Model of the Schooner Bowdoin at Bowdoin College (2013)

Museum Citation: “Schooner Bowdoin, Refuge Harbor, North Greenland, 1950″

Donald Baxter MacMillan (1872-1970), though born in Provincetown, Massachusetts, lived in Freeport as a boy, and graduated from Freeport High School and Bowdoin College in Brunswick.  He later taught at schools in Maine and Massachusetts.

After joining Admiral Robert E. Peary’s successful expedition to the North Pole in 1908, MacMillan began to explore, eventually accompanied by his wife Miriam, the northern climates of Labrador and Greenland, before being interrupted by World War I.

After the war, he arranged for the construction of the schooner Bowdoin, launched from East Boothbay in 1921.

The Bowdoin is a National Historic Landmark, based at the Maine Maritime Academy in Castine.

A model is on display near the Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum on the Bowdoin College campus.

See a brief amateur film clip of the Bowdoin‘s visit at Bar Harbor in 1933, from the Northeast Historic Film archives. Film maker incorrectly referred to it as “Adm. Perry North Pole Ship.”

Life at Battle Harbor, Labrador (c. 1925)

Life at Battle Harbor, Labrador (c. 1925)

He resumed his visits to the Arctic until another World War intruded, following which he continued his visits and explorations, making his final voyage in 1954.

Using motion picture films, photographs, and his personal experiences, he brought his lectures to public schools in the 1950s.

One presentation was held at the Skowhegan Municipal Building, with its opera house style auditorium filled with sometimes unruly students, who unfortunately did not understand the significance of MacMillan’s great accomplishments. Donald MacMillan died on September 7, 1970 and is buried in Provincetown, Massachusetts.

Masts of the "Bowdoin" showing at Battle Harbor, Labrador (c.1925)

Masts of the “Bowdoin” showing at Battle Harbor, Labrador (c.1925)

Commander Donald B. MacMillan is now engaged in preparing his complete report of the work of the MacMillan Arctic Expedition, under the auspices of the National Geographic Society, with the cooperation of the U. S. Navy. [Exerpt from the October, 1925 National Geographic Magazine.]

 

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Schooner Bowdoin in Castine (2014)

Schooner Bowdoin in Castine (2014)

Additional resources

Allen, Everett S. Arctic Odyssey: the life of Rear Admiral Donald B. MacMillan. New York. Dodd, Mead. 1962.

Bowdoin College. Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum. “Donald Baxter MacMillan.” http://www.bowdoin.edu/arctic-museum/biographies/macmillan.shtml (accessed February 27, 2013)

Cowan, Mary Morton. Captain Mac: the Life of Donald Baxter MacMillan, Arctic Explorer. Honesdale, PA. Calkins Creek. c2010. (juvenile biography)

Horr, Alfred Reuel. The Log of the Schooner Bowdoin. Cleveland: World Publishing Co. 1947.

MacMillan, Donald Baxter. Etah and Beyond: Or, Life Within Twelve Degrees of the Pole. Boston, New York. Houghton Mifflin Co. 1927.

MacMillan, Donald Baxter. How Peary Reached the Pole: the personal story of his assistant. Montréal. McGill-Queen’s University Press. c2008 c2008.

MacMillan, Miriam Look. Green Seas and White Ice. New York. Dodd, Mead. c1948.

“MacMillan in the Field.” The National Geographic Magazine. October 1935. p. 473.

“Schooner Bowdoin.” Maine Maritime Academy. http://mainemaritime.edu/waterfront/schooner-bowdoin/ (accessed January 6, 2015)

Thorndike, Virginia. The Arctic Schooner Bowdoin, A Biography.  Unity, Maine: North Country Press.  1995.

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