The most stellar member of a stellar family, Elisha Kent Kane was among the most popular American explorers of the mid-nineteenth century, a hero in the tragic mode. Born in Philadelphia in 1820, the son of John Kintzing Kane and Jane Duval Leiper, Kane studied medicine at the University of Pennsylvania before earning a commission as a naval surgeon. While in the Navy, Kane embarked on the succession of voyages to exotic locales that became the basis for his extraordinary fame. In 1843, he attended Caleb Cushing's first diplomatic mission to China as ship's physician, and subsequently traveled to the Philippines and Western Africa. Distinguishing himself in the Mexican War, Kane's greatest fame came from two expeditions to the arctic, aiming to locate the lost explorer, Sir John Franklin and to explore for evidence of the open polar sea. Kane died in 1857 while attempting to organize a third arctic voyage.
Part of the Kane Family Collection, the Papers of Elisha Kent Kane contain a mix of personal and family correspondence with correspondence relating to all of Kane's explorations. Intelligent, articulate and very much a romantic, Kane's letters are expressive and passionate. The collection provides fine documentation of youth, his relationship with the Spiritualist Margaret Fox, and of course his travels to China and off the coast of Africa in 1846. Kane's two expeditions to the arctic are particularly well documented, with correspondence, notes, logbooks, diaries, and sketches, as well as Kane's post-expedition notes, writings, and lectures recounting his experiences.
Whether because of -- or in spite of -- a debilitating childhood bout with rheumatic fever that left him with a delicate constitution, Elisha Kent Kane went on to live an adventurous life and "die in the harness," as his father had wished. Each of the half-dozen brilliant forays that he made into the exotic seems to have been terminated by accident or illness, but from these experiences, Kane carefully built a public image for himself as America's great tragic hero of exploration.
Elisha Kent Kane was born in Philadelphia on February 3, 1820, the son of the jurist and Democratic politician John Kintzing Kane and his wife Jane Duval Leiper. Already prominent in Philadelphia and Washington, the Kane family became more so with Elisha's celebrity as an Arctic explorer and his brother, Thomas Leiper Kane's, as a general in the Union army and advocate for the Mormons.
Upon first entering college at the University of Virginia, Elisha intended to study geology and civil engineering, but on the advice of family friends, he transferred to the University of Pennsylvania to take up medicine, graduating in 1842. With receipt of his degree, however, his concerned family members believed that a medical practice might be too rigorous for the frail young man, and they sought to discourage him from the profession. But unbeknownst to Elisha, his father arranged a surgeon's commission in the navy, and upon graduation, Elisha was directed to report to the Philadelphia Navy Yard to be examined for assignment. Despite his medical history, Kane passed the examination and received his commission in the following year.
In his first assignment, Kane joined the diplomat Caleb Cushing on the first American diplomatic mission to China in May 1843. The voyage to the Far East was the first of many adventures for Kane, which included a daring descent into a Philippine volcano, apparently inciting controversy among locals. At the completion of trade negotiations in June 1844, Kane resigned from the Cushing Commission and elected to remain in China for six months, operating a hospital boat with a young English surgeon. Although the venture was successful financially, Kane contracted cholera and was forced to abandon his practice and return home. By the time that he reached Philadelphia in the summer of 1845, he had logged thousands of miles and visited five continents.
Despite his stated intentions of settling down and opening a medical practice in the city, Kane soon enlisted for another tour of duty at sea, this time taking a cruise to Africa aboard the frigate United States. It has been suggested that Kane's precipitous decision to ship out had less to do with a thirst for adventure than it did a taste of scandal. Shortly after his return to Philadelphia Kane had begun spending time with a young woman named Julia Reed, and several months later, he was scurrying to conceal her pregnancy. While historian and Kane biographer George W. Corner acknowledged that there was some correspondence to support the basis for the scandal, he nevertheless maintained that an out of wedlock pregnancy "did not fit" Kane's gentlemanly character. Regardless of the circumstances, however, sail away Kane did in May 1846, leaving behind a despondent family and two heartbroken cousins, Mary Leiper and Helen Patterson. Although Kane did not appear to enjoy his African sojourn, it afforded him the opportunity to study the slave trade at first hand, a topic of great interest to the Kane family, and especially to his abolitionist brother Thomas and to his father.
Just as in China, however, illness cut short Kane's cruise, and he returned home weak, emaciated, and depressed, and just as in China, he was not held back for long. Even before he had recovered from his bout of "coast fever," he traveled to Washington to petition for a transfer into the army in order to fight in the Mexican War. The prospects of escape and adventure and of military glory were always supremely attractive to Kane, but after contracting yet another debilitating illness, he gave up hope of active duty. Failing in his attempt to sign on as physician to Girard College, he renewed his push for a transfer, and when President James Polk decided he needed a messenger to relay information to General Winfield Scott, Kane was offered the assignment.
En route to Mexico, Kane wrote to his father to assure him that the "Philadelphia Kane family is represented in the war," and he challenged him to use this "representation" to further advance the Kane family. Ultimately, Kane's stint in the army did bring credit to his family's name. Wounded in a battle with Mexican forces, Kane distinguished himself by saving the life of Mexican General Antonio Gaona, and in return, Gaona and his family nursed Kane back to health in their luxurious compound after the illness-prone Philadelphian had fallen ill with "congestive typhus fever." Declared unfit for further duty, Kane was sent home to a hero's welcome.
After a slow convalescence over the summer, Kane unsuccessfully applied for a position at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, and then for an assignment aboard the store ship Supply, scheduled to sail for Lisbon, the Mediterranean, and Rio de Janeiro. Reminiscent in many ways of Kane's African trip, the Supply cruise was uneventful apart from the brutal floggings meted out frequently on the backs of the unruly crew that Kane, as ship's surgeon, was obligated to attend. In September 1849, Kane left his assignment aboard the Supply, and signed on aboard the surveying steamer Walker, bound for Mobile Bay on coastguard service.
While the experience aboard the Supply deepened Kane's aversion to shipboard brutality, he found his coastguard duty irredeemably dull. Kane yearned for adventure, and early in the following year, the perfect opportunity presented itself: a rescue expedition was forming to search for the lost explorer Sir John Franklin, who had last been seen on July 22, 1845 en route to locate a Northwest Passage to the Pacific Ocean.
On May 22, 1850, Kane set sail aboard the brig Advance, one of two ships supplied for the expedition by the whaling magnate Henry Grinnell. The U.S. Navy crew under the command of Lieutenant Edwin De Haven, was charged with searching for Franklin in Baffin Bay, but he was ordered thereafter to proceed northward in search of the still undiscovered Northwest Passage. There were ten other rescue ships in the Arctic that summer. Between August 25th and 27th, the crews of Captain John Penny and De Haven landed on the shores of Cape Riley where they discovered evidence of an encampment, presumably Franklin's, and additional evidence was discovered on Beechey Island, ten miles further up Wellington Channel. Since Franklin had left no indication of the direction in which he was headed, the captains agreed to split up and continue their search over a wider area, with De Haven heading north up Wellington Channel.
In early September, the Advance passed Cornwallis Island and began heading further north before it was stopped altogether by a howling storm. Scrubbing the mission, De Haven elected to try to return home, but as ice formed around the ships and locked them into a floe, they found themselves trapped, and pushed steadily northward. Even when the floe broke up temporarily, the ship was freed only long enough to become frozen into another icepack headed south. By October 1st, Kane and his shipmates realized that they faced a winter in the Arctic.
In the dark and bitterly cold winter, De Haven and many in the crew became desperately ill with scurvy, leaving their health and survival in Dr. Kane's hands. Ordering them to exercise, even on the coldest days, and increasing their rations, Kane is credited with saving their lives. After having been pushed out of Wellington Channel, eastward through Lancaster Sound, and southward down Baffin Bay, the ship was finally freed of the ice on June 5, 1851, and was able to make its way to Greenland's Disco Island to replenish stores for another season of exploration.
From Upernavik, the expedition set sail again in early July and soon after hit solid ice. By mid-August, the frustrated De Haven abandoned the mission and headed for New York before facing another arctic winter. Although they had failed to locate Franklin or the Northwest Passage, when Kane returned home, he was once again received as a hero.
Making the most of the acclaim, Kane spent the next year traveling and lecturing on his Arctic adventures to capacity crowds. His celebrity grew enormously as a result of his colorful lectures, and carefully edited accounts of his Arctic adventures filled the newspapers. Perhaps most famously, he worked tirelessly to promote his theory that Franklin had drifted into a warm-water Open Polar Sea that he was sure circled the pole. Using the attention resulting from his book, The U. S. Grinnell Expedition in Search of Sir John Franklin, Kane raised funds for a second expedition, taking the largest share from the magnanimous Henry Grinnell, who agreed to once again offered use of the Advance. It appeared as though Kane would have every opportunity to test his theory.
The fall of 1852 was marked by two significant events: the tragic death of fourteen year-old Willie Kane and the introduction of Elisha Kent Kane to Margaret Fox, one the best known Spiritualist mediums in America. Willie's death devastated the entire family, so much so that they abandoned their mansion on the outskirts of Philadelphia and moved back into the city, unable to bear living in Willie's house any longer. Elisha, who had kept watch at Willie's bedside for several weeks, was particularly affected. There has been some speculation that Kane's grief led him to seek out the comfort of Spiritualist communication with the dead; however, there is no evidence that Kane ever actually discussed Willie with Maggie Fox. Nevertheless, after several visits to the hotel where Fox held seances, Kane's spirits improved, and as he labored to finish his book and to complete organization for his expedition, he continued to pay regular visits.
Although their relationship started out casually, Kane began to make demands on Fox. Initially unconcerned over the propriety of her "calling," he soon began to urge her to give it up, and at the same time, he began to insist that she become more ladylike, proposing that she allow him to send her to school. For her part, Fox seemed uncertain whether she would comply or resist, but as their relationship grew more intense, the demands became more important. At one point, Kane broke off the relationship, recognizing that one of them would have to give up their "cause," something that neither was willing to do.
Fox must have had a change of heart, because a few months later she wrote to Kane expressing dissatisfaction with her "very tiresome life" and asking his advice. His immediate reply encouraged her to "stick to your good resolutions" and reaffirmed his commitment to helping her escape a life which, according to Kane, was "worse than tedious, it is sinful." Maggie's mother finally agreed to allow Kane to arrange for Maggie's education, and the Turner family of rural Crookville, Pennsylvania, was engaged to provide board for Maggie while she attended school nearby. Kane also made arrangements with Cornelius Grinnell to pay her board and take care of other incidental expenses. The young couple agreed that if Kane was sufficiently satisfied with Fox's reeducation when he returned from the Arctic, they would be married, but until then they could not become engaged. On May 27, 1853, Fox moved into the Turner's home in Crookville, and four days later Kane departed for the Arctic.
From the beginning, Kane was concerned that news of his relationship with Fox could harm his reputation while he was away, so he enlisted the help of Cornelius Grinnell and younger brother Robert Patterson Kane to help safeguard Elisha's reputation. Patterson and Grinnell were to act as couriers for correspondence between Fox and Kane and they were instructed to quell any rumors that arose. Kane left his correspondence regarding his role in Maggie's education with his brother in order to leave a paper trail indicating that he was nothing more than a generous benefactor of the young woman.
