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THE GREAT
RECONNAISSANCE
The period just before and during the Civil
War was known as the Great Reconnaissance in western exploration.
Scientists who viewed the West as a great outdoor laboratory began
to mount expeditions sponsored by such institutions as the Philadelphia
Academy of Natural Sciences, the Albany Academy, and the National
Museum [later called the Smithsonian]. The U.S. Army Topographical
Engineers were also involved, in their last gasp of activity before
the Civil War. These explorers took a Humboldtian, cosmic approach
to geography. They produced James Hall's geological map of the West.
Simpson's explorations revealed the existence of many unknown ancient
Indian sites. Generally, people who lived in the West wished to
exploit its resources, while explorers led the way toward conservation.
| 1856 |
Lt. Gouverneur Kemble Warren
and Ferdinand V. Hayden explored the great plains of Nebraska.
The 1857 Warren map was the first sophisticated depiction of
the trans-Mississippi west. |
| 1857 |
Joseph C. Ives of the Topographical
Engineers tried to ascend the Colorado River from the Gulf of
California. An overland expedition was able to explore the floor
of the Grand Canyon in its lower reaches. |
| 1859 |
John M. Macomb found ancient
Indian ruins near the Mesa Verde area of Colorado. Macomb's
expeditions filled in a major blank area on maps of the period. |
| 1860 |
The State of California
authorized the California Geological Survey, headed by Josiah
Dwight Whitney. Whitney was probably America's foremost metallurgist,
chemist and geologist at that time. Whitney put together a group
of college-trained scientists. The maps produced by the survey
used topographical systems and served as models for later survey
maps. It was the Whitney Survey which urged President Lincoln
to set aside Yosemite as a park [1864]. The 1865 report of the
survey tied Yosemite in with tourism, as another potential industry
for California. The Sierras were completely mapped in 1864;
elevations were accurately measured with barometers. Clarence
King was a member of the California Survey, and wrote Mountaineering
in the High Sierras, a classic account of western exploration.
The Survey ended in 1868 when the state cut off funding. The
California Geological Survey was extremely important as a "proving
ground" for later U.S. Government surveys. |
THE GREAT SURVEYS
Independents:
| 1868-73 |
Othniel C. Marsh, a paleontologist,
discovered ancient horse fossils and pterodactyl fossils for
Yale. |
| 1869 |
David E. Folsom, C.W. Cook,
and a ranch hand named Peterson went into the mysterious Yellowstone
country. |
| 1870 |
Nathaniel P. Langford of
Helena, Montana, General Henry D. Washburn, and Lt. Gustavus
C. Doane went on a civilian-sponsored expedition of Yellowstone.
All of the nineteen explorers (save one) decided that thoughts
of personal exploitation of the area should be abandoned, and
at the suggestion of Cornelius Hedges, to work together in an
effort to persuade the U.S. Government to set aside the region
as a national park. Langford wrote several articles advocating
this and became known as "National Park Langford." |
| 1874 |
The Custer expedition to
the Black Hills reported that there was gold there, even though
the scientists along said there was not. |
| 1875 |
Walter P. Jenney and Henry
Newton, heading a civilian expedition sponsored by the Department
of the Interior, confirmed the presence of gold in the Black
Hills. |

The Big Four Government-Sponsored
Surveys
1) Clarence
King: King explored the 40th parallel from the 120th meridian to
the 105th, over a 100 mile wide swath, along the route of the transcontinental
railroad. The U.S. Army sponsored the expeditions, although the
only military connection was the use of military posts and supplies,
as well as escorts. King, a Yale-trained scientist, made his own
choice as to civilian scientists for his staff. This was a systematic
exploration of the West.
1867 - When King was 25 years old, he began to head this survey.
The men along included the photographer Timothy O'Sullivan. Rock
specimens were collected, and potential mines investigated. Malaria
struck and swept through the camp; King was struck by lightning
but survived.
1868 - Mapping the Great Basin. The first report from the survey
was the practical The Mining Industry (1870); followed by Botany
(1871). King's book Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevadas (1872)
was a readable account of high adventure. The survey lasted until
1873. Studies of descriptive geology, ornithology, paleontology,
and an atlas were also published. The most important report was
also written by King, on Systemic Geology. The King survey brought
western exploration into the realm of academic science. In 1879,
King was named first director of the U.S. Geological Survey.
