Cape Farrar Explained

Cape Farrar
Type:Cape
Map:Canada Nunavut#Canada
Map Relief:yes
Location:Nunavut, Canada
Coordinates:69.3208°N -94.2667°W

Cape Farrar (French: Cap d'Farrar) is a cape located along the Boothia Peninsula of the Kitikmeot Region near Taloyoak in the Canadian province of Nunavut, approximately northwest of Ottawa.[1] [2]

Geography

James Ross Strait and the St. Roch Basin separate the cape and Boothia Peninsula from King William Island to the west. The community of Taloyoak lies about northeast of the cape.

Name

Cape Farrar is named after Sergeant Frederick Sleigh Farrar of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). Farrar was born at 37 Gresford Avenue, Liverpool, England in 1901, and was a cadet in the Royal Navy when he emigrated to Canada in 1929 and joined the RCMP in that same year. Farrar spent more than ten years on the schooner RCMPV St. Roch.[3] He was among the first to circumnavigate the North American continent, having gone through the Northwest Passage with Inspector Henry Larsen, serving as skipper.[4] Farrar authored a book entailing his journeys entitled Arctic Assignment: The Story of the St. Roch which was published shortly after his death in 1955.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cape Farrar . Natural Resources of Canada . September 28, 2019.
  2. Web site: Cape Farrar . GeoNames . September 28, 2019.
  3. Conquest of the Northwest Passage by R.C.M.P. Schooner St. Roch. J. Lewis Robinson. 1994. Canadian Geographic.
  4. Book: Arctic Assignment: The Story of the St. Roch. registration . Macmillan of Canada . 9780770510565 . Frederick Sleigh Farrar. 1974.
  5. Book: Honoured in Places: Remembered Mounties Across Canada . 9781894384391 . William Joseph Hulgaard, John Wesley White. 2002. Heritage House Publishing Co .