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Where
and When Did Meriwether Lewis
begin Preparations for the Journey?
Before his inauguration on March 4, 1801,
Jefferson asked Meriwether Lewis, a 29 year old career officer in
the U.S. Army, to join him in the White House as his personal secretary.
[See Donald Jackson, Letters of the Lewis and Clark Expedition,
with Related Documents, 1783-1854 Urbana: University of Illinois
Press, 1962, pp. 1-3]. Jefferson knew Lewis and Lewis' family, as
they were neighbors to his Monticello, Virginia estate. Lewis was
serving on the frontier at the time of his appointment as a lieutenant
in the 1st U.S. Infantry at Pittsburgh. Since Jefferson wrote out
all of his own correspondence, his new personal secretary was utilized
in other ways. Lewis, a staunch Jeffersonian Democrat, tested the
loyalty of top Army officers to the President and reported back
to Jefferson. Lewis was sent with sensitive messages to the ministers
of foreign powers, and generally assisted the President. But most
of all Lewis listened. Lewis absorbed Jefferson's ideas on geography,
science, politics, American Indians, and diplomacy. It seems that
Lewis was being groomed to lead Jefferson's expedition into the
West.
On
January 18, 1803, President Jefferson sent a special message to
Congress about the proposed expedition. He noted with concern the
fact that the British were carrying on a lucrative fur trade with
Indians all long the northern border of the United States and into
the West. He approached Congress with the idea that "an intelligent
officer with ten or twelve chosen men, fit for the enterprize and
willing to undertake it, taken from our posts, where they may be
spared without inconvenience, might explore the whole line, even
to the Western ocean . . ." [Jackson, Letters of the Lewis and
Clark Expedition, pp. 10-13]. In this message, Jefferson portrayed
the major goal of the projected expedition as a diplomatic one,
in which the explorers "could have conferences with the natives"
about commerce, and gain admission for American traders among the
various Indian tribes. The other major goal of the expedition, barely
stated by Jefferson on January 18, was a scientific one - to not
only explore but map and chronicle everything of interest, as he
put it, along "the only line of easy communication across the continent."
Jefferson took great care to describe the project as a cheap one
which would not cost the taxpayers much money. "Their arms & accoutrements,
some instruments of observation, & light & cheap presents for the
Indians would be all the apparatus they could carry, and with an
expectation of a soldier's portion of land on their return would
constitute the whole expense." Jefferson knew that diplomacy, especially
with the goal of increased commerce, could be sold to Congress;
scientific discovery and description could not. One seemed practical,
the other less so. Thus Jefferson asked for $2,500 to fund the expedition
(based on Lewis' initial estimates). [Jackson pp. 8-9 and 13]
President Jefferson procured passports for
Lewis from the British and French legations on February 28 and March
1, 1803 [Jackson, pp. 16-17]. At this time the Louisiana Purchase
had not been made nor was it contemplated. There was no Spanish
passport, however. In fact, the Spanish were adamantly opposed to
Jefferson's scheme. Near the end of November 1802, Jefferson asked
the minister from Spain, Carlos Martinez de Yrujo, if the Spanish
court would "take it badly, that the Congress decree the formation
of a group of travelers, who would form a small caravan and go and
explore the course of the Missouri River in which they would nominally
have the objective of investigating everything which might contribute
to the progress of commerce; but that in reality it would have no
other view than the advancement of the geography." Yrujo replied
that "an expedition of this nature could not fail to give umbrage
to our Government." Jefferson dropped the topic, but Yrujo later
warned his superior that the President "might attempt to perpetuate
the fame of his administration . . . by discovering or attempting
at least to discover the way by which the Americans may some day
extend their population and their influence up to the coast of the
South Sea [the Pacific]." [Jackson, pp. 4-5].
On about March 15, 1803, Meriwether Lewis
arrived in Harpers Ferry, Virginia (today's
West Virginia), to obtain rifles and equipment for the expedition.