There were other matters to worry about as well -- Kane's health, as usual, among them. In April 1853, just one month prior to sailing, Kane was stricken with rheumatic fever, but even after being confined to bed for three weeks, unsure whether he might die, he decided that he would make a go of the expedition. Such an unpromising beginning was a sign of things to come. The usual bouts of seasickness and an inexperienced crew added to the concerns, but it was only when the expedition reached the Arctic that the real troubles began.
Already concerned that he might be trumped in the discovery of the Open Polar Sea, Kane grew frantic upon receiving a letters from Lady Jane Franklin informing him that Capt. Edward Inglefield was setting out in one of England's best steam-powered ships to follow the rescue path that Kane had pursued in 1850-1851. Although Inglefield had only been sent to the Arctic to deliver supplies to five ships on Beechey Island, Lady Franklin's letter led Kane to adopt a more aggressive course than he had originally planned, crossing directly through Mellville Bay. Although this route stood to save time, it would expose the ship to treacherous icebergs which blocked the entrances to Smith and Lancaster Sounds, and Kane recognized that by taking this course he would also risk being frozen into an ice floe for the winter. He decided to take the chance.
Ominously, while crossing Mellville Bay, the Advance suffered a head-on collision with an iceberg that destroyed the jig-boom and one of the lifeboats, yet the ship still made remarkable time. By early August, with the entrance to Smith Sound in sight, the Advance stopped at Littleton Island to leave provisions and a lifeboat for future emergencies before pushing northward, and it was there that their troubles really began. Facing lashing storms and ice-clogged waters, Kane ultimately had to order his men to strap themselves into harnesses and pull the ship north. By late August, the Advance had traveled further north than any previous expedition (by the American route), but Kane demanded they push still further. But when the crew protested -- and more importantly, when it was ascertained that no further progress could be made due to heavy ice -- Kane agreed that they should stay put and wait for spring. While the American public waited and worried, Kane and his crew settled in for the winter.
The crew prepared for winter by building supply houses on shore, a wooden cover for the ship's deck, and a kennel for the dogs. Repeated attempts to rid themselves of the ship's rat population were somewhat successful but the methods caused a few anxious moments. The first attempt using noxious fumes nearly killed the cook, and the second, asphyxiation by carbon monoxide, set the deck on fire and caused Kane and another crewmember to lose consciousness while battling the blaze.
By mid-October, when the sun disappeared, all activity ground to a halt, and Kane and his crew were confined below deck to ride out a harsh winter ridden with scurvy and sensory deprivation, and more than a few flares of temper and fist fights. By February, with the sun barely visible, Kane wasted no time in returning to the mission, selecting eight members of the crew to attempt to reach Humboldt glacier and beyond. Ignoring the bitter cold and the protests of the experienced crew members that it was still too early to proceed, he sent his squad northward in mid-March.
The attempt was short-lived. Within a week of their departure, three of the men stumbled back to ship with news that the others were ill and freezing. Kane immediately led a party to rescue the men, an excursion that took fifty hours in temperatures that fell at times to fifty below zero. At the same time, the crew spied several Inuit hunters from Etah, a small village just 70 miles to the south, and invited them on board, where they sat down to a meal of raw walrus that the Inuit had brought with them. With the help of Carl Christian Peterson, a Danish crew member fluent in Inuktitut, Kane was able to communicate with the Inuit, enlisting their help for the upcoming winter.
As spring approached, Kane began to implement his plan to head north in search of the Open Polar Sea. First, he intended to send six of his men by foot to Humboldt Glacier, with him and another crewmember following on a sledge with provisions. They would then cross the channel to the American side and search for openings to the Open Polar Sea. As May -- and warmer weather -- approached, Kane realized that if he was to make a move, it would have to be before rising temperatures melted the ice. Yet once again, nothing went quite right. Heavy snowdrifts and the effects of scurvy and snowblindness stalled the expedition, and the crew discovered that all the food they had cached during the previous fall had been eaten by polar bears. Eventually, though, a small party from Kane's crew made it to Humboldt Glacier and crossed the still-frozen "Kane Basin." Despite battling snow blindness, they managed to travel over two hundred miles in all. Within a week of the first group's return to the ship, Kane sent out a second party of six men to travel beyond Humboldt Glacier to see if they could verify the existence of an opening to the Open Polar Sea.
On June 5, the men set off for Humboldt Glacier, two of whom continued northward after the others attempted to ascend the glacier and failed. Kane feared the worst for the two, but on July 3rd, they returned with the news that Kane had longed to hear: they had discovered the Open Polar Sea. They described how Kane Basin narrowed into a channel, and as they pressed further north, they noticed thinning ice and swarms of birds, including an open water species, the Arctic Petrel. They climbed a cape and from a 480 foot height, they saw nothing but open water. Kane was elated: having attained their goal, it looked as if he and his crew could finally focus on going home. There were only two small problems: the basin was frozen solid, completely blocking the way and the ship itself was completely iced in. It appeared that the Advance might face yet another Arctic winter.
Any hopes that the warm temperatures and strong winds might break up the floe were dashed when Kane discovered that new ice was already beginning to form and that the escape route was narrowing further. As August drew to a close, Kane accepted that the ship was trapped, but several members of the crew began to plan their escape. Feeling that he could not, in good conscience, force them to stay, Kane announced on August 23rd that if any men wished to strike out on their own, he would not stop them. Only five elected to stay: the others he made sign documents attesting that they were deserting and that Kane was no longer responsible for them. To his credit, Kane suppressed his anger long enough to bid the departing men good luck and to assure them that should they decide to return, they would be welcomed.
Kane and the remaining crew prepared for another Arctic winter, fortified with a year's experience and some valuable lessons in survival learned from the Inuit. Their first task was to insulate the ship to make it as "igloo-like" as possible. Although the darkness was oppressive, the relative comfort of the ship as well as the mutual hunting agreement with the people of Etah promised to make the winter months much more bearable. In early December, two deserters returned to the Advance and the others arrived shortly thereafter, having never made it to Upernavik. Kane suppressed his resentment and welcomed them as promised, even though sheltering the extra men proved to be a big challenge -- one of several as it turned out.
The cramped living space and strain on food stores increased tensions among the men, and illness, falling temperatures, and diminishing fuel supplies added to the misery. Tempers flared along with illness and insubordination. Kane kept discipline by calling offenders up on deck individually and bashing them "in the side of the head with a heavy metal belaying pin." This, it seemed, was an effective if temporary method.
The food shortage was the most critical issue, and Kane's hopes of leaning on the generosity of the Inuit were dashed when it was discovered that the residents of Etah were starving, too. Kane arranged to combine efforts with the Inuit in hunting, and together they managed to kill a walrus, saving both groups from starvation. Discipline, however, remained an issue. Two crewmembers, William Godfrey and John Blake, were discovered to be planning to steal a sledge bound for Etah. Although the men were caught in time and were beaten with a "leaden fist," Godfrey managed to escape on foot. Still weak from disease and hunger, the crew suffered for two weeks before the would-be thief returned with the sledge filled with meat. Godfrey refused to board the ship even when Kane brandished a rifle and shot at him, but instead ran off. Although Kane was furious, the meat helped restore the crew's health and spirits. Godfrey later claimed that he had not deserted a second time because he had never entered into an agreement with Kane upon his return from the first secession.
As spring approached, the crew's health and morale slowly improved and preparations began for the journey home. Although Kane was disappointed that he had been unable to see the Open Polar Sea for himself, he did manage to see Humboldt Glacier. On May 20, 1855, he and his crew began pulling their whale boats (their ship having been dismantled for fuel) over the ice to open water. By mid-June they were in Etah, and after waiting out a short spell of severe weather, they bid their Inuit friends farewell and set off for Upernavik.
In a punishing journey that left one crewmember dead, the small boats were pitched about violently in the ice-filled waters, and several times the men had to take cover from to heavy winds and ice. Solid ice at the base of Cape York led Kane to move out into Melville Bay instead of staying close to shore and waiting for the ice to move. By early August, however, Kane and his crew reached Upernavik, and from there they passed to Godhavn and on September 11th, met up with an American ship sent to their rescue.
When Kane arrived in New York on October 11th, 1854, he was once again accorded a hero's welcome. Advised by his family to handle his reception with humility and gratitude, he thanked the nation for their interest and concern, and much to his relief, no one on the crew sought to contradict his account of his crew's camaraderie and unity, or his own strong leadership. As it turned out, his greatest challenge lay within his own family: they were still very much opposed to his relationship with Maggie Fox.
Maggie had moved to Philadelphia in late September 1854 in anticipation of Kane's arrival, and two days later, the two were together at Clinton Place. The long-awaited reunion, however, was not the romantic encounter anticipated. Instead, Maggie found Kane to be distracted and agitated. Bowing to family pressure to cut off the relationship, he pleaded with Maggie to sign a note stating that their relationship was purely platonic. She refused. He returned a few days later with a reporter in tow, requesting that she affirm that they had never been engaged. Again, Maggie refused.
Rumors of Kane's engagement began to circulate widely, and even his departure for Washington, D.C., to give an official account of the expedition did nothing to quash them. To the family's dismay, a small newspaper in upstate New York reported the engagement, and soon major newspapers across the country were reprinting the story. Using its influence, the Kane family forced retraction of the story, but when Kane failed to refute the retraction, Maggie ended the relationship.
Nevertheless, he and Maggie continued to correspond. Kane clearly agonized over his decision but he and his family had built his public image very carefully and were not about to let a fling with a Spiritualist undo their hard work. Maggie, who had to preserve her own reputation, felt she had little choice either. Marriage, one possible solution, would preserve Maggie's reputation, but diminish the Kane family's standing -- something he was unwilling or unable to do until he was financially solvent. In the meantime, Maggie, her sister Kate, and their mother moved to 22nd Street in New York.
The Navy had already given Kane permission to publish his account of his Arctic experiences and had paid him for the time it took to write it. It was a generous arrangement, perhaps because the Navy had suffered criticism for not initially supporting Kane's expedition. At any rate, Kane wasted no time in picking a publisher, George W. Childs, who also worked aggressively to promote Kane's image -- so aggressively in fact, that his efforts to goad Congress into purchasing a large number of copies resulted in accusations that Kane was using his family's political connections for personal gain. Some of Child's other efforts fared better, including marketing the book at trade shows and selling it door-to-door, and Kane's public appearances also increased sales. Although the book was well-received and sold well, Kane was miserable. In addition to being unable to marry Maggie Fox, he had another problem: Lady Jane Franklin was determined that he head yet another expedition to rescue her husband.
