Albert Norwood Albert Norwood was employed by the Pacific Steam Whaling Company. The company’s manging agent, Josiah Knowles, convinced that he should send ships to explore for whales in the shallow Beaufort Sea, sent first officers James Tilton and Albert Norwood to winter in the north. Norwood had the //Grampus,// the lightest of the company’s ships, and Tilton had a smaller tug, the //Mary D. Hume.//((John R. Bockstoce, //Whales, Ice & Men: The History of Whaling in the Western Arctic.// Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1986: 260-62.)) The //Hume// reached Herschel Island in August 1889 and unloaded lumber and supplies on a sandspit on the southern side of the island. The crew built a storage house and then joined the whaling fleet that had passed them going east. The //Grampus// and //Hume// took no whales that fall and were frozen in unexpectedly at Pauline Cove on 18 September 1898, twenty miles from the storage house. The schooner //Nicoline,// commanded and owned by Louis and Ned Herendeen, arrived from the west and was frozen in at the same place. Pauline Cove proved a safe harbour from the crush of the pack ice. As winter set in, the ships’ crews tore down the storehouse and rebuilt it at the Cove. They found a source for water in a freshwater pond in the middle of the island. In October, they were surprised by a group of Van Tut Gwich’in who came from south of the mountains with caribou meat and skins to trade.((John R. Bockstoce, //Whales, Ice & Men: The History of Whaling in the Western Arctic.// Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1986: 260-62.)) On 15 March 1899, Robert Coleman, the //Hume's// fireman and three men from the //Grampus// deserted for the Yukon River basin gold fields, 600 miles away. The men were poorly provisioned and would have perished but captains Tilton and Norwood overtook them, badly frostbitten and exhausted.((John R. Bockstoce, //Whales, Ice & Men: The History of Whaling in the Western Arctic.// Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1986: 262-66.)) On November 4th, John A. Drayton, the first mate of the //Grampus,// died of dropsy. George Leavitt was with the whalers and in June he set out in a whaleboat to cruise 150 miles of coast from Icy Reef, in Alaska to Tent Island on the delta, looking for whales but finding none. On 10 July, the //Nicoline// headed back home empty to San Francisco and the //Hume// and //Grampus// sailed east. On July 24th they discovered whales near Cape Bathurst. The //Grampus// caught twenty-one whales and headed to San Francisco with the whalebone from the //Hume// as well.((John R. Bockstoce, //Whales, Ice & Men: The History of Whaling in the Western Arctic.// Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1986: 262-66.)) Norwood was in the Klondike in 1903, and he owned and managed a group of claims. John McLain stopped at one of his hill claims during clean-up. After two days of sluicing, Norwood recovered about $4000 in gold.((John Scudder McLain, //Alaska and the Klondike.// New York: McClure, Phillips & Co. 1905: 64-5.))