

leave home. At the age of 12, he found work as a cabin boy on the Katie Hines a merchant ship in Baltimore. Captain Childs of Katie Hines saw great promise in Henson's abilities. After recording his age as 15 instead of the illegal 12, Captain Childs taught his new cabin boy various skills including sailing, mathematics, nautical skills, reading and writing. These skills gave Henson opportunities that many African Americans did not have previously.
After years of service on the Katie Hines and the death of Captain Childs in 1883, the 17 year old Henson worked odd jobs in New York, Philadelphia and Boston until finally he became employed as a stock boy in a Washington, D. C. hat shop. About this time, the then Lieutenant Robert Peary was preparing for his 1887 expedition to Nicaragua and was in need of a good crew. Upon meeting, Peary hired Henson as his valet. Peary, impressed with his abilities, promoted Henson to the transit crew. Following their work mapping the Nicaraguan Jungles, Henson would leave his job at the haberdashery and serve in the Naval stockyard of Philadelphia under Peary. This made Henson available to serve Peary in various capacities in his earlier Artic expeditions starting in 1890 through 1902 in which they covered over 9,000 miles of Arctic territory from Northern Greenland to Ellesmere Island in Canada. It was in their 1909 expedition where each man would gain recognition.
The 1909 expedition was to be Peary's last attempt at reaching the North Pole. He took no risk in his selections of crewmembers for the Roosevelt, the ship under Captain Bartlett. Peary chose Henson because of "his physical strength, long experience and ingenuity in difficult situations" Peary was later to say of Henson "I can't get along without him." Naturally, Henson was his choice for the physical demands of the last leg of the journey. Despite all of Peary's efforts, it was Henson who reached the pole forty-five minutes before and greeted his fellow explorer with a toothy grin "I think I'm the first man to sit on top of the world." This of course prompted the frustrated Peary to slam into the ground the American flag they carried.

In the end, Henson was not without his own rewards. He was presented with two honorary Masters degrees in Science, a postage stamp and accolades from President Eisenhower and the African American Community. In 2000, Henson was posthumously awarded the prestigious National Geographic Hubbard Medal for his polar exploration which he could not receive while alive because of his race. Ironically, Peary was awarded the medal nearly a hundred years before.
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