Lady Franklin was, by all accounts, a determined advocate for her still-missing husband, and although nine years had elapsed since her husband had disappeared, she was effective at ratcheting up public pressure to save him. Kane felt obligated to lead the expedition and in August 1856, he began efforts to secure support. Kane spent the remainder of the fall (as he had the spring and summer) with Fox at her family's New York residence. By this point, her family had come to accept Kane as a sincere suitor, and he was welcome in their home, yet because his own family continued to hold back, he took great pains to conceal the relationship. Only his brother Patterson was kept informed, and perhaps only then because Kane assured him of his discretion.
On October 11, 1856, Kane left for Liverpool, arriving in poor health after a rough crossing. His spirits must have been relatively high, because he entertained thoughts of securing funding for not one, but two expeditions, and he wrote to his parents to ask them to seek support in the United States. It was not to be. On October 29, Kane collapsed and was sent to the suburbs of London to rest. From there he traveled to Cuba to take advantage of the better climate. Kane and his steward, William Morton, left for St. Thomas on November 17, but on the voyage between St. Thomas and Cuba, Kane suffered a stroke.
Kane's brother Thomas was waiting in Havana, and was joined in mid-January by his mother, and his brother John. After a brief rally, Elisha suffered a second, more severe stroke, and on February 16, he died at the age of 37.
Part of the Kane Family Collection, the Elisha Kent Kane Papers is comprised primarily of correspondence written by the naval officer and explorer, Elisha Kent Kane, between 1840 and 1857. In addition to a thorough run of letters documenting his intricate and occasionally scandalous personal life, the collection includes a wealth of material regarding Kane's claim to fame: his expeditions to China, Africa, Mexico, and the Arctic.
An erudite family, the Kanes wrote letters that were warm, beautifully penned and highly descriptive, and from the time of Elisha's departure from home to attend school through his varied missions abroad, they offer intimate glimpses of family life and local news in Philadelphia. Similarly, Elisha's letters home describe a student's life in fine detail, and recount both his adventures in exotic locales and his dreary ship-bound days with equal aplomb. From early in his career, Elisha was very image conscious, and the entire Kane family was deeply involved in creating and preserving his image and reputation. The letters he wrote home were often edited and forwarded to the newspapers for publication.
Perhaps no aspect of Kane's life is better documented in the collection than his participation in the two Grinnell expeditions to the arctic, 1850-1851, and 1853-1854. These include not only correspondence with supporters of the project but also copies of Kane's diary, logbooks, notes, and sketches, along with drafts of some of his later writings. Among these are a full suite of meteorological readings from 1850-1851, interesting descriptions of the "eskimeaux" and their way of life, and drafts of Kane's journal from December 1856, when his deserting crew returned to the Advance.
Kane's tumultuous love life is both well documented and frustratingly sparse. His brief affair with Julia Reed is whispered in a small number of documents, perhaps most clearly in a contract drawn up between unnamed parties for an unmarried woman to surrender her child to be raised by the father. The very public affair with the Spiritualist medium Maggie Fox is discussed in an extensive series of letters and documents, though questions about the nature of the relationship still remain unanswered. Several historians have suggested that Kane initially seemed fascinated by Fox's skills as a spiritualist, but that as the relationship advanced, he implored Fox to give up her "rapping" and to pursue a more honest lifestyle. She eventually agreed to attend school and allowed Kane to place her with a family in Crookville, Pennsylvania. Perhaps Kane felt his family might be more accepting of Fox once she had received an education.
The Fox-Kane correspondence includes letters to and from Maggie Fox, and her sisters Kate and Leah and mother Margaret, asking for Kane's support. In at least some cases, the letters appear to have been gathered together by Robert Patterson Kane, presumably as the family prepared itself to defend Elisha's public reputation.
Other travel-related correspondence includes some fascinating translations of letters from Antonio Gonzalez and a Mr. Ferrer "concerning the treatment of free negroes in Cuba." A long letter from "the house of Gen. Gaona" dated February 10, 1848, to his father describes his host's generosity and hospitality.
The remaining series of the Kane Papers consist of personal financial records (Series II), material collected by George Corner when preparing his biography of Kane (Series III), and graphic materials (Series V).
Arrangement
| Series I. Correspondence | 1810-1953 (bulk: | 5.5 linear feet |
| Series II. Financial Records | 1831-1861 | 0.25 linear feet |
| Series III. George W. Corner, Notes on Elisha Kent Kane | 1854-1973 | 0.25 linear feet |
| Series IV. Bound Volumes | 1835-1860 | 1.5 linear feet |
| Series V. Graphics | ca.1840-1856 | 0.25 linear feet |
Provenance
Gift of Mrs. Joseph C. Aub, Dr. Oliver Cope, Thomas Pym Cope, Mrs. Thomas P. Hazard, Mrs. E. Paul DuPont, 1967-1973 (accn no. 1970-145ms, 1973-1615ms); and purchase.
Preferred citation
Cite as: Elisha Kent Kane Papers, American Philosophical Society.
Processing information
Recatalogued by Anne Harney, 2003.
Separated material
Several items associated with Elisha Kent Kane have been transferred to the APS Curatorial Department for storage.
- Buttons from Elisha Kent Kane's U.S. Naval Attire, early 19th c.Brass
- Pocket Watch, Duchene Brothers and Co., 19th c. Said to have belonged to Elisha Kent Kane
- Medal with Portrait of Elisha Kent Kane, 19th c.
- Ceremonial Sword, Nathan P Ames, Springfield, Mass., ca. 1843, Presented to Kane by the U.S. government
The APS owns an oil portrait of Kane by James Reid Lambdin, after an ambrotype by Mathew Brady, 1857.
Related material
The Elisha Kent Kane Papers are part of the Kane Family Collection (Ms. Coll. 115), which includes materials for John Kintzing Kane, Robert Patterson Kane, Thomas Leiper Kane, and Francis Fisher Kane and Eliza Middleton Kane Cope. Several of these contain material relevant to Elisha Kent Kane.
Bibliography
Corner, George W., Dr. Kane of the Arctic Seas (Philadelphia: Temple Univ., 1972). Call no.: B K132c.
Elder, William, Biography of Elisha Kent Kane (Philadelphia: Childs and Peterson, 1858). Call no.: B K132e.
The Love-Life of Dr. Kane: Containing the Correspondence, and a History of the Acquaintance, Engagement, and Secret Marriage Between Elisha K. Kane and Margaret Fox (New York: Carleton, 1866). Call no.: B K132f.
Sawin, Mark Horst, "Raising Kane: The Creation and Consequences of Fame in Antebellum America" (Dissertation, University of Texas, Austin, 2001).
African American History Note
Among the most popular of American explorers of the mid-nineteenth century, Kane visited Africa in 1846 aboard the frigate United States. The Kane collection contains a variety of fascinating materials relating to the slave trade and plight of African Americans in the nineteenth century.
The papers consist of manuscript materials entitled " Journal of a Trip to Africa," " Slave voyage notebook," and " Whydah slave trade." Also, there are two " Africa: miscellaneous" folders which include an essay on the commercial policy and history of the Gold Coast, along with quantitative data for the years 1820-1843 regarding the repatriation of African Americans to Liberia.
Naval History Note
The diverse Kane Papers include the arctic explorer's correspondence, sketches of arctic and other scenes (there are many sketches scattered throughout the numerous bound volumes), notebooks of polar exploration, journals of trips to North Carolina, the Philippines, Africa, the Near East, Egypt, Mexico, logbooks, etc.
The logbooks are catalogued separately and can be viewed at: Kane Logbooks (Mss.B.K132a).
The Kane papers also include printed materials which may be of interest to naval historians. Printed sources include:
- Great Britain. Admiralty. "By the commissioners for executing the office of Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, etc. ...To Horatio T. Austin, Esq., C.B., captain of Her Majesty's Ship 'Resolute,' in charge of an expedition to the Arctic Sea." 1850. 3 pages.
- Ross, Sir James Clark. "Aston Abbotts House, Aylesbury. 18th February, 1853. Sir, With respect to the number of each party, we have found two officers and six men to be the most convenient." 1853. 2 pages.
- Richardson, Sir John. "From Sir John Richardson, C.B., Medical Inspector, on equipment for Arctic travelling. Haslar Hospital, Feb. 14th, 1853. In pursuance of the commands of My Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, conveyed in your letter of the 12th instant, that I should make such remarks and suggestions, as my experience in Arctic travelling may enable me to do, for the information of Dr. Kane, of the United States Navy, appointed to the command of an expedition." 1853. 3 pages.
- Great Britain. Admiralty. "H. M. S. _____ __th of _____ 18__ Lat. _____ Long._____ _____ Commander...Whoever finds this paper is requested to forward it to the Secretary of the Admiralty, London, with a note of the time and place at which it was found." 18__. 1 page.
- Godfrey, William C. "History of the Grinnell Exploring Expedition to the Arctic Ocean, in search of Sir John Franklin, 1853-4-5. Dr. E. K. Kane, U.S.N., commanding. By William Godfrey, one of the survivors of the expedition." Circa 1857. 1 page.
- Maryland Institute. "Memorial. To the Honorable the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States, in Congress assembled: The undersigned memorialists, members of the Maryland Institute and citizens of Baltimore generally...pray that an expedition of recovery be fitted out...[to search for Sir John Franklin and the lost crews of the Erebus and Terror]." n.d. 1 page.
- Parry, Sir William Edward. "Northbrook House, Bishop's Waltham, Feb. 16th, 1853. Sir, In reply to your letter of the llth Inst. (receive only to day, I hasten to assure you how much pleasure it would afford me to contribute, in any degree, to the efficiency of Dr. Kane's equipment in the arduous enterprize in which he is about to be engaged." 1853. 1 page.
- Meriam, Ebenezer. "The Franklin lifesaving and Arctic exploring expedition. The brilliant effort now making by Henry Grinnell...for the early departure of an expedition which he is fitting out for the Polar Seas, from his own private fortune, for the search and rescue of those who embarked in the exploring expedition which sailed from England under the command of Sir John Franklin, is worthy of every aid and facility which can be extended to so noble and praiseworthy an undertaking." 1850. 2 pages.
- Sabine, Sir Edward. "Woolwich, February 24, 1853. Sir, With reference to the letter which you addressed to me on the 12th of February, in respect to Dr. Kane's Arctic Expedition, I must limit the suggestions...to...'magnetic observations'." 1853. 1 page.
Early American History Note
This large collection contains the papers of Elisha Kent Kane, a prominent Philadelphian who led the U.S. Exploring Expedition. The collection is well-described and inventoried in MOLE.
Corporate Name(s)
- Blockley Hospital (Philadelphia, Pa.)
Genre(s)
- Bills.
- Engravings.
- Family Correspondence
- General Correspondence
- Journals (notebooks)
- Lectures
- Letterbooks
- Logbooks
- Maps.
- Notebooks
- Receipts
- Silhouettes
- Sketches.
