Fifty Years Below Zero: A Lifetime of Adventure in the Far North

Fifty Years Below Zero: A Lifetime of Adventure in the Far North

by Charles D. Brower
Fifty Years Below Zero: A Lifetime of Adventure in the Far North

Fifty Years Below Zero: A Lifetime of Adventure in the Far North

by Charles D. Brower

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Overview

Brower had left San Francisco with the intention of making a short dash north on a whaling ship bound for the mythic Arctic Circle. Adventure had a way of following Charlie Brower. His initial landing turned into a fifty-year long ice-bound lifestyle. Once he stepped off the whaler and back onto dry, albeit frozen land, Brower took a job as master of the whaling station. But, though commerce brought him north, it was the people that helped keep him there for Charlie soon became fast friends with the native Inuit people. They taught him how to hunt seals on the ice, caribou on the tundra, and whales out on the sea. He learned their secrets, lived in their igloos, navigated in their kayaks and avoided being murdered in their feuds. Plus the young adventurer observed the great dramas of the Far North play out. He saw the last of the sailing ships disappear over the horizon, and watched the first airplane fly in. For fifty-seven years, through ice storms and northern lights, Charlie Brower maintained both this lonely outpost and his claim as “Uncle Sam’s most northerly citizen.”

A book to remember, “Fifty Years Below Zero” is richly illustrated throughout with photos by the author.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781787204737
Publisher: Papamoa Press
Publication date: 06/28/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 336
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

CHARLES DEWITT BROWER (March 6, 1863 - February 14, 1945) was a whaler, trader, and postmaster in Barrow, Alaska. Known as the “King of the Arctic,” he became one of the few white men to settle in Barrow, Alaska.

Born in New York City to Robert DeWolfe Brower and Maria Garrison Craft, at the age of twenty he was invited to join a small party to investigate coal mining possibilities near Cape Lisburne, Alaska, on the Arctic Ocean. Attracted by the lure of wide horizons and far places, he accepted the invitation.

Beginning with his first voyage in 1884 aboard the good ship “Beda,” he arrived in the Arctic in 1885 and became an important citizen of the north, studying the ways of the natives and their natural environment.

He opened his own whaling operation, the Cape Smythe Whaling and Trading Company, at Barrow, Alaska and quickly established himself as one of the most successful non-native whalers in Barrow.

In 1884 he married an Eskimo girl name Mary Tocktok Herschell, and together they had six children. Following her death in 1902, Brower married his second wife, Mary Boones (Asiangatak), in 1904. They went on to have 12 children.

Except for occasional visits “outside,” Brower remained within the Arctic Circle for the rest of his life, living and working at Point Barrow, Alaska, where he died in 1945 at the age of 81.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Preface to the 1994 Edition
     Terrence Cole
Introduction
     Vilhjalmur Stefansson
Prolog
Chapters I-LV
Epilogue
Index

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