He had looked at available military stores in Philadelphia at an
earlier date, but did not like what he saw. Secretary of War Henry
Dearborn ordered the officials at all federal armories to cooperate
with Lewis. The Harpers Ferry arsenal was a new facility at that
time, and had just begun turning out weapons in 1800. It was one
of two government arsenals, the other being in Springfield, Massachusetts
(it began production in 1795). At Harpers Ferry, Lewis ordered rifles
from the military stores. He also obtained other necessities for
the expedition, including scalping knives, pipe tomahawks, and an
iron boat frame. The iron boat frame detained him longer than he
had expected, and he stayed in Harpers Ferry for about a month.
It seems that the boat frame was Lewis' idea, and only he could
direct the artificers in its fabrication. It was made in two sections,
each weighing 22 pounds, which could be fitted together to form
the skeleton of a boat of 40 feet in length. This boat would be
covered with animal hides and sealed together with pitch. This special
boat could be used high in the mountains if they were unable to
make dugout canoes.
Besides procuring equipment, Lewis was also
expected to take crash courses in several disciplines to round out
his training as leader of the expedition. It is important to remember
that the Lewis and Clark Expedition was not mounted as a stunt,
merely proving that one could reach the Pacific Coast and return.
The expedition was a scientific endeavor as well as a political
and diplomatic one. With only the precedent of the voyages of James
Cook, Lewis was instructed to compile scientific data on every aspect
of the terrain through which he would pass. He was prepared for
this by Jefferson during the period he served as the President's
personal secretary, and during the Spring of 1803 by astronomer
Andrew Ellicott, physician Dr. Benjamin Rush, botanist Dr. Benjamin
Smith Barton, surveyor and mathematician Robert Patterson, and anatomist
Dr. Caspar Wistar.
Lewis
also spent his time in Philadelphia procuring supplies with the
aid of Israel Whelan, the Purveyor of Public Supplies. Lewis had
a $1,000 draft from the War Department, and he spent it with Whelan's
help. Whelan dashed about the city procuring such items as "portable
soup," medicine, special uniforms made of drab cloth, tents, tools,
kettles, tobacco, corn mills, wine, gunpowder in lead canisters,
medical and surgical supplies, and Indian presents.
In addition to all of these activities, Lewis
most certainly visited the famous museum of Charles Willson Peale,
then located on the second floor of Independence Hall. The museum
included paintings of Revolutionary heroes by Peale, as well as
paintings of the bird and
animal species of North America. Many fine specimens of everything
from toads to a full fossil skeleton of a mammoth were on display,
not to mention a unique collection of Indian artifacts from far
and wide. Lewis absorbed much useful information in this museum.
Lewis left Philadelphia on June 1 and traveled
to Washington, D.C. to meet with President Jefferson and make final
arrangements for his journey to the Pacific. These included writing
a long letter on June 19 to an old friend, William Clark, asking
him to be a co-leader of the expedition and to recruit men in his
area. Lewis told Clark the real destination of their mission (the
Pacific Coast), but told him to use a cover story that the mission
was to go up the Mississippi River to its source for his recruitment.
Lewis concluded by saying "Thus my friend you have so far as leisure
will at this time permit me to give it you, a summary view of the
plan, the means and the objects of this expedition. If therefore
there is anything under those circumstances, in this enterprise,
which would induce you to participate with me in it's fatiegues,
it's dangers and it's honors, believe me there is no man on earth
with whom I should feel equal pleasure in sharing them as with yourself."
Lewis also hinted at secret news just received by President Jefferson:
the French had offered the entire territory of Louisiana to the
United States for $15 million.
Jefferson's final instructions to Lewis were
dated June 20, 1803. [Jackson pp. 61-66]. Jefferson also procured
orders authorizing the enlistment of privates and non-coms from
Secretary of War Henry Dearborn, as well as blank commission forms.
