Boy Scouts on Hudson Bay; Or, the Disappearing Fleet
Boy Scouts on Hudson Bay; Or, the Disappearing Fleet
1913. Five Boy Scouts venture into the remote wilderness of Northern Canada, answering rumors of a lost copper mine and a phantom fleet that vanishes without trace in Hudson Bay's fog-shrouded waters. Ned leads his small band, Jimmy, Jack, Frank, and Teddy, through trackless forests and across rushing rivers, each boy sharpened by the frontier's demands. They face a charging bull moose their first night, encounter shadowy figures who may be friend or foe, and uncover clues to a mystery that has confounded the region. Ralphson writes with the earnest vigor of his era: the boys are earnest, the dangers are real, and the wilderness looms vast and indifferent. This is adventure fiction stripped to its bones, no cynicism, just courage, camaraderie, and the thrill of the unknown. It endures for the same reason all good boys' adventure stories do: because watching young people meet the world head-on, with nothing but pluck and each other, never gets old.