- Travel Narratives and Journals
- Watercolors
Geographic Name(s)
- Africa--Description and travel
- Arctic regions--Discovery and exploration
- Asia Minor--Description and travel
- Egypt--Description and travel
- Liberia--Description and travel
- Mexico--Description and travel
- North Carolina--Description and travel
- Philadelphia (Pa.)--Hospitals
- Philadelphia. General Hospital
Personal Name(s)
- Bache, A.D., (Alexander Dallas), 1806-1867
- Baird, Spencer Fullerton, 1823-1887
- Brooks, Henry
- Colt, Samuel, 1814-1862
- Cracroft, Sophia, 1816-1892
- Cushing, Caleb, 1800-1879
- Force, Peter, 1790-1868
- Fox, Margaret, 1833-1893
- Franklin, Jane Griffin, Lady, 1792-1875
- Franklin, John, Sir, 1786-1847
- Greeley , Horace, 1811-1872
- Grinnell, Cornelius
- Grinnell, Henry, 1799-1874
- Harris, Thomas
- Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878
- Kane , John K., (John Kintzing), 1795-1858
- Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857
- Kane, Jane Duval Leiper
- Kane, Robert Patterson, 1827-1906
- Kane, Thomas Leiper, 1822-1883
- Kennedy, John Pendleton, 1795-1870
- Weaver, William H.
Subject(s)
- Abolition, emancipation, freedom
- Africa
- Americans Abroad
- Arctic Indians
- Arctic regions-Pictorial works
- China--Foreign relations--United States
- Colonization, repatriation
- Exploration
- Exploration.
- Explorers--United States
- Geometry--Study and teaching
- Grinnell Expedition, 1st, 1850-1851
- Grinnell Expedition, 2d, 1853-1855
- Hospitals--Pennsylvania
- Indians of North America--Nunavut
- International Travel
- Inuit--Canada
- Inuit--Greenland
- Inuit--Nunavut--Baffin Island
- Marriage and Family Life
- Medicine--Practice--Pennsylvania
- Medicine--Study and teaching--Pennsylvania
- Meteorology--Arctic Regions
- Mineralogy--Study and teaching
- Northwest Passage
- Obstetrics
- Plantations
- Slave trade--Africa
- Slaves, slavery, slave trade
- Social Life and Custom
- United States--Foreign relations--China
- United States. Navy
| Collection overview | |||
| 1810-1953 (bulk: 1843-1857) | 5.5 linear feet | Request Series | |
Personal and public correspondence of Elisha Kent Kane, dating primarily from his college days in the early 1840s through his death in 1857. Touching on all aspects of Kane's personal life (including his scandalous affairs) and his numerous expeditions around the world, the correspondence forms an important resource for examining the public and private construction of one of America's foremost mid-Victorian explorers. | |||
| 1831-1861 | 0.25 linear feet | Request Series | |
Bills, receipts and accounts relating to Elisha Kent Kane's personal finances. The records are arranged chronologically. | |||
| 1854-1973 | 0.25 linear feet | Request Series | |
Notes and miscellaneous materials assembled by George W. Corner while writing his biography of Elisha Kent Kane. The series includes copies of letters and documents relating to Kane and his expeditions held in other libraries, as well as some of Corner's notes and drafts of writings on Kane. | |||
| 1835-1860 | 1.5 linear feet | Request Series | |
A miscellaneous assemblage of bound volumes of notes, ranging from notes Kane kept as a student at the University of Virginia and University of Pennsylvania, to medical records kept at Blockley Hospital and after, and notebooks and a sketchbook relating to both of his arctic expeditions. Of particular interest are notes on Henry Darwin Rogers' class in mineralogy at the University of Pennsylvania, notes on medical courses taught by Samuel Jackson, and two volumes containing Kane's notes on female patients at Blockley, 1840-1841. | |||
| ca.1840-1856 | 0.25 linear feet | Request Series | |
Miscellaneous drawings, sketches, and photographs by and of Elisha Kent Kane, including a number depicting scenes in the arctic. Kane was an incessant doodler and agreeable artist, and the collection includes representative sketches from most of his expeditions. Native American Images note : Over 200 sketches, watercolors, silhouettes, maps, and engravings of Inuits of Baffin Bay drawn by Kane during the first (1850-1851) and second (1853-1855) Grinnell arctic expeditions. Primarily from the first trip, images include portraits in native attire, landscapes, dwellings, hunting tools, kayaks, and encampments. Kane’s log and notebooks are dotted throughout with sketches. Of note in the graphic series, a watercolor of an Inuit boy netting auks. Donated with his papers, Kane’s published works: The United States Grinnell expedition in search of Sir John Franklin (1853) and Arctic explorations: the second expedition…(1857) include engravings of all his original drawings. Referenced in the sketch file, the finding aid contains a detailed inventory. Also, referenced in Murphy Smith’s Historical American Sketches…in the manuscripts collections of the APS. | |||
| Detailed Inventory | |||
Series I. Correspondence | 1810-1953 (bulk: 1843-1857) | 5.5 linear feet | Request Series |
Personal and public correspondence of Elisha Kent Kane, dating primarily from his college days in the early 1840s through his death in 1857. Touching on all aspects of Kane's personal life (including his scandalous affairs) and his numerous expeditions around the world, the correspondence forms an important resource for examining the public and private construction of one of America's foremost mid-Victorian explorers. | |||
Abbott, Henry.
| 1845 | 7 items | Box 1 Request File |
Abbott, W. M..
| 1852-1853 | 3 items | Box 1 Request File |
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia..
| 1851-1853 | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Addison, S. R..
| 1852 | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Admission cards.
| 1839-1842 | 9 items | Box 1 Request File |
Logbook.
| 1850-1851 | 16 folders | Box 1 Request File |
Folder 1 | May -June 1850 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 2 | July 1850 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 3 | August 1850 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 4 | September 1850 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 5 | October 1850 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 6 | November 1850 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 7 | December 1850 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 8 | January 1851 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 9 | February 1851 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 10 | March 1851 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 11 | April 1851 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 12 | May 1851 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 13 | June 1851 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 14 | July 1851 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 15 | August 1851 | Box 1 Request File | |
Folder 16 | September 1851 | Box 1 Request File | |
Agassiz, Louis, 1807-1873.
| 1852 May 8 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Ahrens, C..
| 1852 December 19 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Allderice, John A..
| 1852 February 17 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Allibone, F. Austin.
| 1856 October 8 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Appleton, John.
| 1847 September 11 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Arills (?), Thomas.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Audubon, Vincent G..
| 1852 June 12 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Austen, Capt..
| 1850 September 13 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Ayres, W. O..
| 1853 March 9, n.d. | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Bache, A.D., (Alexander Dallas), 1806-1867.
| 1845-1852 | 10 items | Box 1 Request File |
Bache, Benjamin Franklin, 1769-1798.
| 1847-1849 | 3 items | Box 1 Request File |
Bailey and Co..
| n.d. | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Baird, Spencer Fullerton, 1823-1887.
| 1852-1853 | 6 items | Box 1 Request File |
Bancroft, George, 1800-1891.
| 1846 May 12 | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Barclay, Arthur.
| 1853 | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Baring Bros..
| 1810 November 20 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Barnes, John.
| 1855-1856 | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Baron, D., Jr..
| 1844 | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Barr, James T..
| 1847 November 8 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Barritt, G. W..
| 1853 March 5 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Barrow, John.
| 1853 March 11 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Beaufort, F..
| 1857 March 5, n.d. | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Beck, Morris B..
| 1850 April 29 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Bell, William.
| 1852 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Bellot, J..
| 1852-1853 | 3 items | Box 1 Request File |
Better, T. N..
| 1856 October 31 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Bier, G. H..
| 1849-n.d. | 3 items | Box 1 Request File |
Bigelow, Mr..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Billard, Dr..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Biographical notes.
| n.d. | 21 items | Box 1 Request File |
Blair, T. and W..
| 1852 December 13 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Blanchard, George S..
| 1853 February 9 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Bloodgood, S. DeWitt.
| 1852-1853 | 4 items | Box 1 Request File |
Boker, George H., (George Henry), 1823-1890 .
| 1856 January 14 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Borden, Gail, Jr..
| 1853 | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Borland, Solon.
| 1853 | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Bouring, J. C..
| 1852 March 1 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Bradley, Ravenel.
| 1856 April 11 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Breand, Samuel.
| 1853 January 23 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Brewer, Thomas Mayo.
| 1853 February 18 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Briggs, G. W..
| 1852 October 21 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Brigham, C. H..
| 1852 October 18 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Brooks, Henry.
| 1852-1853 | 7 items | Box 1 Request File |
Brown, Isaac N..
| 1850 | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Browne, Peter A.
| 1852-1853 | 2 items | Box 1 Request File |
Brownlee, Mr..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Butler, G. B..
| 1852 December 29 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Butler, Pierce.
| 1853 March 31 | 1 item | Box 1 Request File |
Cadwalader, John.
| 1849 November 4 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Camba, Andres G..
| 1845 July 17 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Carpenter, W. F..
| 1852 September 27 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Carson, Joseph.
| 1843 April 12 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Carter, R. R..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Caruthers, Horace.
| 1852 December 24 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Cathrall, Charles E..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Chapman, Nathaniel.
| 1843 February 20 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Childs, George W..
| 1856 October 4 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Childs, Thomas.
| 1848 July 28 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Clarke, R. R..
| 1846-1852 | 2 items | Box 2 Request File |
Clippings from Illustrated London News.
| n.d. | 26 items | Box 2 Request File |
Clymer, William B..
| 1852 November 23 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Colson, C. W..
| 1852 | 2 items | Box 2 Request File |
Colt, Samuel, 1814-1862.
| 1852-1853 | 3 item | Box 2 Request File |
Corbit, William T..
| 1853 March 3 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Corner, George Washington, 1889-1981.
| 1953 | 2 items | Box 2 Request File |
Coure, R..
| 1851 January 21 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Cracoft, Sophia.
| 1852-1857 | 15 items | Box 2 Request File |
Crampton, John F..
| 1855 December 8 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Cresson, E. G..
| 1856 January 18 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Cuba: translations of letters regarding treatment of Men of Color | 1841 | 9p. | Box 2 Request File |
Cudworth, Warren H..
| 1920 March 30 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Cummings, A..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Cummings, E..
| 1852 February 4 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Curtis, G. W..
| 1856 October 5 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Cushing, Caleb, 1800-1879.
| 1853 May 7 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Dallas, G. M..
| 1847-1848 | 2 item | Box 2 Request File |
Davidson, Lionel.
| 1848 April 1 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Davis, W. W. H..
| 1858 February 12 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Dawson, John L..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Dayton, A. O..
| 1847-1851 | 7 items | Box 2 Request File |
DeHaven, E. J..
| 1850-1852 | 17 items | Box 2 Request File |
De la Mano, William.
| 1858 February 10 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Delano, J. C..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Delaware Co. Insurance Company.
| 1843 April 18 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Denistown, Wood and Co..
| 1848 May 18 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Dent, Mr..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Dewees, William P..
| 1936 September 22 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
DeWitt, Thomas.
| 1856 October 6 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Dickerson, Mahlon.
| 1848 | 2 items | Box 2 Request File |
Dillard, J..
| 1847 | 4 items | Box 2 Request File |
Dobbin, J. C..
| 1853 | 3 items | Box 2 Request File |
Douglas, S. N..
| 1847 November 5 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Dulany, William.
| 1848 March 19 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Dunglison, Robley, 1798-1869.
| 1856-n.d. | 3 items | Box 2 Request File |
Dunlap, Mr..
| 1849, n.d. | 4 items | Box 2 Request File |
Duval, W. L..
| 1852 December 22 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Eaton, F. B..
| 1852 November 8 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Edwards, D. S..
| 1852 March 31 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Elder, Margaret M..
| 1926 April 21 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Eldridge, Rebecca G..
| 1849 September 19 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Elliot, C. B..
| 1853 February 15 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Elliot, S. A..
| 1848 May 15 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
England, J. W..
| 1855 May 28 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Erwin, E. C..
| 1852-1856 | 2 items | Box 2 Request File |
Kane, J. D. L..
