It was April 3, 1909. An American explorer named Matthew Henson was walking across the ice-covered Arctic Ocean. This was a frozen wilderness—where no person could survive for long. Even polar bears stayed away.
But Henson was excited. He knew he was just days from achieving his dream. He wanted to be one of the first people to reach the North Pole.
Henson put his head down and pushed forward against the wind. Suddenly, he lost his balance. The ice beneath his feet cracked. He fell into the frigid ocean.
Henson had spent nearly 20 years of his life trying to get to the North Pole.
And now it seemed it would all end right here.
It was April 3, 1909. Matthew Henson walked across the ice-covered Arctic Ocean. This was a frozen wilderness. No person could survive there for long. Even polar bears stayed away.
But Henson was excited. He was an explorer. And he was close to reaching his goal. He wanted to be one of the first people to reach the North Pole.
The wind blew hard. But Henson kept moving. And that’s when it happened. Henson lost his balance. The ice beneath his feet cracked. He fell into the frigid ocean.
Henson had spent nearly 20 years of his life trying to get to the North Pole.
And now it seemed it would all end right here.
On April 3, 1909, an American explorer named Matthew Henson was walking across the ice-covered Arctic Ocean. In this frozen wilderness, no person could survive for long. Even polar bears stayed away.
But Henson was excited, because he was only days away from achieving his dream: to become one of the first people to reach the North Pole.
Henson put his head down and pushed forward against the wind. Suddenly, he lost his balance. The ice beneath his feet cracked, and he fell into the frigid ocean.
Henson had devoted nearly 20 years of his life to his goal of reaching the North Pole.
And now it seemed it would all end right here.