The President gave Lewis a "letter of general credit" dated July
4, 1803. On July 3, 1803, official news arrived in the nation's
capital - Robert Livingston and James Monroe had purchased the Louisiana
Territory from Napoleon's France. The news was published in the
Washington papers on July 4, adding to the festivities. Lewis may
have joined in the celebrations - certainly U.S. ownership of Louisiana
changed several aspects of the mission he was about to undertake.
Lewis left Washington on July 5, 1803, for
Harpers Ferry, where he picked up the over 3,500 pounds of supplies
and equipment he had amassed to take overland to the Pittsburgh
area. Lewis wrote that on July 7 he shot his "guns and examined
the several articles which had been manufactured for me at this
place; they appear to be well executed." The Harpers Ferry-made
items probably included the 15 rifles, 24 pipe tomahawks, 36 tomahawks
for Indian presents, 24 large knives, 15 powder horns and pouches,
15 pairs of bullet molds, 15 wipers or gun worms, 15 ball screws,
15 gun slings, extra parts of locks and tools for replacing arms,
40 fish giggs such as the Indians use with a single barb point,
1 small grindstone and the collapsible iron frame for a canoe. Lewis
left Harpers Ferry for the West on July 8. He hired a man named
William Linnard with a Conestoga Wagon to haul the supplies to Pittsburgh.
The items were so heavy that Linnard had to obtain another wagon.
At Elizabeth, Pennsylvania, (south of Pittsburgh
on the Monongehela River), Lewis was held up for over a month waiting
for his 55-foot keelboat to be built. William Clark answered Lewis'
letter asking him to join the expedition on July 18, and followed
up with another letter on July 24. But Lewis did not receive these
letters with any speed, and as late as July 26 was worried that
Clark had not received his message or did not care to join the expedition.
Lewis was going to ask Lt. Moses Hooke, stationed at Pittsburgh,
to accompany him if he did not hear from Clark. On August 3 Secretary
of War Henry Dearborn approved Hooke's participation in the expedition,
but by the same date Lewis had received both of Clark's letters.
On August 31, 1803, the keelboat was completed
and Meriwether Lewis began his journey down the Ohio. It is believed
that Lewis also purchased what later became known as the "Red Pirogue"
at this time, a single-masted boat rowed with seven oars. On September
3, Lewis had to discharge one of the hands he hired to take the
boat down the Ohio. It seems that none of the hands or the soldiers
recruited for this leg of the trip became part of the expedition,
with the exception of George Shannon and John Colter. On September
8 at Wheeling, Virginia, a Doctor Patterson volunteered to go with
Lewis; Patterson never went, because he was an alcoholic. Lewis
investigated ancient Indian mounds on his way down the river at
what is now Creek Mounds State Historic Site near Kent, West Virginia.
The next day Lewis first mentioned his Newfoundland dog Seaman in
the journals. The water in the Ohio was low, causing long portages
at various points.
Lewis reached Cincinnati, Ohio on September
28, 1803, where he talked with Dr. William Goforth about fossil
finds in the area. Dr. Goforth was a local physician who was excavating
the fossil remains of a mastodon at the Big Bone Lick in Kentucky.
Lewis traveled to Big Bone Lick himself by October 4, and sent a
box of specimens back to President Jefferson, along with an extremely
detailed letter describing the finds of Goforth. The letter weighed
the pros and cons of whether the tusks found by Goforth belonged
to a mammoth or to another animal. The letter demonstrated how well
Lewis had learned the scant knowledge of the period regarding fossil
remains, and seems to reveal a personal interest in the subject.
It is by far the lengthiest surviving letter written by Meriwether
Lewis. Lewis spent five days at Big Bone Lick.
On October 14, 1803, the keelboat arrived
in Clarksville, Indiana, where Lewis joined William Clark, his slave
York, and the "young men from Kentucky" including Joseph and Reubin
Field, recruited by Clark on August 1, and Charles Floyd and George
Gibson. John Colter officially enlisted on October 15, George Shannon
and John Shields on the 19th, Nathaniel Hale Pryor and William Bratton
on the 20th. These so-called "nine young men from Kentucky" formed
the backbone of the expedition's crew. Whatever inexperience they
may have suffered from in October 1803 was rectified quickly at
Camp Wood and along the trail in 1804-06. We don't know if these
men met Lewis' initial criteria, but they certainly grew into the
role as time went on, and hindsight shows that Clark could not have
chosen better.