2) Lt. George
M. Wheeler surveyed west of the 100th meridian. Wheeler was married
to the daughter of Missouri politician Frank Blair. Wheeler was
a soldier who was "born too late" to participate in the
Civil War. In 1871, the 30-year-old Wheeler, along with photographer
Timothy O'Sullivan, newspaper reporter Frederick Loring, and geologist
Grove Karl Gilbert, a party of 30 men altogether, explored eastern
Nevada and Arizona, including Death Valley. In 1873, they went up
the Grand Canyon as far as Diamond Creek, where Ives had explored
earlier. Prof. Cope later joined the survey as a paleontologist,
and Elliott Coues served as a zoologist. In 1874, the Wheeler and
King surveys found themselves working in the same location; each
tried to outdo the other in production, and tried to sabotage their
competition. This resulted in a Congressional investigation, with
the civilian, Department of the Interior-sponsored expeditions vs.
the U.S. Army-sponsored ones. Neither side won the argument, and
all continued in the field. The last year of the Wheeler survey
was 1878; the work of the survey was declared to be too broad. In
1879, all western surveys were consolidated under Clarence King
and the U.S. Geological Survey.
3)
Ferdinand V. Hayden: Hayden was born in 1829, and attended Oberlin
College in Ohio, receiving an M.D. at the Albany, N.Y. Medical College.
In 1854, sponsored by the Chouteau family, Hayden explored the Dakotas,
identifying cretaceous strata. In 1856-57, he accompanied Gouverneur
Warren. Hayden served in the Civil War as a surgeon of volunteers.
In 1867, the State of Nebraska offered Hayden funds to conduct a
geological survey there.
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Map used courtesy of the Library of Congress
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In 1868, the survey was extended, with U.S.
Government money, west to the Rockies. The survey followed the line
of the Union Pacific Railroad. The government was pleased with the
results, and doubled the amount given to Hayden in 1869 to $10,000
so that he could continue his work. Hayden reported directly to
the Secretary of the Interior. The United States Geological Survey
of the Territories became the official name of the survey. In 1869,
the group worked along the Rockies from Denver to Santa Fe. Hayden's
published reports emphasized the uses of the territory and future
exploitation of resources, including tourism. In 1870, the group
received a $25,000 appropriation. A 20-man expedition followed the
line of the Union Pacific Railroad, then went up to South Pass,
Fort Bridger, Henry's Fork, and Cheyenne. The photographer William
Henry Jackson joined the expedition for the first time in 1870.
Hayden was careful to publish his reports as soon as possible at
the end of each year, thus keeping the public and Congress aware
of his activities. Books of photographs, such as Sun Pictures of
Rocky Mountain Scenery (1870), were given free to Congressmen and
were best-sellers with the public.
In 1871, $40,000 was appropriated for an
official expedition into the Yellowstone country. In addition to
photographer and artist William Henry Jackson, the artist Thomas
Moran joined the party. Hayden championed the National Park idea
which Langford had been pushing. The idea was also helped by lobbying
in Congress from members of the Washburn-Doane expedition and the
Northern Pacific Railroad. On March 1, 1872, Yellowstone was declared
the world's first National Park, modeled after Yosemite. In 1872,
further explorations were made of Yellowstone, the Fort Hall area,
and Pierre's Hole. In 1873, the survey moved to Colorado, with an
appropriation of $75,000. They stumbled upon the Mount of the Holy
Cross, and on ancient Indian ruins at Mesa Verde in 1874. [But not
cliff palace - that was discovered down a side canyon by cowboys
Bob Wetherill and Charles Mason in 1888]. In 1877, William H. Holmes
and William Henry Jackson made a tour of most of the known "Anasazi"
sites, including San Juan, Canyon de Chelly, Chaco Canyon, Pueblo
Pintado and the existing Moqui [Hopi] Villages near the Colorado
River. Their explorations revealed for the first time the sweep
of an entire lost civilization. Also in 1877, the studies of ethnology
and geology were divided between Hayden and John Wesley Powell [Hayden
chose geology]. 1877-78, Hayden's survey was in Idaho, Wyoming and
Yellowstone. The survey ended there, although Hayden plugged on,
on his own, until 1883, when he retired due to ill health; he died
in 1886.

4) John Wesley
Powell was born in New York State in 1834, the son of a Methodist
preacher. He moved to Illinois with his family when he was a boy,
and was tutored by a curious old man named George Crookham. After
attending Oberlin College in Ohio, the Civil War broke out. An ardent
abolitionist, Powell commanded the 2nd Illinois Artillery. His right
arm was amputated after being shattered by a minie ball at Shiloh.
Powell also served at Vicksburg and in the Nashville and Atlanta
campaigns.
After the war Powell accepted a post as professor
of natural history at Illinois Wesleyan College, where he taught
botany, zoology, comparative anatomy, and other scientific subjects.
He later taught at Illinois Normal University near Bloomington.
Illinois Normal financed Powell's first scientific trip to the Rockies
in 1867. Several other financial institutions also contributed money
[Illinois Industrial University, Chicago Academy of Sciences], as
well as railroad companies [Union Pacific; Chicago, Alton and St.
Louis; Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago; Chicago and Rock Island].
