Introduction:
In December
1803, William Clark established "Camp River Dubois" on the Wood
River at the confluence of the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers,
north of St. Louis, Missouri and across the river in Illinois. While
at the camp it was Clark's responsibility to train the many different
men who had volunteered to go to the Pacific on the expedition and
turn them into an efficient team. Most of these men had never met
each other before. There were exceptions - for instance, Lewis and
Clark knew one another before the trip. There were also two brothers,
Joseph and Reubin Field, and two other men, Floyd and Pryor, were
cousins. Some had served in the same army regiments together. But
by and large, most of them were strangers to one another. The youngest
man, George Shannon, was 17 years old, the oldest, John Shields,
was 35. The average age of all the men was 27. Clark had the men
build a fort and cabins out of logs. He drilled the men, teaching
them how to march in formation, use their weapons as a team and
shoot effectively at targets. Most of all, he tried to get the men
to respect military authority and learn how to follow orders. When
they would later face danger on the frontier, there would be no
time for the men to question the officers.
During
the winter, Meriwether Lewis spent a lot of time in the little town
of St. Louis. There were only 900 people who lived in St. Louis
at that time, and almost all of them were involved, in one way or
another, with the fur trade. St. Louis was ruled by Spain, and since
1770 there had been a Spanish governor in charge of the post. The
Louisiana Purchase
above New Orleans had not yet been transferred to the United States.
Technically, when Lewis rowed across the river from Illinois to
Missouri, he was leaving the United States and entering Spanish
territory. Lewis had to gather more supplies and equipment for his
journey, because there were so many volunteers that there were over
twice as many men set to go on the expedition as he had originally
planned for! Lewis also talked with fur traders who had been up
the Missouri River, and obtained maps made by earlier explorers.
Because the first year of the journey would be over territory that
a small number of European-Americans had seen before, Lewis and
Clark wanted to gather as much information as they could about the
places they would be traveling through.
On March
9, 1804, Meriwether Lewis attended a special ceremony in St. Louis,
during which the Upper Louisiana Territory was transferred to the
United States. Now all the land from the Mississippi River to the
tops of the Rocky Mountains officially belonged to the United States.
Meriwether Lewis must have been proud to see the flag of his own
country raised over St. Louis.
Two
months later, on May 14, 1804, the expedition was ready to begin.
William Clark and the Corps of Discovery left Camp River Dubois,
and were joined by Meriwether Lewis in St. Charles, Missouri a week
later. The outbound party numbered 45, and included 27 young, unmarried
soldiers, the French-Indian interpreter Drouillard, York, and even
Captain Lewis'
Newfoundland dog, Seaman. An additional group of soldiers would
travel only to the Mandan country for the first winter. Several
French boatmen recruited in the St. Louis area helped manage the
three boats, which were laden with supplies.
Travel
up the Missouri River in 1804 was difficult and exhausting due to
heat, injuries and insects as well as the troublesome river itself,
with its strong current and many snags (big logs and trees floating
in the river which could sink a boat). The expedition used Lewis'
55-foot long keelboat and two smaller boats called pirogues to carry
their supplies and equipment. The boats used sails to move along,
but in going upriver against a strong current, oars and long poles
were used to push the boats. Sometimes the boats had to be pulled
upriver with ropes by men walking along the shoreline. This was
called cordelling. They averaged 10-15 miles per day.
During
this phase of the journey the group had some discipline problems.
Some of the men got drunk or misbehaved. They were punished harshly,
and soon the problems stopped. The men began to work together as
a team, and to like one another. One man they especially liked was
Charles Floyd, one of the three sergeants. Suddenly, on August 20,
1804, Sgt. Floyd got sick and died. It is believed that he died
of a burst appendix. He was only 22 years old. There was nothing
that could have been done to save his life, even if he had been
in the nation's largest city instead of on the frontier, and attended
by the best doctor in America. Doctors did not know enough about
the human body and how it worked in 1804 to save Charles Floyd.
Floyd was laid to rest on top of a large hill by the river, in modern-day
Sioux City, Iowa, where today there is a large monument to mark
the spot. Sgt. Floyd was the only man to die on the 2½ year journey,
even though great danger lay ahead.
