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  1. Charles Francis Hall (c. 1821 – November 8, 1871) was an American Arctic explorer, best known for his collection of Inuit testimony regarding the 1845 Franklin Expedition and the suspicious circumstances surrounding his death while leading the American-sponsored Polaris expedition in an attempt to be the first to reach the North Pole.

  2. Charles Francis Hall (Rochester, Nuevo Hampshire, 1821 — Groenlandia, 8 de noviembre de 1871) fue un explorador estadounidense del Ártico.

  3. Charles Francis Hall was an American explorer who made three Arctic expeditions. Hall spent his early life in Ohio, where he held such various jobs as those of blacksmith, journalist, stationer, and engraver, before taking an interest in exploration.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. 26 de ene. de 2017 · The HMS Terror was one of the British ships that took part in the bombing of Maryland's Fort McHenry in September 1814, the same War of 1812 battle from which The Star-Spangled Banner drew inspiration. The Terror's mortars fired bombs designed to detonate and explode upon impact with their targets.

  5. The Arctic explorer Charles Francis Hall was born about 1821, either Vermont or New Hampshire; there are very few details about his early life. He is most notable for spending over ten years in the Arctic among the Inuit, initially focused on locating evidence of the lost British Expedition under Sir John Franklin, and then, in two later ...

  6. 22 de nov. de 2022 · Victim: Charles Francis Hall. Hall undertook two trips to the Arc­tic during the 1860s. He found no sur­vivors from the Franklin party, but he lived among the Inuit people for nearly eight...

  7. Charles Francis Hall (Rochester, Nuevo Hampshire, 1821 — Groenlandia, 8 de noviembre de 1871) fue un explorador estadounidense del Ártico.