James H. Bartlett

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James H. Bartlett Veteran

Birth
Pomfret, Chautauqua County, New York, USA
Death
30 Oct 1892 (aged 43–44)
San Francisco, San Francisco County, California, USA
Burial
Fredonia, Chautauqua County, New York, USA Add to Map
Plot
F/4
Memorial ID
View Source

Civil War Service: Boatman, Aug 1864-Aug 1865


A fireman aboard the USS Jeannette that sailed from San Francisco on July 8, 1879 in search of the "Polar Sea". The ship became trapped in the ice and eventually crushed forcing its abandonment on June 6, 1881. The ship's crew set off across the ice fields in search of open water, towing three small boats and as many supplies as possible. In September they finally were able to launch their boats, Bartlett and ten others in a whaleboat skippered by George W. Melville, the Jeannette's Engineering Officer. The small flotilla soon encountered a violent storm and the boats were separated. Bartlett's boat eventually landed on the east side of the Lena River Delta and all were rescued by natives of that region. Of the other two boats, one was lost and no sign of it was ever found and the other skippered by George W De Long, the Jeannette's captain landed on the west side of the Lena Delta. Of this last boat, all but two members died of starvation and exposure.


Died of self-inflicted gunshot wound.


The known gravesites of the crew of the USS Jeannette;

George Washington De Long

Charles Winans Chipp

George Wallace Melville

Lieut. John Wilson Danenhower

James Markham Marshall Ambler

Jerome J. Collins

William Dunbar

William F. C. Nindemann

Louis P. Noros

Adolph Dressler

Hans H. Erichson

Carl A. Gortz

Neils Iverson

Heinrick H. Kaack

Herbert W. Leach

Raymond Lee Newcomb

Alfred Sweetman

Walter Sharvell

Edward Starr

Peter E. Johnson

Albert Kuehne

Walter Lee

Henry D. Warren

Frank E Manson

John Cole


For further details, see:

'In the Lena Delta' by George W Melville (1892)

'Hell on Ice; The Saga of Jeannette' by Edward Ellsberg (1938)

'In the Kingdom of Ice' by Hampton Sides (2014)

'New York Tribune' Monday, October 31, 1892, Page 1


Cemetery Records list parents as John and Juliett (Doolittle) Barlett

Civil War Service: Boatman, Aug 1864-Aug 1865


A fireman aboard the USS Jeannette that sailed from San Francisco on July 8, 1879 in search of the "Polar Sea". The ship became trapped in the ice and eventually crushed forcing its abandonment on June 6, 1881. The ship's crew set off across the ice fields in search of open water, towing three small boats and as many supplies as possible. In September they finally were able to launch their boats, Bartlett and ten others in a whaleboat skippered by George W. Melville, the Jeannette's Engineering Officer. The small flotilla soon encountered a violent storm and the boats were separated. Bartlett's boat eventually landed on the east side of the Lena River Delta and all were rescued by natives of that region. Of the other two boats, one was lost and no sign of it was ever found and the other skippered by George W De Long, the Jeannette's captain landed on the west side of the Lena Delta. Of this last boat, all but two members died of starvation and exposure.


Died of self-inflicted gunshot wound.


The known gravesites of the crew of the USS Jeannette;

George Washington De Long

Charles Winans Chipp

George Wallace Melville

Lieut. John Wilson Danenhower

James Markham Marshall Ambler

Jerome J. Collins

William Dunbar

William F. C. Nindemann

Louis P. Noros

Adolph Dressler

Hans H. Erichson

Carl A. Gortz

Neils Iverson

Heinrick H. Kaack

Herbert W. Leach

Raymond Lee Newcomb

Alfred Sweetman

Walter Sharvell

Edward Starr

Peter E. Johnson

Albert Kuehne

Walter Lee

Henry D. Warren

Frank E Manson

John Cole


For further details, see:

'In the Lena Delta' by George W Melville (1892)

'Hell on Ice; The Saga of Jeannette' by Edward Ellsberg (1938)

'In the Kingdom of Ice' by Hampton Sides (2014)

'New York Tribune' Monday, October 31, 1892, Page 1


Cemetery Records list parents as John and Juliett (Doolittle) Barlett