Harrison J. Hunt

Harrison J. Hunt (1878โ€“1967) was surgeon on the Crocker Land expedition to the Arctic in 1913โ€“1917, and the first to return to civilization with news of his fellow explorers, who had been trapped in the ice for four years. Hunt escaped after a grueling four-month dog-sled journey accompanied by six Inuit.[1] He wrote about the experience in the book North to the Horizon: Arctic Doctor and Hunter, 1913โ€“1917.

Harrison J. Hunt

Born in Bangor, Maine, Hunt was a graduate of Bowdoin College and the Bowdoin Medical College. He spent his post-Arctic career working at the Eastern Maine Hospital in Bangor, and was appointed Medical Examiner of Penobscot County, Maine, in 1925.[2]

Hunt is credited with finding the major biological specimens returned by the Crocker expedition, the eggs of the red knot, which established its migration pattern between Europe and northern Greenland.[1]

References

  1. New York Times, June 21, 1917, p. 6; Pittsburgh Press, Sept. 23, 1917
  2. Journal of the American Medical Association, v. 86 (1926)
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