- Robert Bylot
Robert Bylot was an explorer. Little is known about his life, even though
Bylot Island , one of the more dramatic of the Arctic Islands, was named to honour him, but he is considered one of the most daring of the early explorers in theCanadian Arctic . Perhaps an unfortunate experience with Captain Henry Hudson in 1611 doomed him to relative obscurity.Bylot was the mate on Hudson's ship "Discovery" when they first sailed into what is now known as
Hudson Bay . During the strife that followed, he was stripped of his rank, and eventually joined the mutineers who set Hudson, his son and several sailors adrift in an open boat. Except for Bylot's skills in navigation, the rest of the crew likely would have suffered the same fate as those abandoned in the bay. He was able to sail the ship back toEngland , earning himself a pardon for his actions during the mutiny.In 1612, Bylot returned to Hudson Bay, this time with Sir Thomas Button. They reached the mouth of the
Nelson River , where they wintered over. In the spring of 1613 they continued north, reaching a latitude of 65° before returning to England.In 1615 and 1616, Bylot continued the search for the
Northwest Passage as captain of his own ship, the "Discovery". The 1615 voyage proved thatHudson Strait was definitely not the sought-after route toAsia . The following year, several notable achievements were made possible by a combination of Bylot's talents in ice navigation, and the brilliant navigational and mapping skills of his pilot,William Baffin . Robert Bylot and his crew were the first Europeans to see Jones, Lancaster andSmith Sound s, important waterways which were named after patrons of the voyage,Alderman Jones ,Sir James Lancaster andSir Thomas Smith . They mapped the entire bay that was named to honour Baffin. And, most significantly, they were able to reach 77° 45' North latitude, a record which held for 236 years.Bylot successfully sailed back to England, but nothing is known about his life after that point. William Baffin, moreover, often receives full credit for the successes of the 1616 voyage.
External links
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* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=99 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
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