The
men of the expedition nearly had a violent encounter with the Teton
(Lakota) Sioux in South Dakota. The Sioux said they wanted more
presents, and insisted that Lewis and Clark be their long-term guests
- they did not want other Indian tribes to have that honor. They
really wanted to stop Lewis and Clark because the Lakota had good
trading agreements
with nearby tribes. They knew that Lewis and Clark wished to open
the entire Missouri River to free trade for all Indian tribes with
the United States. One of the Sioux chiefs tried to keep the expedition
from moving on by holding fast to the tether rope of one of the
boats. Clark drew his sword, and ordered the men on the keelboat
to get out their guns. All the guns of Lewis and Clark's men were
pointed at the Sioux warriors, who pointed their bows and arrows
back at the explorers. The Sioux outnumbered the small Corps of
Discovery, and could easily have killed them all. On the other hand,
Lewis and Clark had powerful weapons which would kill many Sioux
warriors in a fight. After a tense moment, the chief decided to
let the explorers go. Tempers were calmed, no shots were fired,
and the boats moved upstream once again. Despite this incident,
relations with Native Americans were generally good, and councils
were held with many tribes, each of whom were presented with gifts
and peace medals, and told about the change in government from the
Spanish to the United States.
By October
the "Corps of Discovery" reached the villages of the Mandan Indian
tribe, where they
built "Fort Mandan" (near present-day Stanton, North Dakota), and
spent the winter of 1804-1805. The Mandan people lived in earth
lodges along the Missouri River. Their neighbors the Hidatsa lived
along the Knife River close by. The villages of the Mandan and Hidatsa
people were the center of a huge trade network in the West. A small
number of French, British and American traders lived in the villages
with the Indians, and even married women from the two tribes. Lewis
and Clark were not the first European-Americans to visit this part
of the country. During the winter Lewis and Clark made copious notes
in their journals, drew maps, and learned of the geography which
lay ahead from American Indians in the area of the camp. There were
many adventures during the winter, including a buffalo hunt. The
weather was very harsh, with temperatures going down to 40 degrees
below zero.
During
the winter Lewis and Clark recruited a Frenchman who had lived with
the Hidatsa (sometimes referred to as the Minnetari) Indians for
many years. His name was Toussaint Charbonneau, and the captains
wanted him to act as an interpreter. They got a real bargain, because
along with Charbonneau would come his 16-year-old Shoshoni Indian
wife, Sacagawea, and her newborn baby boy, Jean Baptiste. Sacagawea
had been captured by a raiding party of Hidatsa warriors five years
earlier, and was taken from her homeland in the Rocky Mountains
to the Knife River village where she met her husband. Lewis and
Clark knew that they would probably meet Sacagawea's people in the
Rocky Mountains, and that they might have to ask for horses if they
could not find a nearby stream which led down to the Columbia River.
So Sacagawea would be invaluable because she could speak to her
people directly for the explorers.
On April
7, 1805, Lewis and Clark sent the keelboat back to St. Louis with
an extensive collection of zoological, botanical, and ethnological
specimens as well as letters, reports,
dispatches, and maps. Members of the expedition who had caused problems
were sent back as well. As the keelboat headed south, and the expedition,
now numbering 33, resumed their journey westward in the two pirogues
and six dugout canoes. The Corps of Discovery now traveled into
regions which had been explored and seen only by Native Americans.
The
men pulled and sailed their boats up the Missouri River through
what is now Montana. They encountered fierce grizzly bears which
attacked them. The bears were so tough that even several rifle shots
wouldn't kill them. The grizzly bears were truly the kings of the
western plains. The men also investigated other animals they had
never seen before, including pronghorn antelopes and black tailed
deer. They were fascinated with the little prairie dogs that built
huge underground villages. They saw so many buffalo that at one
point they recorded that they had to "club them out of the way."
They saw huge cliffs of white rock that reminded them of castles
and huge stone buildings.
