chunk_id
stringlengths 3
9
| chunk
stringlengths 1
100
|
---|---|
44_54
|
some locations, it provided almost the only reading material around.
|
44_55
|
Stuck traveled each winter more than 1500–2000 miles by dogsled to visit the missions and villages.
|
44_56
|
In 1908, he acquired the launch called The Pelican, a shallow riverboat. He used it on the Yukon
|
44_57
|
River and tributaries to visit the Athabascans in their summer camps, where they fished and hunted.
|
44_58
|
He reported that in twelve seasons' cruises, ranging from i,800 to 5,200 miles each summer, he
|
44_59
|
traveled a total of up to 30,000 miles along the rivers.
|
44_60
|
Stuck wrote and published five books, memoirs of his times in Alaska, in part to reveal the
|
44_61
|
exploitation of the Alaska Native peoples that he witnessed in his work. Two of Stuck's books were
|
44_62
|
edited by Maxwell Perkins, the legendary Scribner's editor who also edited Ernest Hemingway, F.
|
44_63
|
Scott Fitzgerald, and Thomas Wolfe.
|
44_64
|
Stuck had experience mountain climbing, including having ascended Mount Rainier in Washington
|
44_65
|
state.
|
44_66
|
Ascent of Denali
|
44_67
|
Stuck recruited Harry Karstens, a respected guide, to join his expedition. Other members were
|
44_68
|
Walter Harper and Robert G. Tatum, both 21, and two student volunteers from the mission school,
|
44_69
|
John Fredson and Esaias George. They departed from Nenana on March 17, 1913. They reached the
|
44_70
|
summit of Denali on June 7, 1913. Harper, of mixed Alaska Native and Scots descent, reached the
|
44_71
|
summit first. Fredson, then 14, acted as their base camp manager, hunting caribou and Dall sheep to
|
44_72
|
keep them supplied with food.
|
44_73
|
The party made atmospheric measurements at the peak of the mountain for purposes of determining its
|
44_74
|
elevation. At the summit, their aneroid barometer read 13.175 inches, their boiling-point
|
44_75
|
thermometer read 174.9 degrees, their mercurial barometer read 13.617 inches. The alcohol minimum
|
44_76
|
recording thermometer read 7 °F. These measurements, with others taken at Fort Gibbon and Valdez,
|
44_77
|
were reduced by C. E. Griffin, Topographic Engineer of the United States Geological Survey, to
|
44_78
|
produce an elevation for Denali of 20,384 feet. The precise figure measured by the United States
|
44_79
|
Geological Survey in 2015 is 20,310 feet.
|
44_80
|
They also erected a six-foot high cross at the summit.
|
44_81
|
When the party returned to base camp, Stuck sent a messenger to Fairbanks to announce their success
|
44_82
|
in reaching the peak of the mountain. His achievement was announced on June 21, 1913, by The New
|
44_83
|
York Times and carried nationally.
|
44_84
|
Stuck was scheduled to go to New York City in October for a General Convention of the Episcopal
|
44_85
|
Church. This gave him another opportunity to talk about the ascent. He was awarded the Back Award
|
44_86
|
of the Royal Geographical Society in 1919.
|
44_87
|
Later life
|
44_88
|
Several of the mission churches established by the Episcopal Church in remote areas of the Interior
|
44_89
|
during the early 20th century have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
|
44_90
|
Stuck continued to urge Alaska Native youths in their education, helping arrange scholarships and
|
44_91
|
sponsors for education in the Lower 48. For instance, John Fredson was the first Alaska Native to
|
44_92
|
finish high school and graduate from college. Sponsored by Stuck and the Episcopal Church, he went
|
44_93
|
to the University of the South in Tennessee. After returning to Alaska, he developed as a Gwich'in
|
44_94
|
leader. In 1941 he gained federal recognition of the Venetie Indian Reserve to protect his people's
|
44_95
|
traditional territory. Walter Harper was accepted at medical school in Philadelphia, but died en
|
44_96
|
route when his ship sank off the coast of Alaska.
|
44_97
|
Stuck worked as a priest in Alaska for the rest of his life, serving both Alaska Natives and
|
44_98
|
American settlers. Like many other missionaries, he never married. He died of pneumonia in Fort
|
44_99
|
Yukon. By his request, he was buried in the native cemetery there.
|
44_100
|
Legacy and honors
|
44_101
|
A memorial service was conducted at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City in his
|
44_102
|
honor.
|
44_103
|
Stuck and the naturalist John Muir are honored with a feast day on April 22 of the liturgical
|
44_104
|
calendar of the US Episcopal Church.
