There are three months of total darkness…
August 1820 CE
William Parry and his men are kept busy with regular exercise while the officers put on plays and produce a newspaper.
The first case of scurvy had been reported in January and by March fourteen men were on the sick list, about half with mild scurvy. (Parry carries mustard and cress seeds and plants them in his cabin. The leaves seem to help.)
There had been some excitement in early March when the first melt water appeared, but by the end of the month the ice was still six feet (two meters) thick.
In June Parry leads a group of men dragging a wooden cart to the north shore of the island, which he names Hecla and Griper Bay.
It is the first of August before the ships are able to float out of the harbor.
They get as far west as 113°46'W before turning back.
It is too late in the season and new ice as already beginning to form.
They will reach England in October 1820 having lost only one man.