By early
June they reached a place where two rivers met. Lewis and Clark
were confused. The Indians did not tell them about such a large
river meeting the Missouri, and they had no idea which river - the
right fork or the left fork - was the right one to take. The only
clue they had was that the Indians had told them that the Missouri
had a huge waterfall on it. If they found the right river they would
see the waterfall. If they didn't, they might not get to the Pacific
Ocean in time for the winter, and would have to spend another cold
season away from
home, this time in the wilderness without Indian friends like the
Mandans and Hidatsas to help them. Lewis and Clark knew they needed
to find the correct fork of the river, and time was running short.
They led small groups of soldiers up each river, Lewis going up
the right fork and Clark up the left, both looking for the waterfall.
When they returned, both Lewis and Clark had made up their minds
about which was the right river to take, even though neither party
saw a waterfall. They asked their men what they thought. After all,
most of the men had spent a lot of time on the rivers. Labiche,
Cruzatte and Lepage were all experienced French voyageurs. All of
the men felt that the right fork was the true Missouri. It was muddy
like the Missouri, while the left fork was clear. Both Lewis and
Clark disagreed with all their men. They felt that the left fork
was the true Missouri. They told the men they would go up the left
fork, even though neither party had sighted the great falls which
would prove once and for all which was the correct fork. The men
said they would follow Lewis and Clark no matter what, even though
they thought the captains were wrong. So they started up the left
fork, calling it the Missouri and naming the right fork the Marias
River after a cousin of Meriwether Lewis.
Sacagawea
fell very sick, and the expedition moved slowly against the strong
current of the river. Meriwether Lewis became impatient, and led
a small party of men overland to see if he could find the waterfall
- otherwise, they would have to turn back and follow the other fork
of the river. On June 13 he spotted a mist rising above the hills
in front of him. After a few minutes of walking, Lewis looked down
into a deep ravine, and saw a beautiful, huge waterfall. He knew
they were on the right river.
But
the problems of the expedition were not over. Lewis scouted ahead
and found that there was not just one waterfall but five, and that
they stretched for many miles along the river. The canoes could
not be paddled upstream against such a current. They would have
to be portaged (taken out of the water and carried) around these
waterfalls. The portage at Great Falls was going to be 18 miles
long. In order to move the heavy dugout canoes and all their supplies
so far, the men had to build little "carriages" with solid wooden
wheels cut from tree trunks. The canoes were put on the wheels and
pulled by ropes by the men overland for 18 miles. They also tried
to make Sacagawea well again; after drinking water from a mineral
spring her health improved. The pirogues were left behind by this
point, so Meriwether Lewis tried to put his special collapsible,
iron-framed boat from Harpers Ferry together. He was very disappointed
when the boat did not work, but Clark was ready to help by having
two more dugout canoes made.
They
set out westward once more, paddling upstream. Soon they entered
the Rocky Mountains and saw incredibly beautiful scenery with tall
evergreen trees. By August 17 they reached the Three Forks of the
Missouri, which marked the navigable limits of that river. At this
spot the Missouri was fed by three rivers, which they named the
Jefferson, Gallatin, and Madison after government officials in Washington.
They turned up the river named for President Jefferson and finally
reached its headwaters, where the once mighty Missouri could be
easily straddled by a man. Now they had reached the crest of the
Rocky Mountains. Jefferson, Lewis and Clark had all hoped that the
trip would be easy from this point on. It was hoped that the headwaters
of the Columbia would be nearby, and that the men could float and
paddle their way downstream to the Pacific Ocean. Imagine how disappointed
Lewis was as he came to the top of the mountains - and saw nothing
but more mountains stretching off as far as he could see. Lewis
knew then, as he crossed the Continental Divide through Lemhi Pass,
that there was no easy water route to the West Coast.
Luckily,
the men had brought Sacagawea along. This mountainous area was the
homeland of her people, the Shoshoni, from whom she had been taken
five years earlier. Lewis, who needed horses to get his expedition
over the mountains, was finally able to contact the elusive Shoshoni,
who had never seen a white man before. When Sacagawea came along
the trail with her baby son on her back, she suddenly recognized
the chief of the Shoshoni, the man for whom she was supposed to
interpret - and he was her brother! If this had been the script
of a Hollywood movie, the audience would reject the scene as being
too far-fetched to be believed, yet it really happened. This happy
accident certainly helped Lewis and Clark as they bargained with
the Shoshoni for the horses they needed. In their journals, they
wrote about the happy reunion of Sacagawea with her long-lost brother.
