, friend and fellow explorer of Captain George Leavitt It was not work for the faint-hearted. Aside from injuries aboard ship, the ice and frigid waters posed immense risk. During one particularly treacherous summer, it was impossible to make it past
Nelson Head before August 14 because the passage was still frozen. "The ice", wrote Leavitt in his log, "was solid all the way across [to Cape Parry]." Many of the early boats, including the
schooner Bonanza, became stuck in the ice and were destroyed. In another horrifying incident, Leavitt and other captains watched as eight whaling ships became trapped in the ice on Alaska's northern coast. "As an eerie postscript to an already chilling bulletin", writes John Taliaferro of the 1898 incident in his
In A Far Country, "Captain James McKenna of the
Fearless and Captain George Leavitt of the
Newport reported that the
Navarch [another whaler] had been spotted drifting in the pack ice, to the north of them." It was an enormously complicated undertaking. To help him figure out the elements and the topography, Captain Leavitt, like some other early pilots, hired a Native Inuit (
Eskimo) guide named Natkusiak ( 1885–1947), who helped him in his expeditions across the Arctic seas, including his trips to some islands like Norway Island where other whalers had not dared venture. Natkusiak worked for Leavitt for several years. During this time, when the steam whaler
Narwhal was wintering at
Herschel Island in 1906–07 with Leavitt as her captain, the Arctic explorer
Vilhjalmur Stefansson first met Leavitt and his Native guide. Leavitt and the explorer went on to become fast friends, with Leavitt often offering advice on the area to Stefansson, as well as bringing him supplies from the
American Museum of Natural History in New York City. In 1908, Stefansson hired Leavitt's Native guide, who went on to aid the Arctic explorer on his subsequent expeditions. Leavitt himself proved to be the source of advice and support to the explorer Stefansson, who quotes him often in his journals and calls him 'explorer' as well as 'captain'. The Maine-born mariner, Stefansson noted, was intrepid in his nautical work, often sailing to places beyond the reach of others. "Captain Leavitt had told me that the
Narwhal was the only ship of the whaling fleet", Stefansson wrote, "that ever went to Norway Island, but I have heard of others that went within of it – to Terror Island." In his journals, Stefansson wrote often of his relationship with the early whaling captain. "Captain George Leavitt of the
Narwhal had entertained me aboard his ship in winter quarters at Herschel Island several times during the winter of 1906–1907, and had now brought me a consignment of ammunition, kerosene, alcohol for the preservation of scientific specimens, and various things of that sort, sent North in his care by the American Museum of Natural History." Nor was Stefansson the only early Arctic explorer who benefited from the counsel of the New England mariner.
Ernest de Koven Leffingwell, another early Arctic explorer and cartographer, was often given berth aboard Captain Leavitt's ships as he traveled back and forth to the Arctic region. In 1908, after the explorer's own early vessel
The Duchess of Bedford was itself trapped in the Arctic ice and smashed, Capt. Leavitt provided passage for Leffingwell and his party back to San Francisco. As a token of thanks, Leffingwell named the island Narwhal after the name of Leavitt's steam-driven whaler. Leffingwell named another island – off Alaska's North Slope – Leavitt Island, after his friend the captain. Following the destruction of his own ship, and unable to continue his work with the meager supplies left and Native assistance, Leffingwell wrote that "the writer returned to civilization in the fall of 1908 as guest of Capt. George Leavitt, of the whale ship
Narwhal." ==Family life in Alaska and legacy==