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Difference between revisions of "Matthew Alexander Henson and Adoption"

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Revision as of 03:45, 6 June 2014

Matthew Henson 1910
Source: Wikipedia.org.

Biography

Henson was orphaned as a boy and was mistreated by his uncle. He ran away and lived on the streets for a while, until he was taken in by a Miss Janey, who ran a café where he worked and where he slept on the floor. He wanted to go to sea and a few years later walked to Baltimore, where he signed on as a cabin boy. His captain taught him until he died in 1882.

Then after a series of dead-end jobs he took a job in a hat shop, where he met Admiral Perry, a customer. Perry hired him as his assistant and they stayed together for 23 years. Henson saved the lives of Perry's expedition to Greenland in 1888 and learned fluent Inuit. On a later expedition he saved Perry's life again, and in 1909 Henson was the first non-Inuit to reach the north pole, 45 minutes before Perry, but because he was Black his primacy has been ignored. He also fathered several African-Inuit children, and there are still Inuit who acknowledge him as their ancestor.

References

Microsoft Encarta 98 Encyclopedia, 1993-97 Dictionary of American Biography The Life of Matthew Henson, edited by Bertram A. Fitzgerald, Jr. (Dix Hills: Fitzgerald Pub. Co., 1969) (Golden Legacy series) Gilman, Michael. Matthew Henson. (New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1988) (Black Americans of Achievement) Ferris, Jeri. Arctic Explorer: The Story of Matthew Henson. (Minneapolis: Carolrhoda Books, 1989) Henson, Matthew. A Negro Explorer at the North Pole. (Grand Rapids: Candace Press, 1996) (The Heritage Series; 10) "Matthew Henson." [Includes portrait]. Available at: [1]