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act of congress, assumed authority for prosecuting a three years' voyage of exploration in the Arctic regions. The authorities selected the An image should appear at this position in the text. Bering strait route and Lieutenant De Long was placed in command of the expedition which was equipped and manned with twenty-eight able seamen and five officers selected from the U.S. navy list. The vessel sailed from San Francisco, Cal., July 8, 1879, reaching Herald Island, 71° 35'N. 75°W., Sept. 5, 1879. Here the Jeannette took the ice pack and drifted 600 miles to the northwest by a course covering twice that distance, and on June 13, 1881, the vessel was crushed by the ice in 77° 15' N. 155° E., 150 miles from the nearest known land and 300 miles from the main land (Asia). By sledge and boat the party reached Bennett Island July 28, and Thaddeus Island, one of the New Siberian group, Aug. 20, 1881. Here they formed three boats' crews under command respectively of De Long, Lieutenant Chipp and Engineer Melville. On September 12, Chipp's boat was lost in a gale. Melville reached the village of Delta, and De Long, Dr. Ambler and twelve others reached the land at the mouth of the Lena river, September 17, after travelling 2800 miles, although the spot on which they landed was only 500 miles from the point at which the ship had been crushed. Here they abandoned the boat and travelled overland on foot carrying their sick, and the valuable records of the voyage. Within twenty-five miles of a Siberian settlement they halted Oct. 9, 1881, unable to go further. Two of the party. Noros and Nindermann, had been sent in advance to seek relief, and of the entire party they alone survived, the other twelve perishing of exposure and starvation. The last record in De Long's journal was made Oct. 30. 1881. Lieutenant Melville with a searching party found the dead bodies and the records, March 23, 1882. and by orders from the U.S. government the bodies of De Long and his eleven companions were brought to New York where they were buried with honor, Feb. 22, 1884. After a protracted and thorough investigation, the court of inquiry appointed, said: "Special commendation is due Lieutenant-Commander De Long for the high qualities displayed by him in the conduct of the expedition." A modelled bronze with medallion portrait surrounded by four scenes from his disastrous expedition: The Departure, Crushed, Bennett's Island, and The Last Entry, was placed by the class of 1865 on the An image should appear at this position in the text. walls of the chapel of the Naval academy, Annapolis, a memorial to their classmate. See The Voyage of the Jeannette, comprising his journals, edited by Mrs. Emma J. (Wotton) De Long, his widow (1883): In the Lena Delta by George W. Melville (2 vols., 1884); and Our Lost Explorers (1888). Lieutenant De Long died in Siberia, Oct. 30, 1881.
Demarest, David D., educator, was born in Harrington township, Bergen county, N.J., July 30, 1819; son of Daniel P. and Leah (Bogert) Demarest; grandson of Peter P. and Leah Demarest; and a descendant of David des Marest, born in Picardy about 1620. The family came to America in 1663. He received a common school education and was prepared for college at New Brunswick, N.J. He was graduated from Rutgers in 1837, and from the Theological seminary of the Reformed Dutch church, New Brunswick, N.J., in 1840. He was licensed to preach by the classis of New Brunswick; was assistant pastor at Catskill, N. Y., in 1841; pastor of the Reformed Dutch church at Flatbush, N.Y., 1841–43; pastor at New Brunswick, N.J., 1843–52; and at Hudson, N.Y., 1852–65. In 1865 he was elected professor of pastoral theology and sacred rhetoric in the Theological seminary at New Brunswick. He was clerk of the general synod of the Reformed Dutch church from 1862 to 1869; was elected a trustee of Rutgers college in 1858, and became secretary of its board of trustees in 1866. He received from the College of New Jersey the degree of D.D. in 1857, and from Rutgers that of LL.D. in 1892. He is the author of: Religion in Politics (1856); The Reformed Church in America: Its Origin, Development and Characteristics (1856, 4th ed., 1889); History of the Theological Seminary at New Brunswick (1884); The Huguenots on the Hackensack (1886); Dort and Westminster (1890); and numerous sermons, addresses and articles. He died at New Brunswick, N.J., June 21, 1898.
Demarest, John Terhune, clergyman, was
born at Teaneck, N.J., Feb. 20, 1813; son of Samuel S. and Annatje Demarest; and a descendant
of David des Marest and Marie Sohier, who
came to America in 1663. He was graduated at
Rutgers college in 1834 and from the Theological
seminary at New Brunswick, N.J., in 1837. He
was ordained to the Reformed Dutch ministry