Samuel Hearne (born 1745, London, England—died November 1792, London) was an English seaman, fur trader, and explorer, the first European to make an overland trip to the Arctic Ocean in what is now Canada. He was also the first to show the trend of the Arctic shore.
At the age of 11, Hearne became a midshipman in the British Royal Navy. From 1766 he worked for the British-based Hudson’s Bay Company as mate on company vessels, one of which took him in 1769 to Prince of Wales Fort at the mouth of the Churchill River (near present-day Churchill, Manitoba). Between the fort and the Arctic Ocean lay an immense region known only as the Barren Grounds, rumoured to be filled with riches, including copper. It was speculated that the mysterious tundra even offered a route to the Orient (East Asia).
Twice frustrated in attempts to explore the territory for the Hudson’s Bay Company, Hearne left the Churchill River in December 1770, accompanied only by an Indian guide and the guide’s eight wives. The following July he found the mouth of the river that he is said to have named the Coppermine (in present-day Northwest Territories and Nunavut). When he returned to the fort in late June 1772, he had walked some 5,000 miles (8,000 km) and explored more than 250,000 square miles (650,000 square km).
In 1774 Hearne built for the Hudson’s Bay Company its first interior trading post, Cumberland House, on the Saskatchewan River, the first permanent settlement in present Saskatchewan. He was serving the Hudson’s Bay Company as governor and was in command of Prince of Wales Fort in 1782 when he surrendered it to a French force under the command of Jean-François de Galaup, comte de La Pérouse. The French took Hearne and his garrison prisoner before plundering and destroying the post.
To the credit of the French navy, Hearne was treated with dignity. La Pérouse, himself an explorer, encouraged Hearne not only to preserve his papers but also to publish an account of his fabulous journey to the Arctic. Released by the French, Hearne spent four relatively uneventful years in Canada (1783–87), where he reestablished the trading post at the mouth of the Churchill before returning to England to write A Journey from Prince of Wales’s Fort in Hudson’s Bay to the Northern Ocean in the Years 1769, 1770, 1771, & 1772 (published posthumously, 1795, and with many subsequent new editions and printings).