John Ross (1777 - 1856) was famous as a British naval officer and explorer, and today he remembered many attacks on the North Sea. The legendary Northwest Passage finds a way. He is another famous Arctic explorer, Sir James Clark Ross' s uncle who sailed with him and explored the North Pole and the South Pole.
John Ross was born on June 24, 1777 in Wig Downs County, Scotland as Pastor Andrew Roth of the English pastor Barris Rock and his wife Elizabeth Korsan. He joined the Navy at the age of 9 and polished his handicrafts in the Mediterranean and the Chanel in the UK as a disciple of the British Navy. His first order arrived in 1808, where he was 31 years old, and eventually he was promoted to the position of the Swedish Navy Commander in 1812. Six years later he contacted the British navy admiral and you directed his first Arctic expedition. The purpose of the mission was to use his two "Isabella" and "Alexander" ships ordered by Colonel William E. Parry to find the way across the Northwest Passage. They sailed around Baffin Bay, arrived at the Lancaster Sound, and entered the east gate of the Tohoku West Passage. He did not leave there and returned to his hometown and told the mountain ranges later turned to Crocker Hills.
Between 1829 and 1833, lieutenant William E. Parry, the lieutenant of John Ross, commanded another task of Northwest Passage. On this trip, John Ross and his nephew James Clark Ross served as officers and drove 600 miles more than their previous trip. This trip is the reason for finding the main axis of the Northwest route. They spent several years in the north, accustomed to the area, learned from Inuit, and left for the north. On June 1, 1831, James Clark Ross led the land exploration to successfully discover the North Pole Poles at the Cape Cape Cape Adelaide in Boothia Peninsula. A famous Norwegian explorer, Roald Amundsen, discovered an arctic pole in another place 71 years later (the magnetic pole moves with time due to the change in the center of the earth)
After returning home, Captain Rose was warmly welcomed by the geography of England and France, won numerous medals, prizes, Swedish star night and night knight, and British CB. In 1850 he sailed again to the Arctic Ocean to find Lord John Franklin's missing expedition, but he could not find them.
British explorer, Sir John Ross (1777-1856) joined the British Navy at the age of 9 and the rest of his life spent in the sea. In the early nineteenth century, he visited the North Pole, explored the North William Island and the Bosch peninsula, and traveled three times to North Pole, searching for Sir John Franklin's missing exploration. Ross is the fifth son of Andrew Rose and his wife Elizabeth. He was born on 24th June 1777 in Balsarroch in Wilshire, Scotland. He was a boy who joined a ship crew called Pearl and spent the next three years in the Mediterranean. In 1790 he navigated with a solid fleet and his captain Sir Thomas Bairard suggested that he join the merchant ship. He did this and became an apprentice of Bearie for four years, heading to the West Indies and the Baltic Sea. After that, he sailed on many ships as a crew or partner and became a lieutenant in 1805.
John Ross (1777 - 1856) was famous as a British naval officer and explorer, and today he remembered many attacks on the North Sea. The legendary Northwest Passage finds a way. He is another famous Arctic explorer, Sir James Clark Ross' s uncle who sailed with him and explored the North Pole and the South Pole. John Ross was born on June 24, 1777 in Wig Downs County, Scotland as Pastor Andrew Roth of the English pastor Barris Rock and his wife Elizabeth Korsan. He joined the Navy at the age of 9 and polished his handicrafts in the Mediterranean and the Chanel in the UK as a disciple of the British Navy. His first order arrived in 1808, where he was 31 years old, and eventually he was promoted to the position of the Swedish Navy Commander in 1812. Six years later he contacted the Admiral of the British Navy and you gave him the command of the first Arctic expedition.