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GEORGE FRANCIS LYON

'George Francis Lyon' (1795-1832) was a rare combination of Arctic and African explorer. By all accounts a fun loving extrovert, he also managed to be a competent British Naval Officer, Commander, explorer, artist and socialite. While not having a particularly distinguished career, he is remembered for the entertaining journals he kept and for the watercolour paintings he completed in the Arctic.
He was, in 1818, sent with Joseph Ritchie by Sir John Barrow to find the course of the River Niger and the location of Timbuctoo. The expedition was underfunded, lacked support and because the ideas of John Barrow departed from Tripoli and thus had to cross the Sahara as part of their journey. A year later, due to much officialdom they had only got as far as Murzouk where they both fell ill. Ritchie never recovered and died there, but Lyon survived and travelled a little further around the region. Exactly a year to the day he left, he arrived back in Tripoli, the expedition being a complete failure.
Having been promised a promotion on his return, he now set about trying to pester the Admirality into fulfilling their promise. He irritated enough people that his reward was, in 1821, to be given the command of ''HMS Hecla'' under William Edward Parry on his second attempt at the Northwest Passage.
An aspect of his personality rare (and possibly frowned upon) at the time, was his genuine interest in the "Natives" of the countries he visited. Wearing Arab/Muslim dress and learning fluent Arabic he managed to blend in with the inhabitants of North Africa; He was tattooed by the Inuit in the Arctic, using needle and sooty thread; He ate raw reindeer and seal meat with the Inuit. All things that at the time would have been seen as, at best, eccentric in a British Naval Officer. The expedition achieved little, spending two years in the Arctic and getting only as far the Fury and Hecla Straight before being stopped by ice.
Lyon received his promotion to Captain on his return, and in 1824 was given sole command of ''HMS Griper'' for another voyage to the Arctic. Unfortunately the Griper was badly built and Lyon also met with some of the worst weather yet seen in the Arctic. The expedition was a disaster, Lyon limping home after only 5 months.
While he was well known in society, this last failure effectively saw him blacklisted in the Navy. He never had another command.
He died on Oct 8, 1832,[1] en-route from South America to Britain to be treated for eye problems.

Contents
Publications
Notes

Publications


He published at least two books about his adventures:

★ ''The Private Journal of Captain G.F. Lyon, of'' H.M.S. Hecla, ''During the Recent Voyage of Discovery under Captain Parry'' (1824)

★ ''A Brief Narrative Of An Unsuccessful Attempt To Reach Repulse Bay In'' His Majesty's Ship Griper, ''In The Year MDCCCXXIV'', London (1825)

Notes


1. Marquis of Ruvigny and Raineval, Melville Henry Massue. ''The Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal Being A Complete Table of All the Descendents Now Living of Edward III, King of England''. London, England: T.C. & E. C. Jack, 1905-1911. Page 475.


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