for the Boston American newspaper, Matthew Henson described how Peary didn‘t seem aware that they had reached the top: “Because of his crippled feet, {Peary} had ridden on the sledges the greater part of the journey. Riding, one cannot so well judge of distance traversed. He made no observation in the five days, merely knew we had 132 miles to go and he supposed that we could nearly make it in the five days of marching”…”Well, Mr. Peary” I spoke up, cheerfully enough, “We are now at the Pole, are we not?” “I do not suppose that we can swear we are exactly at the Pole” was his evasive answer. “Well, I have kept track of the distance and we have made exceptional time, I replied.”
Matthew Henson was not just a servant or assistant to Peary. According to Donald MacMillan, a member of the successful expedition and of several others, Robert Peary was totally dependent on Henson. “He never would have reached the Pole without Henson, MacMillan wrote. “Matt was of more real value than the combined services of all of us. With years of experience, an expert dog driver, a master mechanic, physically strong, most popular with the Eskimos, talking the language like a native, clean, full of grit, he went to the Pole because Peary couldn’t get along without him”.
Henson claimed that Peary stopped speaking to him after reaching the top-only expressing fury when Henson went on a lecture tour. Though he kept his film and illustrations, Henson also said that Peary took his other records and never returned them. Matthew Henson was honored by Congress and Presidents Truman and Eisenhower as co-discoverer of the North Pole. So, why doesn't the Smithsonian put aside the matter of Peary versus Cook and focus instead on the man who was really first to set foot on the North Pole: Matthew Henson?
Posted by sandra m on January 4,2011 | 03:19 PM
Cook is the man.
Posted by Cheryl Petersen on December 28,2010 | 05:25 PM
i want the summary of the discover of the north pole
Posted by micheal on July 22,2010 | 06:02 AM
dident scott discover the north pole
Posted by Austin Johnson on April 29,2010 | 08:17 AM
what is all this talk about cook and peary, discovering the north pole, the true man that discover the north pole was captain robert bartlett, yes a canadian, or rather a newfoundlander. here is a great book for you to read. bartlett the great explorer
Posted by Keith on March 24,2010 | 01:16 PM
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