|
44_105
|
Books
Voyages on the Yukon and its Tributaries. 1917.
|
44_106
|
A Winter Circuit of Our Arctic Coast. 1920.
|
44_107
|
See also
Harriet Bedell, Episcopal missionary in Alaska, also honored on liturgical calendar
|
44_108
|
References
|
44_109
|
Further reading
|
44_110
|
David Dean, Breaking Trail: Hudson Stuck of Texas and Alaska (Athens: Ohio University Press, 1988).
|
44_111
|
External links
|
44_112
|
Hudson Stuck, Ten Thousand Miles with a Dog Sled, 1914, Internet Archive
|
44_113
|
Hudson Stuck, Ten Thousand Miles with a Dog Sled, 1916, Project Gutenberg
|
44_114
|
Hudson Stuck, Voyages on the Yukon and its Tributaries, 1917 (available through google books and
|
44_115
|
hathitrust.org)
|
44_116
|
Hudson Stuck, The Ascent of Denali (Mount McKinley), 1918, Project Gutenberg
|
44_117
|
Hudson Stuck, Baccaulaureate Sermon Given at Columbia University, 1916 (available through google
|
44_118
|
books)
|
44_119
|
David M. Dean, "Hudson Stuck biography – Texas State Historical Association
|
44_120
|
1865 births
1920 deaths
Alumni of King's College London
American mountain climbers
Anglican saints
|
44_121
|
Deaths from pneumonia in Alaska
Denali
People from Fort Yukon, Alaska
|
44_122
|
People of the Alaska Territory
Sewanee: The University of the South alumni
|
45_0
|
Top Ground Gear Force is a one-off TV special, featuring the cast of BBC's Top Gear, which
|
45_1
|
originally aired on BBC Two at 22:00 GMT on 14 March 2008 as part of Sport Relief 2008. It was
|
45_2
|
repeated on Easter Monday, 2008.
|
45_3
|
It borrowed its format from Top Gear of the Pops, a similar one-off special which aired as part of
|
45_4
|
Comic Relief 2007. Whereas Top Gear of The Pops combined Top Gear with Top of the Pops, this
|
45_5
|
episode combines the motoring show with Ground Force, a gardening makeover show which ran on the
|
45_6
|
BBC from 1998 to 2005.
|
45_7
|
Regular Top Gear hosts Jeremy Clarkson, James May and Richard Hammond take over sportsman Steve
|
45_8
|
Redgrave's garden, to dispense advice on creating a zero maintenance lawn, installing an impressive
|
45_9
|
water feature and getting rid of unwanted plants. Naturally, disaster ensues. Top Ground Gear
|
45_10
|
Force was then included as a page in the 2009 Big Book of Top Gear, giving advice to garden
|
45_11
|
problems including concreting the garden over, petrol bombs and flash fires.
|
45_12
|
Title screen
|
45_13
|
Like Top Gear of the Pops, the title screen and music is changed to suit the programme. Instead of
|
45_14
|
having cars in the background, images of gardening were shown instead. The images bore a strong
|
45_15
|
resemblance to the Top Gear title screen (e.g. dirt coming out of a spinning pot, similar to a car
|
45_16
|
wheel spinning and kicking up water from the ground) Hammond was seen pushing a spade into the
|
45_17
|
ground, and then holding it over his shoulder. May was seen holding a wheelbarrow, and breaking a
|
45_18
|
gnome in half (in replacement of him pushing a button on a remote control in the Top Gear title
|
45_19
|
screen). Clarkson was seen with a pair of open hedge trimmers, which he then snaps shut.
|
45_20
|
Ending credits
|
45_21
|
The Top Gear ending credits are also adapted to suit the programme's resemblance to Ground Force –
|
45_22
|
the presenters' names were listed as Alan Clarkson, Handy Hammond and Charlie May (references to
|
45_23
|
Ground Force presenters Alan Titchmarsh, Tommy Walsh and Charlie Dimmock respectively). The rest of
|
45_24
|
the crew were all listed as having the first name "Monty". This 'mocking' was also used in special
|
45_25
|
editions such as the Top Gear Polar Special, in which the presenters' first names were changed to
|
45_26
|
'Sir Ranulph', as a reference to Sir Ranulph Fiennes.
|
45_27
|
Title irregularities
|
45_28
|
The title Top Ground Gear Force appears during the opening credits and is spoken by the hosts
|
45_29
|
throughout the show. However, the insulated jackets worn by the three hosts are silkscreened with
|
45_30
|
"TGGGF" on the front chest and "Top Garden Ground Gear Force" on the rear. Other equipment, such as
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.