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The
Charcot
expeditions visited Greenland and Iceland annually on scientific
studies. The 1935 expedition carried an official mail franked
by a private vignette and Iceland postage. The following year
the ship and all hands were lost in a storm off Iceland.
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French Service to the Arctic Communities
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Jean
Charcot attracted the French scientific community to continue
work in the polar regions. Each year he sailed to Iceland
where he serviced stations and projects. In 1935, his ship
was destroyed in a storm as he left Reykjavik harbor. His
work was continued by the "Scientific Service to the
Sea", illustrated by this cover.
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A Polar Flight to Europe
1935
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Thor
Solberg flew a single engine amphibian plane from New York
to Denmark in easy stages during August and September of 1935
to prove the navigational ability of aircraft in the Arctic.
Covers
were carried outside the mail, but received a transit mark
in Greenland. The covers were returned in regular mail from
Kobenhaven.
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And Heavy Seas Blocked Their Path
to Ellesmere Island
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The
Mac Gregor Expedition of 1937 intended to establish a radio
station on Ellesmere Island in northern Canada. Their initial
base was at Reindeer Point in Greenland where the mail was
canceled on March 27, 1938, where they were finally forced
to conduct their work.
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A
set of cards canceled in expectation of their arrival at Fort
Conger on Ellesmere Island was to be given to the crew, but when
heavy seas blocked their entry, Mac Gregor retained the cards. |
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A Russian Ice Station on the Pole
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A
Russian party, led by Ivan Pappanin, was placed on the North
Pole by aircraft on May 19, 1937 to study polar drift. The
party had to be removed by icebreakers on February 19, 1938
at 70° 54' N latitude. Mail was not handled during the
drift, but commemorative covers were issued on their return.
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A
FIELD NOTEBOOK USED BY THE MEMBERS OF THE RUSSIAN NP 1 ICE STATION
IN 1937-8. THEY WERE THE FIRST STUDIES MADE FROM A BASE ON THE
NORTH POLE.
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(Exhibition
pieces courtesy of George Hall)
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