The
expedition got under way once more on October 27, moving down the
Ohio to Fort Massac, Illinois, by November 11. Today a replica of
the American fort as it looked when Lewis and Clark visited in 1803
stands on the site. Lewis hired interpreter George Drouillard and
gained volunteers from the U.S. military at Fort Massac: John Newman
and Joseph Whitehouse of Daniel Bissell's 1st Infantry Regiment.
These were the first active-duty military personnel added to the
Corps of Discovery. The most important addition at Massac was Drouillard,
or "Drewyer" as his name is most often spelled in the journals.
Born north of present-day Detroit, Michigan, Drouillard was half
French and half Shawnee Indian. Drouillard had "the right stuff"
the expedition lacked to this point - he was a real frontiersman
in the mold of Daniel Boone or Simon Kenton, by far the best hunter
and woodsman of the entire expedition. Drouillard was hired as an
interpreter for $25 per month, and was not an enlisted man or in
the chain of military command (sergeants made $8 per month, corporals
$7, and privates $5).
On November 13 the Corps left Fort Massac,
arriving in the vicinity of modern Cairo, Illinois
on the 14th. Here Lewis and Clark worked jointly on their first
scientific research and description; to study the geography at the
junction of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers. Lewis and Clark were
learning to use surveying instruments and astronomy by working together.
They also measured and compared the speed of the currents and the
volume of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. On November 16, 1803,
they began the diplomatic phase of their journey when they visited
the Wilson City area of Mississippi County, Missouri and met with
Delaware and Shawnee Indian chiefs. They probably took the occasion
to inform the Indian chiefs of the impending change in government
in Louisiana from Spain to the United States. They ended their surveys
at Cairo on November 19, and proceeded up the Mississippi River,
now working against the current. At Cape Girardeau Lewis attended
a horse race, and met the attractive daughter of Louis Lorimier.
Lewis and Clark stopped to describe and climb
Tower Rock on November 25, and arrived at Fort Kaskaskia, Illinois
on the 29th. Today Fort Kaskaskia State Historic Site, high on a
bluff above the river, shows the outlines of the earthen portion
of its fortifications in a park-like setting. In 1803, Kaskaskia
was the U.S. Army post furthest north and furthest west. Kaskaskia
was a town of 467 people when Lewis and Clark visited in 1803. Six
soldiers enlisted at Kaskaskia from Russell Bissell's Company, 1st
U.S. Infantry Regiment: Sgt. John Ordway and privates Peter M. Weiser,
Richard Windsor, Patrick Gass, John Boley, and John Collins. In
addition, John Dame, John Robertson, Ebeneezer Tuttle, Issac White,
and Alexander Hamilton Willard of Capt. Amos Stoddard's company,
U.S. Corps of Artillery, also enlisted for the journey. This was
a very important crop of men who added immeasurably to the success
of the expedition. Francois Labiche, another half-Indian half-Frenchman,
enlisted with the expedition on November 30. Another boat, the "White
Pirogue," may have been acquired at Kaskaskia; orders stated that
Lewis and Clark were to have the use "of the best boat at the Post."
Clark and the men of the Corps departed Kaskaskia on December 3,
and camped just below Ste. Genevieve. Lewis remained at Kaskaskia,
probably meeting with locals and taking care of the military and
paperwork sides of the expedition. On December 4 Clark and the men
moved further up the river, passing Ste. Genevieve on the left side,
a very prosperous town of about 1,000 residents - equal in size
to St. Louis in 1803. Clark and the men next viewed the remains
of Fort De Chartres, abandoned for over 30 years, on the right side.
On December 6, Lewis left Kaskaskia and traveled
to Cahokia along the Illinois roads. Both Lewis and Clark arrived
in Cahokia on December 7.
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