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Thunder Bay

Living on through DNA: Another crew member identified from the 1845 Franklin expedition

The skeletal remains of a crew member from Sir John Franklin's 1845 Northwest Passage expedition was identified in a joint study by researchers from the University of Waterloo and Lakehead University. They were found to belong to Capt. James Fitzjames, a senior officer on the HMS Erebus.

Capt. James Fitzjames identified through research by Lakehead, Waterloo universities

Daguerreotype of James Fitzjames
Daguerreotype of Cmdr. James Fitzjames, HMS Erebus, taken by Richard Beard in May 1845. Fitzjames is only the second crew member of the failed Franklin expedition to be positively identified though DNA and genealogical analyses. (Sotheby's)

The skeletal remains of a crew member from Sir John Franklin's failed 1845 Northwest Passage expedition havebeengiven a name: James Fitzjames.

He is only the second member of the crew to bepositively identified though DNA and genealogical analyses, joining John Gregory, engineer aboard HMS Erebus, who was identified in 2021.

It's believed Capt.Fitzjames, a senior officer on the HMS Erebus, attempted to help the 105 sailors of theFranklin expedition clear the Northwest Passage in his final days of April 1848. However, the 1845 exploration to find the Northwest Passage ended in starvation, death and, according to marks on Fitzjames's jawbone,cannibalism.

Researchers from Lakehead University in Thunder Bay and the University of Waterloo, both in Ontario, worked together in thejoint study.

Stephen Fratpietro, technical manager for the Lakehead University Paleo-DNA Laboratory, was responsible for getting DNA from the samples and matching them to descendants. He said the remains were found about 80 kilometresaway from where they deserted the HMS Erebus and made their way to King William Island, Nunavut.

WATCH | DNA analysis ID's another crew member fromdoomed 1845 Franklin expedition:

DNA analysis identifies another crew member from the doomed 1845 Franklin expedition

2 days ago
Duration 3:47
James Fitzjames is the second crew member of the ill-fated Franklin expedition who has been identified. His skeletal remains were detected through DNA research. The CBC's Mary-Jean Cormier speaks to Stephen Fratpietro about how that works.

Evidence of cannibalism

It was through a DNA analysis of the captain's jawbone found on the islandthat the team found new insights about the expedition's sad ending.

"On this mandible, they did find cut marks or evidence of cut marks," said Fratpietro. "So, it looks as though that this individual, or James Fitzjames, he was possibly cannibalized and that was probably his final situation that he was in. It was a dire survival situation and whoever was with him at the time probably used him to survive."

Douglas Stenton kneels beside where the remains of James Fitzjames and twelve other Franklin expedition sailors rest.
Douglas Stenton, adjunct assistant professor at the University of Waterloo, kneels beside what's known as NgLj-2, one of the most significant sites where remains from people on the expedition have been found. (R. Park)

In the 1850s, the Inuit were reported to have seen evidence that survivors had resorted to cannibalism. Those accounts were later corroborated in 1997 by the late Dr. Anne Keenleyside, who found cut marks on nearly one-quarter of the human bones at the site,NgLj-2.

DNA and genealogical analyses

At this particular site, Fratpietro said, there are 13 individuals consisting of around 451 bones.

"We've identified two individuals at this point and we'd love to be able to identify individuals in the future."

However, reaching their goal of identifying every member of the Franklin expedition is not easy.

He said it is all based on living descendants providing their DNA and them being able to compare the living descendant DNA to their library of DNA that was achieved from working on the rest of the samples.

The tale of the 1845 Franklin expedition to find the Northwest Passage is well-known, but new information has emerged. We'll speak to a relative of one of the sailors from the doomed Arctic expedition about what researchers have found.

Living descendant

Nigel Gambier is the explorer'spaternal second cousin five times removed. He sent his DNA to the research project in the hopes of identifying his distant relative.He said that he was surprised but delighted to hear from the researchers.

Gambier, a retired furniture importer from Bury St. Edmunds, England, knew he was a relation butsaid the new information about how Fitzjames died helps him connect to what he's read about the captain.

"I thinkit's terrific. It kind of gives closure onwhere James Fitzjames died and, we understand the circumstances how he died. We now have a sense of just how extraordinarily tough it was for him in his final days,"Gambiertold CBC's Jonathan Pinto on Up North.

Fratpietro said while his team was initially apprehensive about mentioning that Fitzjames was cannibalized, they wanted to present the facts and were excited to share the results with Gambier.

"(Gambier)was a little bit taken aback, but he wasn't upset about it or anything," saidFratpietro. "He said something to the effect that he is kind of glad that his ancestor wasn't the one doing the cannibalizing, but at least he was eaten instead."

"It goes just to show how incredibly desperate and hungry they were," said Gambierin an interview with CBC's Up North.

"I think it's a terrific pity that despite that cannibalism that took place, that they didn't manage to make it to Back River and then on to Hudson Bay to be able to tell the story of the whole expedition and exactly what happened," he said.

Going forward, Fratpietro's team will use this research to help them figure out what exactly happened during the expedition, including which sailors went, how they migrated from their shipsand where they ended up.

"It's just great that we can do this kind of research at Lakehead University, and it does change history," said Fratpietro. "We are asking the public if they think that they have a member of the Franklin expedition somewhere in their family tree to contact us. We ensure that they're a good candidate for DNA testing and then hopefully they can help us identify more of these individuals that we have found up north."

This research was funded by the government of Nunavut and the University of Waterloo.

With files from the Canadian Press