Estate Inventory | n.d. | 3 items | Box 2 Request File |
Etheridge, John.
| 1853 February 26 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Everest, G. W..
| 1846 May 17 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Everett, Col..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Everett, Edward.
| 1852 | 2 items | Box 2 Request File |
Farmers' and Mechanics' Bank in the City of Philadelphia ..
| 1853 February 5 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Fausard, Joshua.
| 1852 January 28 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Fellerer, E..
| 1852 | 2 items | Box 2 Request File |
Fellows, E. R..
| 1852 November 19 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Fields, J..
| 1852 November 16 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Fisher, Joshua Francis, 1807-1873.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Force, Peter, 1790-1868.
| 1852-1856 | 5 items | Box 2 Request File |
Foreman, E..
| 1852 | 4 items | Box 2 Request File |
Foulke, Jean Kane.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Fox, Catherine.
| 1862 October 26 | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Fox, J. L..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Fox, Margaret.
To Mrs. Ellet | n.d. | 2 items | Box 2 Request File |
Fox, Margaret.
To Cornelius Grinnell | 1853-1855 | 3 folders | Box 2 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1853-1854 | 16 items | Box 2 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1855-n.d. | 15 items | Box 2 Request File |
Folder 3 | n.d. | 10 items | Box 2 Request File |
Fox, Margaret.
To Elisha Kent Kane | 1856, n.d. | 11 items | Box 2 Request File |
Fox, Margaret.
To R. P. Kane | 1857-1860 | 2 folders | Box 2 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1857-1858 | 21 items | Box 2 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1859-1860, n.d. | 15 items | Box 2 Request File |
Fox, Margaret.
To Mr. Philips | n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Fox, Margaret.
To William Quinn | 1860 | 3 items | Box 2 Request File |
Fox, Margaret (mother).
| 1856 June 24, n.d. | 2 items | Box 2 Request File |
Fox-Kane Correspondence.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Fox-Kane Correspondence (bundled by R. P. Kane).
| 1853; 1858-1860; 1862 | 3 folders | Box 2 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1853; 1858 | 17 items | Box 2 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1859-1860 | 15 items | Box 2 Request File |
Folder 3 | 1862; n.d. | 24 items | Box 2 Request File |
Fox-Kane Correspondence.
In re publication | n.d. | 1 item | Box 2 Request File |
Fox-Kane Correspondence.
In re schooling | 1853 | 8 items | Box 2 Request File |
Franklin, Jane Griffin, Lady, 1792-1875 .
| 1849-1857 | 2 folders | Box 3 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1849-1852 | 13 items | Box 3 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1853-1857 | 12 items | Box 3 Request File |
Freeland, Benjamin.
1850 | Box 3 Request File | ||
See Vreeland, Benjamin | |||
French, Benjamin.
| 1847 November 23 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Fronti, Gabriel.
| 1849 | 3 items | Box 3 Request File |
Frost, C. C..
| 1852 December 3 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Gaona, Macuin.
| 1848 | 2 items | Box 3 Request File |
Garcia, J. M..
| 1848 May 27 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
George, Joseph.
| 1819-1828 | 7 items | Box 3 Request File |
Ghiselin, J. D., Jr..
| 1849 | 2 items | Box 3 Request File |
Giddings, C. S..
| 1852 October 20 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Gleason, J. T..
| 1852-1853 | 2 items | Box 3 Request File |
Goddard, Charles.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Goodfellow, Henry..
| 1853 May 12 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Governor of Luxor.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Graham, W. A..
| 1852 June 16 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Gray, N. B..
| 1845 April 7 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Greeley , Horace, 1811-1872.
| 1858 | 3 items | Box 3 Request File |
Green, Dr..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Greene, James M..
| 1847-1848 | 3 items | Box 3 Request File |
Gregg, O. O..
| 1853 January 13 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Greig, John.
| 1851-1856 | 3 items | Box 3 Request File |
Grinnell, Cornelius.
| 1851-1857 | 3 folders | Box 3 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1851-1852 | 17 items | Box 3 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1853-1857 | 9 items | Box 3 Request File |
Folder 3 | n.d. | 15 items | Box 3 Request File |
Grinnell, Henry.
| 1851-1857 | 3 folders | Box 3 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1851-1852 | 18 items | Box 3 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1853 | 14 items | Box 3 Request File |
Folder 3 | 1854-1857 | 15 items | Box 3 Request File |
Grinnell, R. M..
| 1854 April 28 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Gunnell, Francis B..
| 1852 | 2 items | Box 3 Request File |
Guthrie, J. B..
| 1847 November 9 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Gutzlaff, Charles.
| 1842 May 24 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Gwin, W. M..
| 1855 February 7 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Hacker, W. P..
| 1852-185- | 2 items | Box 3 Request File |
Haghe, C..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Haines, R..
| 1846 January 20 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Hamilton, James, 1710-1783.
| 1852 October 11 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Harper and Brothers.
| 1853 January 11 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Harris, Samuel G..
| 1852-1853 | 2 items | Box 3 Request File |
Harris, Thomas.
| 1847-1853 | 2 folders | Box 3 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1847-1851 | 15 items | Box 3 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1852-1853, n.d. | 16 items | Box 3 Request File |
Harris, William.
| 1842-1852 | 4 items | Box 3 Request File |
Harrison, T..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Hawkins, Rush C..
| 1853 April 16 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Hawks, Francis L..
| 1853 | 2 items | Box 3 Request File |
Hays, Isaac Israel.
| 1852-n.d. | 3 items | Box 3 Request File |
Hays, Otis.
| 1848-n.d. | 2 items | Box 3 Request File |
Headley, G. T..
| 1856 November 19 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Heiskell, H. L..
| 1847 | 2 items | Box 3 Request File |
Henry, Joseph.
| 1851 | 4 items | Box 3 Request File |
Hilgard, J. E..
| 1852-1853 | 7 items | Box 3 Request File |
Hollins, R. S..
| 1852 January 28 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Horner, G. M. B..
List of materials | 1852 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Hudson, Frederick.
| 1855 October 9 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Hughs, C..
| 1852 January 6 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Humboldt, Alexander von, 1769-1859.
| 1853 March 8 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Humphreys, Bevan.
| 1843 March 21 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Hunter, W..
| 1845 April 26 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Hutchinson, Thomas.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Inglefield, E. A..
| 1855-n.d. | 3 items | Box 3 Request File |
Ingraham, Edward D..
| 1846 | 2 items | Box 3 Request File |
Ingraham, Miss.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
Irving, Washington.
| 1845 | 1 item | Box 3 Request File |
John Godsby and Son.
| 1853 January 24 | 1 item | Box 4 Request File |
Johnson, G. N..
| 1852 February | 2 items | Box 4 Request File |
Johnson, Thomas H..
| 1848 | 4 items | Box 4 Request File |
Jones, Alexander.
| 1852 January 21 | 1 item | Box 4 Request File |
Joyner, L. S..
| 1841 January 21 | 1 item | Box 4 Request File |
Judkins, D..
| 1852 February 11 | 1 item | Box 4 Request File |
Justice, George.
| n.d. | 2 items | Box 4 Request File |
Kane, C. V. L..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 4 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
| 1825-[1847?] | 2 items | Box 4 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Access to the North Pole | n.d. | 17 p., 2 copies | Box 4 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Access to the North Pole | n.d. | 17 p. | Oversize 1 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Africa: miscellaneous | ca.1846 | 2 folders | Box 4 Request File |
Folder 1 | ca.1846 | 9 p. | Box 4 Request File |
Folder 2 | ca.1846 | 26p. | Box 4 Request File |
Includes census information on Africans recaptured and sent to Liberia, information on productions of Liberia, Meterological chart for Monrovia, November 1846, etc. | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Agreement with Thomas Leiper Kane to resign commission | 1842 September 24 | 2p. | Box 4 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Expedition: Bills and Receipts | 1846-1855 | 22 items | Box 4 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Expedition: Diary | 1850-1851 | 27p. | Box 4 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Expedition: Library | n.d. | 1 item | Box 4 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Expedition: Meteorlogical Observations | 1850-1851 | 30p. | Box 4 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Expedition: Meteorlogical Observations | 1853-1854 | 2 p. | Box 4 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Expedition: Meteorological charts | n.d. | 3 p. | Oversize 1 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Expedition: miscellaneous | 1850-1853, n.d. | 22 folders | Box 4 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1850-1851 | Box 4 Request File | |
Folder 2 | 1850-1851 | Box 4 Request File | |
Folder 3 | 1852-1853 | Box 4 Request File | |
Folders 4-22 | n.d. | Box 4 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic expedition proposal | 1852 November 23 | AMs (3 p.) | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Expedition: Return of Deserters | 1856 December | 24 p. | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Expedition: Sick list | 1850-1851 | 2 notebooks | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Expedition: Supplies | n.d. | 6 items | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Expedition: Whalefish Islands, etc. | n.d. | 14 p. | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic expedition proposal | 1852 November 23 | AMs (3 p.) | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic Regions (notes) | n.d. | AMs (12 p.) | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arcticles that were in use of Elisha Kent Kane | n.d. | 1 item | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Bank check | 1844 | 2 items | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Book of estimates, Macao | 1845 | 1 item | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Canceled checks | 1852 | 21 items | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Catalogue of the Library of the U.S.S. United States | 1846 May 9 | 1 item | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Childhood notebook | n.d. | 1 notebook | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
China miscellaneous | 1844-1845 | 3 folders | Box 5 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1844 | 4 items | Box 5 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1844-1845 | Box 5 Request File | |
Folder 3 | 1844-1845 | Box 5 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
China and India (notes) | n.d. | 1 notebook | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
China correspondence | 1844-1845 | 8 items | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Claim for service as Cushing Mission physician | 1844 | 3 items | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Climate (notes) | n.d. | AMs (4 p.) | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Controversy on "Grinnell Land" | n.d. | 1 notebook | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Court martial material | n.d. | 1 item | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Curry recipes | n.d. | 1 item | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Description of his watch | n.d. | 1 item | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Egypt, etc. notebook | n.d. | 1 notebook, 5 p. | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Engineering notes, Charles Bonnycastle lectures, Univ. of Virginia | [ca. 18380] | 1 notebook | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Eskimo song | n.d. | 1 item | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Examinations taken at the African Hospital | 1841 | 1 item | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Experiments on Lt. Morris' power to distinguish color | n.d. | 1 item | Box 5 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Franklin, John. Plan for a rescue mission | n.d. | AMs (18 p.) | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Greenland notebook | n.d. | AMs, 36 p. | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Hawaii | 1843 | 1 item | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Last days and death | 1857 | 14 items | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Lectures | n.d. | Box 6 Request File | |
Lecture I: Arctic Exploration | n.d. | 2 folders | Box 6 Request File |
Lecture II: The probable fate of Sir John Franklin... | n.d. | 3 folders | Box 6 Request File |
Lecture III: Arctic travel | n.d. | 1 folder | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Letters of condolence on Kane's death | 1855-1861 | 12 items | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
List of medicines for J. Dent | 1845 January 20 | 1 item | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Lock of hair | 1822 | 1 item | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
To J. K. Kane (Gift from Eliza Cope Harrison and Robert Normandy Cope) | n.d. | 1 item | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
To Maggie Fox | n.d. | 2 items | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Manila - rough notes | n.d. | 7 items | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Maps, charts, graphs | n.d. | 15 items | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Bolivia and Paraguay | n.d. | 1 map, 21.6 x 22.2 cm | Request Item |
Colored. | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Bon Secour Bay | n.d. | 1 map, 25.4 x 19.7 cm | Request Item |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
British Isles | n.d. | 1 map, 19.7 x 22.9 cm | Request Item |
Colored. | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Map of Baffin's Bay | n.d. | 1 map, 24.1 x 19.7 cm | Request Item |
172.3: 1853-1855: G895exp: Large. Melville Bay and Sylva Mountain Maps | 1853-1855 | 4.0 Item(s) | Map-case Large Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Melville Bay and surrounding area | 1853-1855 | 1 map, 60.4 x 73 cm | Map-case Large Request Item |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Base of Sylva Mountain, observatory and brig | 1853-1855 | 1 map, 44.8 x 63.4 cm | Map-case Large Request Item |
Draft. | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Sylva Mountain, position of brigg and observatory | 1853-1855 | 1 map, 18.3 x 20.8 cm | Map-case Large Request Item |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Unidentified | 1853-1855 | 1 map, 44.8 x 63.4 cm | Map-case Large Request Item |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Mobile Bay, Alabama | n.d. | 1 map, 25.4 x 19.7 cm | Request Item |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Mobile Bay, Alabama | n.d. | 1 map, 25.4 x 19.7 cm | Request Item |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Northernmost penetration of the first Kane expedition | n.d. | 1 map, 32.4 x 50.5 cm | Request Item |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Unidentified maps | n.d. | 6.0 Item(s) | Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Medical notes | n.d. | 2 folders | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Memoranda. Baffin's Bay, Lancaster Sound | 1851-1852 | 1 notebook | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Memorandum of cash advanced on account of copyright | 1855 | 1 item | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Meteorological Journal, North Africa | 1835 | AMs (12 p.) | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Meteorological observations-Sierra Leone, Freetown | n.d. | 13 items | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Mexico | n.d. | 8 items | Box 6 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Miscellany | n.d. | 5 folders | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Notebook | n.d. | 1 notebook | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Passport | 1843 August 13 | 1 item | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Pay voucher | 1848-1852 | AMs (4 p.) | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Pemican | n.d. | 1 item | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Philippines notebooks | [1844] | 7 notebooks | Box 7 Request File |
Notebooks identified as #1, 3-8 | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Philippines notebook | [1844]? | 1 notebook | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Poetry | 1935-n.d. | 3 items | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Power of attorney to J. K. Kane | 1850 May 20 | AMs (1 p.) | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Power of attorney to J. K. Kane | 1850 May 26 | AMs (1 p.) | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Receipt for a Haggis | n.d. | AMs (1 p.) | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Report on discovery of "Grinnell Land" | n.d. | AMs (7 p.) | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Rio de Janeiro | n.d | AMs (4 p.) | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Rough Notes of the Ke-Ying Visit, Macao | 1844 | AMs, 16 p. | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Sketch of ship floor plan | n.d. | 1 drawing | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Sketches | n.d. | 2 folders | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Slave Voyage Notebook | n.d. | 1 notebook, 4 p. | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Spirit thermometers | n.d. | 1 item | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
"Testimonials" and "letters scr. for Dr. E. K. Kane" | 1843 March | 1 item | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Travel notes, miscellaneous | n.d. | AMs (24 p.) | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Whampoa medical affairs | 1844 | AMs (6 p.) | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Will | 1857 | 2 items | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Unidentified correspondent | 1843-1852, n.d. | 5 folders | Box 7 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1843-1852 | 7 items | Box 7 Request File |
Folders 2-5 | n. d. | Box 7 Request File | |
Kane, Elizabeth.
| 1952, n.d. | 4 items | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Family.
| 1850-1853 | 6 items | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Francis Fisher, 1866-1955.
| 1921 December 20 | 1 item | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Jack and Willie.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, James.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 7 Request File |
Kane, Jane D. L..
| 1828-1856, n.d. | 5 folders | Box 7 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1828-1846 | 15 items | Box 7 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1847-1848 | 13 items | Box 7 Request File |
Folder 3 | 1849-1850 | 16 items | Box 7 Request File |
Folder 4 | 1851-1856 | 11 items | Box 7 Request File |
Folder 5 | n.d. | 23 items | Box 7 Request File |
Kane , John K., (John Kintzing), 1795-1858.
| 1841-1857, n.d. | 6 folders | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1841-1846 | 13 items | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1847-1849 | 17 items | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 3 | 1850-1852 | 10 items | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 4 | 1853-1857 | 11 items | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 5 | n.d. | 36 items | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 6 | n.d. | 26 items | Box 8 Request File |
Kane, John Kintzing, Jr..
| 1846-1847 | 5 items | Box 8 Request File |
Kane, M., Jr..
| 1847 November 8 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Kane, Robert Patterson, 1827-1906.
| 1844-1859, n.d. | 3 folders | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1844-1859 | 23 items | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 2 | n.d. | 13 items | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 3 | n.d. | 17 items | Box 8 Request File |
Kane, Robert Patterson, 1827-1906.
Letters to Margaret Fox | 1858-1859 | 8 items | Box 8 Request File |
Kane, Thomas Leiper, 1822-1883.
| 1844-1860 | 5 folders | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1844-1846 | 11 items | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1847-1850 | 11 items | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 3 | 1851-1860 | 13 items | Box 8 Request File |
Folder 4 | n.d. | 24 items | Box 8 Request File |
Correspondence with other Kane family members | n.d. | Box 8 Request File | |
Kane, William L..
| 1844-1849 | 11 items | Box 8 Request File |
Kane Bros. and Co..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Kane Family.
| 1850-1853 | 6 items | Box 8 Request File |
Kearney, John A..
| 1846-1852 | 5 items | Box 8 Request File |
Kelly, P. E..
| 1854 September 27 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Kemp, Mrs. V..
| 1848, n.d. | 2 items | Box 8 Request File |
Kennedy, C. W..
| 1849 December 25 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Kennedy, G. P..
| 1853 March 7 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Kennedy, J. L..
| 1848 March 9 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Kennedy, John P..
| 1852-1854 | 17 items | Box 8 Request File |
Kennedy, William.
| 1852-1853 | 7 items | Box 8 Request File |
Kenrick, Bishop.
| 1843 April 3 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Kilty, A. H..
| 1847 January 7 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Kimball, William H..
| 1846 October 21 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Kobeth, Henry.
| 1845 April 12 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Kopler, Peter C. (Pass).
| 1845 May 26 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Kopman, Sidney.
| 1857-1858 | 6 items | Box 8 Request File |
Kossuth, Louis.
Dinner seating arrangement | n.d. | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Krebs, W. G..
| 1856 October 10 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Krider, John.
Account with gunsmith | 1854 | 2 items | Box 8 Request File |
Lathrop, I. H..
| 1852 November 22 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Leavitt, Joshua.
| 1853 March 26 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Leiper, Elizabeth.
| 1845-1853 | 6 items | Box 8 Request File |
Leiper, Mary T..
| 1843-1852 | 16 items | Box 8 Request File |
Leiper, S. M..
| 1845-1853 | 2 items | Box 8 Request File |
Leiper, Thomas.
| 1855, n.d. | 2 items | Box 8 Request File |
Leiper, William J..
| 1847, n.d. | 3 items | Box 8 Request File |
Lepsius, R..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Lewis, R. F..
| 1853 March 28 | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Lisle, Leo.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 8 Request File |
Litchfield, J. P..
| 1853 February 14 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Loomis, E..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Loring, John W..
| 1852 February 16 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Lossing, Benson J..
| 1852-1856 | 5 items | Box 9 Request File |
Lovell, William L..
| 1853 February 1 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Ludlow, S. W..
| 1853 January 17 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Lumley, J. Saville.
| 1856 | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
Lynch, W. F..
| 1849-1852 | 3 items | Box 9 Request File |
Macalester, Charles.
| 1849-1853 | 3 items | Box 9 Request File |
Macauley, D..
| 1853 January 19 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Manning, George.
| 1854 December 8 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Mason, John Y..
| 1847-1848 | 8 items | Box 9 Request File |
Maupin, S..
| 1852 January 29 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Maury, Mathew F..
| 1852-1856 | 8 items | Box 9 Request File |
Mayer, B..
| 1856 October 9 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Mayo, H. O..
| 1847 January 6, n.d. | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
McAuley, H. W..
| 1839 January 31 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
McBlair, T. P..
| 1853 January 18 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
McBurgonyn, Mr..
| 1853 January 22 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
McCauley, E. G..
| 1847 May 12 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
McClure, Robert.
| 1855 February 19 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
McGill, S. F..
| 1846 | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
McSherry, R..
| 1848-1849 | 6 items | Box 9 Request File |
Meade, Edward.
| 1849 September 9 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Mercantile Library Association (Portland, Maine).
| 1852 October 20 | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
Mercantile Library Association (Portland, Maine).
| 1852 August 2 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Metts, H. C..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Mexico. Ministerio De Guerra Y Marina.
| 1845 March 3 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Miles, P..
| 1853 March 28 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Miles, S. M..
| 1847 December 14, n.d. | 3 items | Box 9 Request File |
Millar, Dr..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Mills, Robert.
| 1852-1853 | 3 items | Box 9 Request File |
Milne, Mr..
| 1852 December 28 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Mitchell, Dr..
| 1850, n.d. | 4 items | Box 9 Request File |
Mitchell, S. Weir, (Silas Weir), 1829-1914.
| 1856, n.d. | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
Morris, N. N..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Morris, Thomas.
| 1848 September 18 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Morton, William.
| 1857 | 5 items | Box 9 Request File |
Moxey, John G..
| 1857 April 11 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Muller, W. A..
| 1849 April 4 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Murchison, Roderick Impey.
| 1856-1857 | 4 items | Box 9 Request File |
Murdaugh, W. H..
| 1852 May 6 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Naval Board of Examiners (U.S.).
| 1842 June 2 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Neal, William.
| 1852 | 4 items | Box 9 Request File |
New York Yacht Club.
| 1852 October 1 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Nickelson, H..
| 1856 August 7 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Norton, C. B..
| 1853 | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
Oakford, John.
| 1841 May 3 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Ohlsen, Christian.
| 1853 February 27 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Ohlsen, Mary.
| 1854-1855 | 5 items | Box 9 Request File |
Osborn, Sherard.
| 1856 | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
Page, T. J..
| 1853 January 2 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Parker, Foxhall Alexander.
| 1846-1852 | 9 items | Box 9 Request File |
Parker, John.
| 1852 February 17 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Parker, P..
| 1844 February 15 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Parker, R. Le Roy.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Parsons, Theophilus.
| 1853 February 8 | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
Patterson, Helen.
| 1846-1847, n.d. | 12 items | Box 9 Request File |
Patterson, J. D..
| 1849 January 26 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Patterson, , Robert M., (Robert Maskell), 1787-1854.
| 1848 March 31 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Paulli, J. H..
| 1856 May | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Peabody [?].
| 1846 December 12 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Peale, Titian Ramsay.
Power of Attorney | 1837 October 30 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Peirce, Edwin.
| n.d. | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
Peirce, Mr..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Pelton, C. M..
| 1852 March 5 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Penny, W..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Percy, James R..
| 1853 February 21 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Perkins and Smith.
| 1852 November 20 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Perot, P..
| 1836 January 5 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Peters, J. C..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Peterson, Emma Bouvier.
| 1856 October 8 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Pettit, Robert.
| 1847 | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
Pettit, T. M..
| 1846 December 17 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Philippine Islands.
Passport | 1844 April 29 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Pierce, Franklin.
| 1853 March | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Pitman, R. C..
| 1852 November 25 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Polk, James K..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Porto Grande.
Sketches | n.d. | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Potts, George.
| 1855 October 19 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Preble, G. H..
| 1853 February 19 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Prentiss, George A..
| 1846-1847 | 5 items | Box 9 Request File |
Prescott, William H..
| 1856 | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
Preston, J. W..
| 1848-1852 | 2 items | Box 9 Request File |
Putnam, James M..
| 1850 May 13 | 1 item | Box 9 Request File |
Quinn, William.
In re Margaret Fox | 1859-1861 | 20 items | Box 9 Request File |
Randall, D..
| 1848 March 2 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Read, G. C..
| 1846 | 9 items | Box 10 Request File |
Reddie, John G..
| 1845 April 11 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Reed, Julia.
Letters in re. | 1846 | 3 items | Box 10 Request File |
Includes letter from J.T.J. (John Taylor, Jr.), Feb 4, 1846; Indenture between "Margaret Jones Smith and John Smith Jones," n.d.; and draft from E. K. K. | |||
Rensselaer, Stephen van.
| 1801-1807 | 2 items | Box 10 Request File |
Resolution to Dr. Kane.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Reynolds, G. W., Jr..
| 1852 October 28 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Reynolds, Mr..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Robbins, T. W..
| 1855 February 3 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Robinson, William.
| 1845-1851 | 2 items | Box 10 Request File |
Rodrigo, Senon.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Roquette, de la.
| 1856 September 8 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain).
| 1856 August 21 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Rufner, S..
| 1851 November 20 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Rupal, S..
| 1851 October 14 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Russell, G. R..
| 1852-1853 | 8 items | Box 10 Request File |
Salem Charitable Mechanic Association.
| 1852 October 25 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Sanderson, James.
| 1804 December 20 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Sargeant, L. P..
| 1852 November 5 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Sartain, John.
| 1852 October 9 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Say, Benjamin.
Indenture | 1833 April 17 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Schott, Charles A..
| Folder 1. 1852 | 15 items | Box 10 Request File |
Schott, Charles A..
| Folder 2. 1953, n.d. | 7 items | Box 10 Request File |
Schweinitz, Bernard de.
| 1853 March 18 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Scott, Winfield.
| 1848 February 13 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Seaman, Mr..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Seaver, Benjamin.
| 1853 February 6 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Selden, Henry.
| 1845-1853 | 2 items | Box 10 Request File |
Shaw, R. G..
| 1853 February 16 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Shields, Bessie Kane.
| 1843 July 4 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Shields, C. W..
| 1856 October 7 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Sickles, D. E..
| 1854 April 11 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Sinclair, Arthur.
| 1849-n.d. | 4 items | Box 10 Request File |
Sinclair, W. M..
| 1850-1852 | 2 items | Box 10 Request File |
Smith, F. M..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Smith, Henry H..
| 1847, n.d. | 2 items | Box 10 Request File |
Smith, John B..
| 1848 May 17 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Smith, J. P..
| 1852-1853 | Box 10 Request File | |
Smith, William P..
| 1851-1856 | 10 items | Box 10 Request File |
Smoot, Joseph R..
| 1846 November | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Smoots, Capt..
| 1846 December 31 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Snider, Jacob, Jr..
| 1845 August 14, n.d. | 2 items | Box 10 Request File |
Sonntag, August.
| 1853 May 13 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Souza, Ant.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Sprague, E. R..
| 1849-1852 | 2 items | Box 10 Request File |
Stalecrath (?), George Henry.
| 1853 March 10 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Stanley, C. H..
| 1853 March 16 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Stevens, William Bacon.
| 1853 March 14 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Stewart, Charles.
| 1847 April 26 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Stewart, George W..
| 1845 April 9 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Stewart, Joseph J..
| 1856 October 10 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Stimpson, William.
| 1853-n.d. | 2 items | Box 10 Request File |
Stone, Henry.
| 1856 October 1 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Streeter, L..
| 1852 October 26 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Strickland, [Nimrod?].
| 1852 January 23 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Sturgis, Russell.
| 1844 June 26 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Sullivan, M. G..
Settlement | 1844 September 1 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Sutton, William.
| 1853 January 22 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Symmes, John C..
| 1851 October 20 | 1 item | Box 10 Request File |
Tagore, Dwarkanoth.
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Tasker, Lyman H..
| 1852-1853 | 5 items | Box 11 Request File |
Taylor, G..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Taylor, John N..
| 1846 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Taylor, Lucy P..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Thomas, Ann G..
| 1845-1847 | 3 items | Box 11 Request File |
Thomas, H. G..
| 1853 February 9 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Thomas, John A..
| 1847-1856 | 4 items | Box 11 Request File |
Thomas, Mary L..
| 1852 August 27 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Thornton, D. M..
| 1852 | 2 items | Box 11 Request File |
Thornton, M. J..
| 1849-1852 | 3 items | Box 11 Request File |
Tillinghast, James.
| 1852-1853 | 3 items | Box 11 Request File |
Torrejon, Anatt..
| 1848 January 3 | 3 items | Box 11 Request File |
Tucker, J. T..
| 1852 October 25 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Tuckerman, J. Francis.
| 1846-1847 | 5 items | Box 11 Request File |
Tufts, Samuel, Jr..
| 1853 March 28 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
U.S. Army Hospital Report.
Jalapa, Mexico | 1847 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
U.S. Navy.
Proceedings of a General Court Marshal | 1846 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
U.S. Secretary of the Navy.
| 1829-1853 | 10 items | Box 11 Request File |
U.S. Secretary of War.
| 1848 November 20 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
U.S. Treasury Dept..
| 1848-1852 | 5 items | Box 11 Request File |
VanWyck, C. C..
| 1846-1847 | 2 items | Box 11 Request File |
Vaughan, Petty.
| 1845 July 11 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Vezzana, General.
| 1849 April 9 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Victor, O. I..
| 1857 January 1 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Vinton, Francis.
| 1856 October 26 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Vreeland, Benjamin.
| 1850 | 5 items | Box 11 Request File |
Two letters from Kane to Vreeland have name misspelled as Freeland: June 28-30 and July 5 | |||
Waddell, W. C..
| 1855 December 27 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Waln, William Jr..
| 1847 | 2 items | Box 11 Request File |
Ward, A. H..
| 1856-1857 | 2 items | Box 11 Request File |
Weaver, William H..
| 1846-1850, n.d. | 2 folders | Box 11 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1846-1848 | 18 items | Box 11 Request File |
Folder 2 | 1849-1850, n.d. | 15 items | Box 11 Request File |
Webster, D..
| 1842 November 23 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Webster, Fletcher.
| 1852-1853, n.d. | 6 items | Box 11 Request File |
Welles, F. N..
| 1853 January 29 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wells, Charles H..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wells, H. T..
| 1852 February 18 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wells, S. R..
| 1851-1852 | 3 items | Box 11 Request File |
Welsh, Henry.
| 1852 | 2 items | Box 11 Request File |
Welsh, W. H..
| 1852 February 3 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Westall, John.
| 1852 November 5 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wetherill, Samuel.
| 1848 November | 3 items | Box 11 Request File |
Wetmore and Co..
| 1848 May 4 | 2 items | Box 11 Request File |
Wharton, Mr..
| n.d | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wharton, William H..
| 1857 February 18 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wheaton, Charles.
| 1856 July 7 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Whitting, John G..
| 1852 November 5 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Whydah Slave Trade.
| 1842 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Williams, Edwin.
| 1852 | 2 items | Box 11 Request File |
Williams, Israel L..
| 1849 January 30 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Williamson, Robert.
| 1852 February 26 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Willis, Nathaniel P..
| 1856 October 5 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wilson, John Wall.
| 1853 January 12 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wilson, R. P..
| n.d. | 1 items | Box 11 Request File |
Wise, John.
| 1853 January 13 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wivild, N..
| 1856 September 10 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wood, C. M..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wood, H. N..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wood, J. Walter.
| 1852-n.d. | 2 items | Box 11 Request File |
Wood, William W..
| 1848, n.d. | 2 items | Box 11 Request File |
Wood, Mr..
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wright, Charles W..
| 1853 January 3 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Wright, Edwin.
| 1852 October 22 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
W.M.C.A..
| 1852 October 21 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Young, Dr. (Macao).
| n.d. | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Zucker, William.
| 1840 September 29 | 1 item | Box 11 Request File |
Unidentified correspondents.
| 1845-1857, n.d. | 2 folders | Box 11 Request File |
Folder 1 | 1845-1857 | 6 items | Box 11 Request File |
Folder 2 | n.d. | 11 items | Box 11 Request File |
Series II. Financial Records | 1831-1861 | 0.25 linear feet | Request Series |
Bills, receipts and accounts relating to Elisha Kent Kane's personal finances. The records are arranged chronologically. | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Bills and receipts | 1831-1861, n.d. | 8 folders | Request File |
Folder 1 | 1831-1845 | Request File | |
Folder 2 | 1846-1847 | Request File | |
Folder 3 | 1848-1849 | Request File | |
Folder 4 | 1850-1851 | Request File | |
Folder 5 | 1852 | Request File | |
Folder 6 | 1853-1855 | Request File | |
Folder 7 | 1856-1861 | Request File | |
Folder 8 | n.d. | Request File | |
Series III. George W. Corner, Notes on Elisha Kent Kane | 1854-1973 | 0.25 linear feet | Request Series |
Notes and miscellaneous materials assembled by George W. Corner while writing his biography of Elisha Kent Kane. The series includes copies of letters and documents relating to Kane and his expeditions held in other libraries, as well as some of Corner's notes and drafts of writings on Kane. Provenance: Gift of Mrs. E. Paul DuPont, Aug. 13, 1973 (accn. 1973-1615ms). | |||
Elisha Kent Kane Medical History (drafts) | 1965 | 3 folders | Request File |
Folder 1 Includes Robert L. Levy, "Notes on the Case of Elisha Kent Kane. MD" | |||
Goodfellow, Henry..
