The Peary expedition to Greenland of 1891–1892 was where Robert Edwin Peary, Sr. set out to determine if Greenland was an island, or was a peninsula of the North Pole.[1]
History
Peary sailed from Brooklyn, New York on June 6, 1891 aboard the Script error: The function "ship_prefix_templates" does not exist..[1] Aboard was Josephine Diebitsch Peary, making her the first female on an arctic expedition.[1]
An expedition to find Peary was organized by the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences in 1892.[1]
↑"Peary Greenland Expeditions, 1891-1892". Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences. http://www.ansp.org/library/archives/coll_100-199/coll0145.xml. Retrieved 2011-11-01. "Dr. Frederick Cook, surgeon and ethnologist, John M. Verhoeff, mineralogist and meteorologist, Langdon Gibson, ornithologist, M. Henson, Eivind Astrup and Mrs. Peary. Angelo Heilprin, curator of the Academy, the second in command, was accompanied by Professors Benjamin Sharp and J. F. Holt, both zoologists, William E. Hughes, ornithologist, Dr. Robert N. Keely, Jr., surgeon, Levi W. Mengel, entomologist, Alexander C. Kenealy, correspondent of the New York Herald, Frazer Ashhurst and W. H. Burk"