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Overview"In the second half of the nineteenth century, an epic race was underway in some of the most brutal stretches on the planet. Explorers from around the world hoped to stake their claim on the Arctic, with the North Pole being the ultimate prize. Those with the greatest success found that the fastest way to travel was on four legs-using a team of hardworking sledge dogs. Harnessed to the Polefollows the adventures of eight American explorers and their dog teams, starting with Elisha Kent Kane and ending with Robert Peary, controversial claimant of the title of first to reach the North Pole. While history has long forgotten these ""little camels of the north,"" Sheila Nickerson reveals how critical dogs were to the Arctic conquest. Besides providing transportation in extreme conditions, sledge dogs protected against wolves and polar bears, helped in hunting, found their way through storms, and provided warmth in extreme cold. They also faced rough handling, starvation, and the possibility of being left behind as expeditions plunged ahead.Harnessed to the Poleis an extraordinary-and unflinching-look at the dogs that raced to the top of the world." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sheila NickersonPublisher: University of Alaska Press Imprint: University of Alaska Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.510kg ISBN: 9781602232235ISBN 10: 1602232237 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 15 May 2014 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of Contents1. Jules Verne 2. Sir John Franklin 3. What Was the Greenland Dog? 4. Sledge or Sled? 5. Toodla and Whitey 6. Henry Bergh 7. Oosisoak and Arkadik 8. Disease and Diet 9. Dogs and Driver: The Essential Team 10. Seeking Companionship: When Dogs Were Not Available 11. Barbekark 12. Dogs as Showmen 13. Wolf, Smarty, Bear, Shoemaker, Tiger 14. Tommy the Cat and the Lemmings 15. Bear, Spike, and the Nameless Prisoners 16. Toekelegeto, Ublubliaq, Miqijuk 17. The Importance of Naming 18. Kasmatka, Snoozer, Bingo, Snuffy, Tom, Jack, Wolf 19. The Polar Bear 20. Gypsy, Old Sneak, Ritenbenk, Disco King 21. The Nameless 22. Heart-hungers 23. Nalegaksoah 24. Commemoration Chapter Notes Bibliography IndexReviewsThe next time I see the words: Inuit Dogs have played an important role in Arctic exploration, Sheila Nickerson s book, Harnessed to the Pole; Sledge Dogs in Service to American Explorers of the Arctic, 1853-1909, will haunt me. For letting it go at just those ten words is a trivialization, a glossing over of what actually happened to those hundreds upon hundreds of dogs during their use. . . . Fascinating details of polar history with a very strong focus on the dogs, Harnessed to the Pole is not for the faint of heart, but is a book that needed to be written. --Sue Hamilton The Fan Hitch A must-read. . . . Utilizing new sources and original research, Nickerson provides the magnificent dogs the recognition they deserve. She portrays them as the most rugged, tenacious and significant polar travelers. Without the dogs, these explorations would have been impossible. -- Naval Historical Foundation As the old adage goes, every dog has its day. In Shelia Nickerson's book Harnessed to the Pole not only do polar dogs get their day, they also star prominently in their own chapters. . . .Told in an engaging manner, supported with lots of sources and notes and illustrations, Nickerson accomplishers her goal of bringing to light the plight, duty, heroism, tragedy, daily life, loyalty and importance of naming these animals referred to as 'camels of the north.' -- Polar Times Nickerson has written two books in one--a beautiful paean to sledge dogs and gutsy narrative describing the accomplishments, hardships, and human treatment of the 'Sherpas of the Arctic.' -- Alaska History Nickerson again proves herself an enchanting storyteller. She covers an era when American attention shifted from finding the Franklin Expedition to Arctic discoveries and attaining the North Pole. The accounts of hardship and survival are fascinating, and those of disaster are spellbinding. Readers unfamiliar with Arctic history will be mesmerized by the death march of De Long's men into Siberia. Even more astonishing is the narrative of the crew members of the Polaris who were marooned the entire winter of 1872-73 on an ice floe. Miraculously, all survived. Even those familiar with these tales will be gripped anew by Nickerson's retelling. In the end, however, this book belongs to the dogs, which Nickerson calls 'the Sherpas of the Arctic . . . a team pulling a sledge overladen with hope and ego, each dog named and known to its driver, each a distinct personality, all hauling toward an uncertain and often fatal destination.' Theirs is a story worth learning. -- Alaska Dispatch Harnessed to the Pole serves as a significant contribution to the recently developed field of human-animal relations. Although the book might be of particular interest to (Arctic) historians and ethnologists as a primary audience, it is also an enjoyable and approachable book for everyone interested in the topic. In Harnessed to the Pole, Nickerson's call to recognize the contributions of sledge dogs in Arctic explorations culminates in an eloquent, at times emotional, new perspective on American Arctic explorations in the late 19th century. -- The Arctic Journal The next time I see the words: 'Inuit Dogs have played an important role in Arctic exploration, ' Sheila Nickerson's book, Harnessed to the Pole; Sledge Dogs in Service to American Explorers of the Arctic, 1853-1909, will haunt me. For letting it go at just those ten words is a trivialization, a glossing over of what actually happened to those hundreds upon hundreds of dogs during their use. . . . Fascinating details of polar history with a very strong focus on the dogs, Harnessed to the Pole is not for the faint of heart, but is a book that needed to be written. --Sue Hamilton The Fan Hitch The next time I see the words: 'Inuit Dogs have played an important role in Arctic exploration, ' Sheila Nickerson's book, Harnessed to the Pole; Sledge Dogs in Service to American Explorers of the Arctic, 1853-1909 , will haunt me. For letting it go at just those ten words is a trivialization, a glossing over of what actually happened to those hundreds upon hundreds of dogs during their use. . . . Fascinating details of polar history with a very strong focus on the dogs, Harnessed to the Pole is not for the faint of heart, but is a book that needed to be written. --Sue Hamilton The Fan Hitch The next time I see the words: 'Inuit Dogs have played an important role in Arctic exploration, ' Sheila Nickerson's book, Harnessed to the Pole; Sledge Dogs in Service to American Explorers of the Arctic, 1853-1909, will haunt me. For letting it go at just those ten words is a trivialization, a glossing over of what actually happened to those hundreds upon hundreds of dogs during their use. . . . Fascinating details of polar history with a very strong focus on the dogs, Harnessed to the Pole is not for the faint of heart, but is a book that needed to be written. --Sue Hamilton The Fan Hitch Author InformationSheila Nickerson is a poet and author, most recently of Disappearance: A Map: A Meditation on Death and Loss in the High Latitudes and Midnight to the North: The Untold Story of the Inuit Woman Who Saved the Polaris Expedition. A former resident of Alaska, she now lives in Bellingham, WA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |