Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Rae's grave at St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall, Orkney. John Rae died from an aneurysm in Kensington, west London, on 22 July 1893. A week later his body arrived in Orkney. He was buried at St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall, Orkney. A memorial to Rae, lying as in sleep upon the ground, is inside the cathedral.

  3. Lady Franklin’s relentless campaign to have him removed from the history of Arctic exploration saw his discoveries attributed to Royal Navy expeditions; an injustice that he robustly fought. He died at his house at 4 Addison Gardens, London, on 22nd July 1893; his body was taken north for burial in the grounds of St Magnus Cathedral.

  4. Sep 26, 2024 · John Rae (born Sept. 30, 1813, near Stromness, Orkney Islands, Scot.—died July 22, 1893, London) was a physician and explorer of the Canadian Arctic. Rae studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh (1829–33).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Rae paddled from Moose Factory to the Red River settlement to reach his tutor, traveling with fellow Orcadian John Corrigall and three First Nations men. When Rae arrived, he found that the man who was to teach him surveying was deathly ill.

    • How did John Rae die?1
    • How did John Rae die?2
    • How did John Rae die?3
    • How did John Rae die?4
    • How did John Rae die?5
  6. Jan 2, 2008 · John Rae, fur trader, explorer, surgeon, author (born 30 Sept 1813 in Orkney, Scotland; died 22 July 1893 in London, England). Rae was an expert doctor and outdoorsman known for surveying parts of the Canadian Arctic while searching for the Northwest Passage, and for his 1854 reports on the Franklin Expedition 's fate.

  7. On 22nd July 1893, at the age of 79, he died at his home in 4 Addison Gardens, London. His widow brought his body back to Orkney, where he was buried in St Magnus’ Cathedral. The name of John Rae was largely forgotten by history, but today he is rightly celebrated as one of Scotland’s most accomplished explorers.

  8. Oct 10, 2019 · In London, England on July 22, 1893, John Rae died of an aneurysm. His body was returned to Scotland, where he was buried at St. Magnus Cathedral cemetery in Kirkwall, Orkney Islands. Making strong alliances with the Inuit, Dr. John Rae achieved significant discoveries with little recognition as one of Canada’s greatest explorers.