George Francis Lyon

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George Francis Lyon (1795–1832) was a rare combination of Arctic and African explorer. By all accounts a fun loving extrovert, he also managed to be a competent British Naval Officer, Commander, explorer, artist and socialite. While not having a particularly distinguished career, he is remembered for the entertaining journals he kept and for the watercolour paintings he completed in the Arctic.

Career

Sadlermiut (?) Inuit of Southampton Island offer gifts to the crew of Capt. Lyon's HMS Griper on 27 August 1824[1]

1818: He was, in 1818, sent with Joseph Ritchie by Sir John Barrow to find the course of the Niger River and the location of Timbuktu. The expedition was underfunded, lacked support and because the ideas of John Barrow departed from Tripoli and thus had to cross the Sahara as part of their journey[clarification needed]. A year later, due to much officialdom they had only got as far as Murzuk where they both fell ill. Ritchie never recovered and died there, but Lyon survived and travelled a little further around the region. Exactly a year to the day he left, he arrived back in Tripoli, the expedition being a complete failure.

1821: Having been promised a promotion on his return, he now set about trying to pester the Admiralty into fulfilling their promise. He irritated enough people that his reward was, in 1821, to be given the command of HMS Hecla under William Edward Parry on his second attempt at the Northwest Passage. The lieutenants included Francis Crozier, James Clark Ross, and Henry Parkyns Hoppner.[2] Lyon received his promotion to Captain on his return.

1824: In 1824 he was given command of the HMS Griper, a ship that had proved itself a poor Arctic vessel on William Edward Parry's 1819 expedition. His goal was to sail to Hudson Bay and then north through Roes Welcome Sound to Repulse Bay and then go overland through unknown country to reach John Franklin's furthest east at Point Turnagain on the Kent Peninsula. (The Inuit had told Parry that there was salt water 3 days walk to the west, but this was apparently the Gulf of Boothia[3]). Hudson Bay was unusually ice-filled and on 1 September 1824 near Cape Fullerton just west of the entrance to Roes Welcome Sound a storm drove the ship onto a rock or iceberg. All hands expected the ship to sink but when the gale died down it was still afloat. On 12 September the Griper was forced to anchor offshore in a gale with heavy seas and snow. It lost its anchor cables and the masts and rigging were badly damaged. Lyon took three weeks to work the hulk out of Hudson Bay. Arriving at Spithead without anchors the ship only stopped when it fouled a three-decker's mooring cables.

While he was well known in society, this last failure effectively saw him blacklisted in the Royal Navy and he never had another command. He was elected in November 1827 a Fellow of the Royal Society [4] He died on 8 October 1832,[5] en route from South America to Britain to be treated for eye problems.

An aspect of his personality rare at the time was his genuine interest in the "Natives" of the countries he visited. Wearing Arab/Muslim dress and learning fluent Arabic he managed to blend in with the inhabitants of North Africa; he was tattooed by the Inuit in the Arctic, using needle and sooty thread, and ate raw caribou and seal meat with them. The expedition achieved little, spending two years in the Arctic and getting only as far the Fury and Hecla Strait before being stopped by ice. But the information recorded about the Inuit tribes that he met proved valuable to later generations of anthropologists, such as Franz Boas and Knud Rasmussen, who relied on his journals as a reference point for their own observations.[6]

Personal life

He was the elder son of Lieutenant–Colonel George Lyon of the 11th Light Dragoons and Louisa Alexandrina Hart. She was in turn the second daughter of Sir William Neville Hart and Elizabeth Aspinwall.[7]

He married Lucy Louisa, younger daughter of the Irish revolutionary Lord Edward Fitzgerald,[8][9] on 5 September 1825.[10] They had a daughter, Lucy Pamela Sophia Lyon, born in September 1826.[11] Lucy Louisa Lyon died that same month, while her husband was away in Mexico. He did not find out about her death until he landed at Holyhead, having survived the wreck of the ship bringing him home.[10]

His daughter went on to marry Rev. Thomas Ovens in 1849, had three children, and died in 1904.[11]

Publications

He published at least three books about his adventures:

Legacy

Notes

  1. Inuit man (possibly Sadlermiut) paddling an inflated walrus-skin boat (Northwest Territories) - image description
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Anthony Brandt,"The Man Who Ate His Boots", Chapter 11
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Melville Henry Massue. The Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal Being A Complete Table of All the Descendants Now Living of Edward III, King of England. London, England: T.C. & E. C. Jack, 1905-1911. Page 475.
  6. Boas, Franz (1888). "The Central Eskimo". Annual reports (Bureau of American Ethnology)
  7. Oxford Journals: Notes and Queries: Sir William Neville Hart and his Descendants; Frederick Copland-Griffiths; 10 S. X. 3 October. 1908 pp. 263 and 264
  8. Tillyard, Stella. (1998) Citizen Lord: The Life of Edward Fitzgerald, Irish Revolutionary Farrar Straus & Giroux: New York
  9. Partington, Charles F. (1836) The British Cyclopædia of Biography, vol II p. 278 Wm. S. Orr & Comp.: London [1]
  10. 10.0 10.1 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Lyon, George Francis (1795–1832), naval officer and Arctic explorer), by Elizabeth Baigent
  11. 11.0 11.1 Marquis of Ruvigny and Raineval, Melville Henry Massue. The Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal Being A Complete Table of All the Descendants Now Living of Edward III, King of England. London, England: T.C. & E. C. Jack, 1905-1911. Page 475

External links