Although she got to see old friends and her family, Sacagawea did
not decide to stay with the Shoshoni. She continued with Lewis and
Clark, her husband and baby, as the captains looked westward and
hoped to find a way to the Pacific Ocean before the harsh winter
weather set in.
The
explorers traveled overland on horseback, north to Lolo Pass, where
they crossed the Bitterroot Range on the Lolo Trail; this was the
most difficult part of the journey. The men almost starved on the
trail, and were lucky to stumble into the camps of the Nez Perce
Indians. The Nez Perce, who had never seen white men before, could
easily have killed the starved and weakened explorers and taken
their guns and trade goods. These things would have made the Nez
Perce rich and powerful. Instead, they treated the explorers with
kindness, feeding and helping them, pointing the way to the Pacific.
Lewis and Clark left their horses for safekeeping with the honest
Nez Perce, and finished making dugout canoes.
Finally, they put their canoes in the water for the trip down the
rivers to the coast. They floated down the Clearwater, Snake, and
Columbia rivers, portaging dangerous waterfalls and trading with
friendly Indians along the way. They reached the Pacific Ocean by
mid-November 1805. They had fulfilled the goals set for them by
President Jefferson. Now they had to make it through another winter
and return with their information to the United States.
Once
in sight of the ocean, the expedition was lashed by harsh winds
and cold rain as they huddled together on the north side of the
Columbia River. A decision had to be made about where to stay for
the winter. They could not return to the mountains because the snows
would be too deep. Finally, Capt. Lewis called for a vote. Everyone
in the party got to vote, including York and Sacagawea. Most African
Americans and women could not vote in the United States in 1805,
but The Corps of Discovery had become a truly democratic organization.
The decision about where to spend the winter would affect them all.
It was decided to stay on the south side of the river, inland where
the winds and rain would be less harsh and their would be more elk
to hunt for food and clothing.
In
December the explorers built Fort Clatsop on the south side of the
Columbia River (near present-day
Astoria, Oregon), and settled in for the winter. Lewis and Clark
accomplished considerable scientific work, and gathered and recorded
information regarding the country and its inhabitants. A detail
of men was assigned to make salt by boiling sea water on the Pacific
coast. The winter on the Pacific coast was not a cold one, but the
weather was dreary, with rain almost every day for months on end
and several types of biting insects, like fleas. One day, the Indians
reported that a dead whale had washed up on the shore, and Clark
led a group of the men who were curious about seeing the whale to
the ocean. Sacagawea begged Clark to take her along too, saying
that she hadn't traveled so far to miss out on seeing the ocean
and the whale. Clark brought her along on the little adventure.
The men spent most of the winter making clothing and moccasins out
of elk hides, and trying to hunt for food in an area which seemed
to have very little game. No contact was made with any trading ships,
and Lewis and Clark knew that all the men would have to return to
the United States by an overland route.
On March
23, 1806 the return trip began. After a tough journey up the Columbia
River against strong currents and many waterfalls, the party retrieved
their horses from their friends the Nez Perce, and waited in the
Indian villages for the deep mountain snows to melt. It wasn't until
June that they could get over the mountains and back to the Missouri
River basin. After crossing the Bitterroots Lewis and Clark decided
to split their party at Lolo Pass in
order to add to the knowledge they could gather. They wanted to
be certain that there was not an easier way to cross the continent
to the Pacific, and that they had not missed an important potential
route or pass. Confident of their survival, Lewis went north along
the Missouri River while Clark went south along the Yellowstone
River. They planned to rendezvous where the Yellowstone and Missouri
Rivers come together in western North Dakota. Clark took the larger
group with him, including Sacagawea, her husband and son, and York.
Lewis took along the best hunters and outdoorsmen, including George
Drouillard and the Field brothers.
