'', a Hawaiian feather cape presented to her by King
Kamehameha IV during her visit in 1861,
Bishop Museum. Until shortly before her own death, Lady Franklin travelled extensively, generally accompanied by her husband's niece Sophia Cracroft, who remained her secretary and
companion until her death. Lady Franklin travelled to
Out Stack in the
Shetland Islands of Scotland, the northernmost of the British isles, to get as close as she could to her missing husband. Lady Franklin sponsored seven expeditions to find her husband or his records (two of the expeditions failed to reach the Arctic): • 1850
Prince Albert under
Charles Codrington Forsyth and
William Parker Snow • 1851
Prince Albert under
William Kennedy and
Joseph René Bellot, • 1852
Isabel (one under Donald Beatson aborted, the other under
Edward Inglefield explored
Greenland) • 1853
Isabel (William Kennedy and Robert Grate, aborted) • 1857
Fox under
Francis Leopold McClintock, and • 1875
Pandora under
Allen Young By means of sponsorship, use of influence, and offers of sizeable rewards for information about him, she instigated or supported many other searches. Her efforts made the expedition's fate one of the most vexed questions of the decade. Ultimately, in 1859, Francis McClintock found evidence that Sir John had died twelve years previously, in 1847. Prior accounts had suggested that, in the end, the expedition had turned to
cannibalism to survive, but Lady Franklin refused to believe these stories and poured scorn on explorer
John Rae, who had in fact been the first person to return with definite news of her husband's fate. The popularity of the Franklins in the Australian colonies was such that when it was learned in 1852 that Lady Franklin was organising an expedition in search of her husband using the auxiliary steamship
Isabel, subscriptions were taken up, and those in Van Diemen's Land alone totalled £1671/13/4. Although McClintock had found conclusive evidence that Sir John Franklin and his fellow expeditioners were dead, Lady Franklin remained convinced that their written records might remain buried in a cache in the Arctic. She provided moral and some financial support for multiple later expeditions that planned to seek the records, including those of
William Parker Snow and
Charles Francis Hall in the 1860s. Finally, in 1874, she joined forces with
Allen Young to purchase and fit out the former steam gunboat HMS
Pandora to undertake another expedition to the region around
Prince of Wales Island. The expedition left London in June 1875 and returned in December, unsuccessful, as ice prevented her from passing west of the
Franklin Strait. Lady Franklin died in the interim, on 18 July 1875. At her funeral on 29 July, the pall-bearers included Captains McClintock,
Collinson and
Ommanney, R.N., while many other "Old Arctics" engaged in the Franklin searches were also in attendance. She was interred at
Kensal Green Cemetery in the vault and commemorated on a marble cross dedicated to her niece Sophia Cracroft. ==Legacy==