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Leffingwell Camp Site facts for kids

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Leffingwell Camp Site
Leffingwell.jpg
Sod house at the Leffingwell Camp Site (1949)
Leffingwell Camp Site is located in Alaska
Leffingwell Camp Site
Location in Alaska
Location On Flaxman Island, about 58 miles (93 km) west of Kaktovik
Area 10 acres (4.0 ha)
Built 1906
Built by Anglo-American Polar Expedition
NRHP reference No. 71001093
Quick facts for kids
Significant dates
Added to NRHP June 21, 1971
Designated NHL June 2, 1978

The Leffingwell Camp Site, on Flaxman Island, 58 miles (93 km) west of Barter Island on the Arctic Coast of Alaska, was used by polar explorer and geologist Ernest de Koven Leffingwell on his pioneering Anglo-American Polar Expedition of 1906–1908, which aimed to explore the Beaufort Sea. The expedition's ship, the Duchess of Bedford, was allowed to become locked in ice which eventually destroyed it.

The camp site was chosen before the ship was locked in ice, and was not merely the nearest landfall. The site was used by Leffingwell over several years, beyond the end of that expedition.

Leffingwell created the first accurate map of a section of Alaskan coastline. He was the first to scientifically describe permafrost and to pose theories about permafrost which have largely proven true. He accurately identified the oil potential of the area, including assessing that it was not, in his day, technologically or economically feasible to develop it.

Leffingwell dwelling and sheds circa 1910
Leffingwell's camp, circa 1910, during the years that he still made use of it

Following the destruction of the Duchess of Bedford, Leffingwell "returned to civilization in the fall of 1908, as the guest of Capt. George B. Leavitt." Leffingwell subsequently named Narwhal Island for the name of Capt. Leavitt's vessel, the steam New Bedford, Massachusetts-based whaler Narwhal, and bestowed the name of the Maine-born Captain, who married an Inuit woman and settled at Barrow, on Leavitt Island off the Alaska North Slope.

The historic integrity of the camp was diminished in the 1930s when some structure was removed by a salvager.

The camp was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1971 and was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1978.

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