|
Collapsible Boat
During the first year of their trek across
the continent (1804-05), Lewis and Clark carried the dismantled
frame of a collapsible boat. Designed by Meriwether
Lewis, the frame could be bolted together and covered with animal
skins. The boat would be used in inaccessible areas, when the heavier
wooden boats were left behind. Unfortunately, tar was required to
make the invention waterproof, and by the time the expedition needed
the boat, in the vicinity of Great
Falls, Montana, there were no pine trees to provide it. Attempts
to contrive a substitute were unsuccessful; the boat leaked and
could not be used, and dugout canoes were made instead.
[See especially The Journals of Lewis and Clark for the period June
25 - July 9, 1805]. The collapsible boat was left behind in the
mountains. There is some debate over whether it was recovered and
hauled back to St. Louis or left in a cache in the Great Falls area.
|