While
on the Marias River in Montana Lewis' small group had a fight with
a party of Blackfeet Indians, and was forced to kill two of them
who tried to steal their guns and horses. This was the only violent
incident of the entire journey. While out hunting one day, Lewis
was accidentally shot by Cruzatte, a nearsighted member of his own
crew. The painful wound in Lewis' backside kept him from being able
to sit down or continue his journal writing. Soon after this near-disaster,
the Corps of Discovery was reunited in North Dakota. They returned
to the Mandan villages where they left Charbonneau, Sacagawea and
the baby behind. Clark promised to take care of the baby, who he
nicknamed "Pomp." Three years later, Charbonneau and Sacagawea brought
Pomp down to St. Louis, where William Clark saw to his schooling.
At
the Mandan villages Lewis and Clark convinced a chief named Sheheke
(they called him "Big White") to come with them to meet President
Jefferson in Washington. As they continued down the Missouri River,
they had Chief Sheheke, his wife, and an interpreter named Rene
Jusseaume with his family along in their dugout canoes. One of Lewis
and Clark's men stayed behind. His name was John Colter, and he
asked special permission to remain in the Mandan country to trap
furs and try to make a living as a "mountain man." Colter later
became one of the most famous mountain men, and was the first non-Indian
to see the Grand Tetons and what is now Yellowstone National Park.
The
Lewis and Clark Expedition returned to St. Louis on September 23,
1806. Nearly all the people of the little town lined the riverbank
to welcome them back. Dinner parties and dances were held in their
honor. When people in the settled portions of the United States
heard that Lewis and Clark had returned from the West, they could
barely believe it. Most people had given them up for dead. If wild
animals, hunger, harsh weather or Indians hadn't killed them, perhaps
they had gotten lost, they thought. Of course, none of those things
happened. Lewis, Clark, and nearly all their men returned to St.
Louis as heroes. The Corps of Discovery broke up in St. Louis. Lewis
and Clark made their way to Washington, where they told President
Jefferson in person about the wonders they had seen in the West.
The dream of Jefferson and of Jefferson's father had finally come
true, and Americans had climbed the Rocky Mountains and walked on
the beaches of Oregon.
What
did Lewis and Clark accomplish, and what was the significance of
their Expedition? From the standpoint of international politics,
the expedition altered the struggle for the control of North America,
particularity in the Pacific Northwest, by strengthening the U.S.
claim to the areas which today includes the states of Oregon, Idaho
and Washington. Lewis and Clark also achieved an impressive record
of peaceful cooperation with the Indians. The expedition generated
American interest in the fur trade. This had a far reaching effect,
since it led to further exploration and commercial exploitation
of the West. It can be said that Lewis and Clark's trek set off
a century of rapid settlement which peopled the West with Euro-Americans
and unfortunately disrupted or ruined the cultures and lifestyles
of countless Native Americans. Lewis and Clark added to geographical
knowledge by determining the true course of the Upper Missouri and
its major tributaries. They forever destroyed the dream of a Northwest
Passage (a water route across the continent), but proved the success
of overland travel to the Pacific. In addition, William Clark produced
maps of tremendous value to later explorers. The expedition compiled
the first general survey of life and material culture of the village
Indians of the Missouri, the Rocky Mountain tribes, and the Native
Americans of the Northwest coast.
Lewis
and Clark made significant additions to the zoological and botanical
knowledge of the continent, providing the first scientific descriptions
of many new species including the grizzly bear, prairie dog, pronghorn
antelope, and mountain goat. They made the first attempt at a systematic
record of the meteorology (weather) of the West, and less successfully
attempted to determine the latitude and longitude of significant
geographical points.
Lewis
and Clark traveled over 8,000 miles in less than 2½ years, losing
only one member of their party, at a total cost to the taxpayer
of $40,000. By any measure of scientific exploration, the Lewis
and Clark expedition was phenomenally successful in terms of
accomplishing its stated goals, expanding human knowledge, and spurring
further curiosity and wonder about the vast American West. But in
the end, it was Thomas Jefferson who was most pleased. In late 1806,
Meriwether Lewis returned to Washington, D.C., and spread maps out
on the floor of the White House, delighting the President with the
tales of his travels. Jefferson's dream, and the dream of his father,
Peter Jefferson, had finally come true. The West had been investigated,
the Pacific had been reached by an overland route, and America would
never be the same again.
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