[187] [Chap. i., by Charles Deane.—Ed.]
[188] Collinson’s Three Voyages of Martin Frobisher, p. 72; Hakluyt’s Voyages (ed. 1600), iii. 58.
[189] Collinson’s Three Voyages of Martin Frobisher, p. 75; Hakluyt’s Voyages, iii. 59.
[190] Collinson’s Three Voyages of Martin Frobisher, p. 119.
[191] Ibid., p. 242; Hakluyt’s Voyages, iii. 80.
[192] In his first expedition to seek for traces of Sir John Franklin, 1860-1862, our countryman, Captain Charles F. Hall, obtained and brought home numerous relics of Frobisher’s voyages. Some of these were sent to England, and others are deposited in the National Museum at Washington. See Hall’s Arctic Researches, passim; Collinson’s Three Voyages, etc., Appendix; and the Semi-Annual Report of the Council of the American Antiquarian Society, October, 1882.
[193] [See Dr. De Costa’s chapter, and Gilbert’s map and comments in Editorial Note A, sub anno 1576, at the end, and also the notes at the end of Mr. Henry’s chapter.—Ed.]
[194] Northwest Fox, p. 42.
[195] Letter to Mr. Sanderson, in Hakluyt’s Voyages, iii. 114.
[196] Rundall’s Narratives of Voyages towards the Northwest, p. 62.