"The Facts Relating to the Separation of the Ship's Company of the Brig Advance In the Fall of 1854" | n.d. | TMs Cy, 16p. | Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent. Annotated bibliography | n.d. | 2 folders | Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Correspondence | 1843, n.d. | 4 folders | Request File |
Folders 1-3 | n.d. | Request File | |
Folder 4 | 1843 | Request File | |
Includes photocopies of originals held by the National Archives, Naval Records | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Letter to Mary | 1853 April 11 | Photocopy, 1p. | Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Financial accounts | 1853 | Photocopies, 24p. | Request File |
Originals at Smithsonian Institution | |||
Kane Family Genealogical notes | 1969 | 4p. | Request File |
Miscellaneous correspondence relating to Kane biography | 1966-1973 | Request File | |
Miscellaneous notes | 1965-1969 | Request File | |
Miscellaneous notes on collections of Kane Papers | 1965-1966 | Request File | |
Miscellaneous printed materials | 1857-1897; 1960-1967 | 2 folders | Request File |
Folder 1 | 1857-1897 | Photocopies, 4 items | Request File |
Includes biographical sketches of Kane and Memoir of Dwarkanath Tagore. | |||
Folder 2 | 1960-1967 | Reprints, 3 items | Request File |
Includes A.F.C. Wallace, "An interdisciplinary approach to mental disorder among the Polar Eskimos of Northwest Greenland". | |||
U.S. Navy. Naval History Division.
History of Ships Named Kane | 1969 | 10p. | Request File |
Series IV. Bound Volumes | 1835-1860 | 1.5 linear feet | Request Series |
A miscellaneous assemblage of bound volumes of notes, ranging from notes Kane kept as a student at the University of Virginia and University of Pennsylvania, to medical records kept at Blockley Hospital and after, and notebooks and a sketchbook relating to both of his arctic expeditions. Of particular interest are notes on Henry Darwin Rogers' class in mineralogy at the University of Pennsylvania, notes on medical courses taught by Samuel Jackson, and two volumes containing Kane's notes on female patients at Blockley, 1840-1841. | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Notebook of polar exploration | 1851 | Volume 1 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Medical notebooks | ca.1841-1842 | 10 vols | Volume 2 Request File |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Notes on a Trip into North Carolina | 1850 | Volume 3 Request File | |
Some illustrations. | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Journal of a Trip into the Philippines | ca.1844 | Volume 4 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Journal of a Trip in Africa | 1846 | Volume 5 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Notebook on Asia Minor | n.d. | Volume 6 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Journal of a Trip in Egypt | ca.1845 | Volume 7 Request File | |
Some illustrations. | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Sketchbook from Egypt | ca.1845 | Volume 7a Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Journal pertaining to Mexico | 1848 | Volume 8 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Log of the Tilt | June 29-July 16, 1848 | Volume 9 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic exploration letterbook (Private) | ca.1850-1851 | Volume 10 Request File | |
Contains many sketches. | |||
Inuit kayaking | ca. 1850-1851 | Request Item | |
Access digital object: | |||
Inuit kayaking | ca. 1850-1851 | Request Item | |
Access digital object: | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Notebook of specimens located in the Arctic | ca.1850-1851 | Volume 11 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Logbook | 1850 | Volume 12 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Meteorological Journal | 1850-1851 | Volume 13 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Examination book, University of Virginia | ca.1836 | Volume 14 Request File | |
Contains some sketches. | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Notes on Geology and Mineralogy | 1839 | Volume 15 Request File | |
Taken in Prof. Rogers' class. | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Medical lecture notes, University of Pennsylvania | ca.1838-1839 | Volume 16 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Geometry notebook | n.d. | Volume 17 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Language of algebra, literal quantities | 1835 | Volume 18 Request File | |
"Written with Uncle [Robert M.] Patterson." | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Memoranda and notes relative to engineering, University of Virginia | ca.1838 | Volume 19 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Medical notebook, Blockley Hospital | 1841 | Volume 20 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Observations on Kiesteine (obstetrics, pregnant women), Blockley Hospital | ca.1841 | Volume 21 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Kyestine | ca.1841 | Volume 22 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Commonplace book | n.d. | Volume 23 Request File | |
Weaver, W. H..
Accounts | 1848 | Volume 24 Request File | |
U.S.S..
Passbook with W. H. Lewis, Grover, Govt. Street, Mobile, Alabama | 1850 | Volume 25 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Notebooks, meteorological observations | 1853 | 2 vols. | Volume 26 Request File |
With sketches | |||
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Medical casebook | 1856-1860 | Volume 27 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Journal kept at Blockley Hospital | 1840-1841 | Volume 28 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Medical lecture notes for course by Samuel Jackson | 1840-1841 | Volume 29 Request File | |
Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857.
Arctic diary | 1850-1851 | Volume 30 Request File | |
Series V. Graphics | ca.1840-1856 | 0.25 linear feet | Request Series |
Miscellaneous drawings, sketches, and photographs by and of Elisha Kent Kane, including a number depicting scenes in the arctic. Kane was an incessant doodler and agreeable artist, and the collection includes representative sketches from most of his expeditions. Native American Images note : Over 200 sketches, watercolors, silhouettes, maps, and engravings of Inuits of Baffin Bay drawn by Kane during the first (1850-1851) and second (1853-1855) Grinnell arctic expeditions. Primarily from the first trip, images include portraits in native attire, landscapes, dwellings, hunting tools, kayaks, and encampments. Kane’s log and notebooks are dotted throughout with sketches. Of note in the graphic series, a watercolor of an Inuit boy netting auks. Donated with his papers, Kane’s published works: The United States Grinnell expedition in search of Sir John Franklin (1853) and Arctic explorations: the second expedition…(1857) include engravings of all his original drawings. Referenced in the sketch file, the finding aid contains a detailed inventory. Also, referenced in Murphy Smith’s Historical American Sketches…in the manuscripts collections of the APS. | |||
[F.Y.O.?].
House on bay with miscellaneous doodles of fences, plants, faces on verso. | n.d. | Pencil drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Advance moored in fjord | n.d. | Pencil and ink drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
The Advance in ice | n.d. | Mounted ink drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Advance schematic cross section (1 with doodles of starving men on verso) | n.d. | 2 diagrams, 1 pencil and 1 pen. | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Angular masses and detritus in Ice Berg | n.d. | Pencil drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Boxes [schematic sketches] | n.d. | Ink drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
The Brig in the winter ice | 1856 December 10 | Pencil drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Sketch of Henry Brooks | 1851 March 5 | Pencil drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Cape Melville | 1856 August 14 | Watercolor | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Central High School | n.d. | Pencil drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Coast of Greenland | 1850 June 22 | 2 pencil drawings | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Coast of Greenland II | n.d. | Pencil drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Departure of the II Grinnell Expedition from New York Harbor | n.d. | Mounted pencil drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Entering Fjord near Storae Island | n.d. | Pencil drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Faces and pulley doodles | 1850 February 18 | 1 page of pen drawings | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
First experience in the Pack | n.d. | Six small pen and ink drawings on one page | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Houses | n.d. | 2 pencil drawings | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Ice, 3 varieties | n.d. | Pencil and ink drawings | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Imp; shuttered window sketch and other doodles on verso | n.d. | Pencil drawings | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Inuit man, profile | n.d. | Pencil and ink drawing | Request File |
Access digital object: | |||
Kane, E. K..
Island in South Pacific [?] | n.d. | Pencil drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Islets | n.d. | Pencil drawings | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Maps - rough drafts | n.d. | 3 items | Request File |
Map of Baffin Bay | n.d. | Request Item | |
Access digital object: | |||
Kane, E. K..
Miscellaneous sketches: ship on coast, a man's head, a glacier, etc. | n.d. | 5 pencil drawings | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Models and diagrams | n.d. | 3 items | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Musicians [doodles] | [ca. 1840] | Pen and ink drawings | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Porto Grande, views | n.d. | 5 pencil drawings on one page | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Silhouettes | n.d | 5 cut-outs | Request File |
Access digital object: | |||
Kane, E. K..
Sailboat and steamer | n.d. | Pencil drawing | Request File |
Sea kayak | 1850-1851 | 1.0 Item(s) | Request File |
Sea kayak | 1850-1851 | Request Item | |
Access digital object: | |||
Kane, E. K..
Seal flipper, 2 views: extended and ventral portion of extended | n.d. | 2 pencil drawings on 1 page | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Small sailboat at sea | n.d. | Pencil drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
[Nagendronoth?] Tagore, profile sketch; small map of Greece on verso. | 1845 June 1 | Pen and ink sketches | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Tomb of R. P. Kane | n.d. | Pencil drawing on verso of printed invitation from Wistar Party | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
Venta de Fayal [Azores] | n.d. | ink drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
View of Heather Field | n.d. | Pencil drawing | Request File |
Kane, E. K..
View of Dios Polis Parva [?] | n.d. | 2 pencil drawings | Request File |
Kane, R. P..
Botanical sketches | n.d. | 2 pages of various pencil drawings | Request File |
The Philadelphia Club.
Invitation to Judge and Mrs. Kane | 1851 January | 1 item | Request File |
Weaver, W. H..
Brandywine Cottage, exterior; interior measurements on verso | n.d. | Small pencil drawing. | Request File |
Baffin Bay refraction | 1850-1851 | 3 3/4 x 4 1/2 inches, watercolor | Request File |
Access digital object: | |||
Inuit netting birds | 1850-1851 | 7 x 10 1/2 inches, watercolor | Request File |
Access digital object: | |||
Engraving of John Kintzing Kane. | ca. 1860 | 1.0 Item(s) | Request Item |
Abstract: Half length, seated, frontal view, with chin resting on hand and index finger at side of head. Access digital object: | |||
John Kintzing Kane with sons Elisha Kent Kane and Thomas Leiper Kane. | n. d. | 1.0 Item(s) | Request Item |
Abstract: Group portrait of three Kane men. Access digital object: | |||
Photograph of portrait of Elisha Kent Kane in uniform. | ca. 1860 | 1.0 Item(s) | Request Item |
Abstract: Half length portrait of Kane in uniform with sword, seated. Other Descriptive Information: Possibly a photograph of original portrait owned by family and sold at Kane auction in Kane, PA, 2003. Access digital object: | |||
Sketch of Inuits in kayaks. | ca. 1850 | 1.0 Item(s) | Request Item |
Abstract: Sketch of kayaks and people. Access digital object: | |||
