De Long died of starvation near Matvay Hut,
Yakutia. Melville returned a few months later and found the bodies of De Long and his boat crew. Overall, the doomed voyage took the lives of 20 expedition members, as well as additional men lost during the search operations. De Long's death – and that of the other men – was assumed to have occurred at or about the end of October. By direction of the United States government, the remains of De Long and his companions were brought home and interred with honour in his native city.
Legacy In 1890, the officers and men of the United States Navy dedicated the
Jeannette Monument, a granite-and-marble monument designed by
George P. Colvocoresses—a cross with carved icicles hanging from it that sits atop a cairn. The -high structure is in the
United States Naval Academy Cemetery overlooking the
Severn River. His journal, in which he made regular entries up to the day on which he died, was edited by his wife and published in 1883 under the title
Voyage of the "Jeannette", and an account of the search which was made for him and his comrades by Melville was published a year later under the title of
In the Lena Delta. Union veterans in the
Kingdom of Hawai‘i on September 23, 1882, named the post of the
Grand Army of the Republic there after him. Two United States Navy ships have been named USS DeLong after George W. De Long. In addition to the
De Long Islands, the
De Long Mountains in northwest
Alaska, The
De Long Strait separating
Wrangel Island from mainland Eurasia and the
De Long Fjord in Greenland bear his name. == References ==