General Grant, a friend from their military days together, gave
his support, granting Powell a military escort. The remainder of
the expenses were paid out of Powell's own pocket. His personnel
included college students, amateur naturalists, professors and relatives,
including his wife Emma Dean. On the 1867 trip, they explored the
Rocky Mountains, climbing Pike's Peak along with Mrs.
Powell. On his return, Powell traveled the country, giving dramatic
lectures. In 1868, the same group explored Middle Park, Colorado
and the Long's Peak area.
In 1869, Powell set out on his greatest adventure; the descent of
the Colorado River. Some government money, but mostly private funds
bankrolled the expedition [John Wesley Powell, Illinois Normal,
Illinois Industrial, the Chicago Academy of Sciences, the Union
Pacific Railroad; the Burlington Railroad]. Four special boats were
built [three 21 feet long, of oak; and a fourth of light pine, 16
feet long. All had watertight compartments fore and aft]. A total
of nine men ran the rapids of Green River Canyon, Red Canyon, Lodore
Canyon, Desolation Canyon, Cool Canyon, Labyrinth Canyon, and Stillwater
Canyon. By the time of the junction with the Grand [Colorado] River,
the boats had traveled 538 miles. Below Grand Junction they went
through Cataract Canyon, past the Dirty Devil River through Glen
Canyon to Lee's Ferry [this is the point where Escalante crossed
in 1776], and into Marble Canyon. Crossing the Little Colorado they
entered the Grand Canyon for some of the roughest rapids yet. As
the walls closed in about them and the sound of the river became
a continuous, never-ending roar, the nerves of the men began to
fray. Finally, a particularly nasty-looking rapid convinced three
of the group [Oramel Howland, Bill and Seneca Dunn] to leave and
try to climb out of the Canyon to walk overland to the Mormon settlements.
They did not know that Powell was within three days of reaching
the end of the Grand Canyon and contact with Mormon settlers himself.
The three men were killed by Indians on the plateau country west
of the canyon.
With Powell's emergence from the epic journey
down the Colorado, he became an internationally-known figure. He
lectured widely on his experiences, and wrote a book. His surveys
continued. In 1870, the plateaus north of the Grand Canyon and Zion;
1871-72, another Colorado River trip, with three new boats and a
photographer along [Beaman; Fennemore; Hillers]. It was during this
trip that Powell observed the river tied to a chair on one of the
boats. Powell did not accompany the men for the entire journey;
in fact, part of his time was spent in Washington, D.C., gaining
government money to continue his surveys. The Powell Survey identified
the last unknown river [Escalante] and mountain range [Henry] in
the continental United States. The survey lasted until 1879.
John Wesley Powell centered on a single problem,
that presented by the environment on the people who wished to settle
the West and make use of it. Adaptation was the key, according to
Powell, and Eastern institutions and techniques could not be transplanted
successfully to the West. Powell felt that his mission was to describe
the new Western environment and point up its lessons for the onrushing
tide of civilization. Powells' books Exploration of the Colorado
River of the West (1875) and Report on the Geology of the Eastern
Portion of the Uinta Mountains (1876) presented important, far-ranging
geological concepts.
Powell made friends among the Indians, gained
their trust, learned their languages and customs. He favored "civilizing"
Indians on reservations. His book Report on the Arid Regions of
the United States (1879) was the first modern treatise on political
reform in the West. Much of the West was unsuitable for settlement
and farming along the patterns used in the East. A scientific and
environmental approach to using the West and its resources wisely
was needed, argued Powell. Powell advocated mapping and classifying
lands; and new land laws which would allocate irrigation districts
and pasturage districts, similar to what Powell had seen in the
Mormon colonies along Utah rivers. Land should be sold in 80 acre
units, not 160. Irrigation cooperatives were encouraged. Powell
wanted to prevent monopolies of water rights. Powell's report was
heartily disliked by westerners, who said that it favored the big
money men and corporations.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
The
Grant era was an age in which the great surveys flourished. But
the Hayes administration, beginning in 1877, ushered in an era of
reforms. In 1879, Clarence King was appointed to head the U.S. Geological
Survey; Powell was appointed to the Bureau of Ethnology. This change
in the surveys brought the era begun by Lewis and Clark to an end.
The Geological Survey began to amass information on the resources
of the United States; the age of true exploration was over. King
was no conservationist; he favored mining and mineral rights during
his tenure on the Survey, until 1880. No work on irrigation was
done during these two years. King resigned in 1880, and died in
Arizona amid his mining interests in 1901.
Powell was brought in to head the U.S. Geological
Survey, and enlarged its responsibilities and budget. His irrigation
survey of the entire West angered westerners, who said it took too
long. Powell's work was never finished, as he resigned from the
survey in 1894. He remained as head of the Bureau of Ethnology until
his death in 1902.
The great age of exploration began with Columbus
in 1492, and has never really ended. The great age of American continental
exploration falls between 1804-1880.

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