Frederick Cook
Frederick Albert Cook (1865 - 1940) was an American explorer, physician and ethnographer, who is most known for allegedly being the first to reach the North Pole on April 21, 1908. A competing claim was made a year later by Robert Peary, though both men's accounts have since been fiercely disputed; in December 1909, after reviewing Cook's limited records, a commission of the University of Copenhagen ruled his claim unproven. Nonetheless, in 1911, Cook published a memoir of the expedition in which he maintained the veracity of his assertions. In addition, he also claimed to have been the first person to reach the summit of Denali (then known as Mount McKinley), the highest mountain in North America, a claim which has since been similarly discredited. Though he may not have achieved either Denali or the North Pole, his was the first and only expedition where a United States national discovered an Arctic island, Meighen Island. …more
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Books with Frederick Cook
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True North: Peary, Cook, and the Race to the Pole
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2005
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The Explorer and the Journalist: The Extraordinary Story of Frederick Cook and Philip Gibbs
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2023
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Through the First Antarctic Night, 1898-1899: A Narrative of the Voyage of the "Belgica" Among Newly Discovered Lands and Over an Unknown Sea about the South Pole
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1900
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The Noose of Laurels
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published
1989
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My Attainment of the Pole
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published
2000
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Arctic Hero - The Incredible Life of Matthew Henson
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2008
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Erchie, My Droll Friend
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published
1904
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Hero in Disgrace: The Life of Arctic Explorer Frederick A. Cook
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1991
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