Lewis and Clark Expedition
The phrases Lewis and Clark and Lewis & Clark redirect here. For other uses, see Lewis and Clark (disambiguation). For the similarly pronounced TV series, see Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman.The
Lewis and Clark expedition (1804–1806) was the first
United States overland expedition to the Pacific coast and back, led by
Captain Meriwether Lewis and
Second Lieutenant William Clark, of the
United States Army.
In a message to
Congress Thomas Jefferson wrote
The river Missouri, and Indians inhabiting it, are not as well known as rendered desirable by their connection with the Mississippi, and consequently with us. ... An intelligent officer, with ten or twelve chosen men ... might explore the whole line, even to the Western Ocean ...
In a letter dated
June 20,
1803 Thomas Jefferson wrote to
Meriwether LewisThe object of your mission is to explore the Missouri river, and such principal stream of it as by its course and communication with the waters of the Pacific ocean whether the Columbia, Oregon, Colorado or any other river may offer the most direct and practicable water communication across this continent for the purposes of commerce.
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Lewis and Clark on the Lower Columbia by C.M. Russell |
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Mandan and Arikara delegation. (NB this photograph dates well after the Expedition) |
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The famous map of Lewis and Clark's expedition. It changed mapping of northwest America by providing the first accurate depiction of the relationship of the sources of the Columbia and Missouri rivers, and the Rocky Mountains. |
Lewis and Clark traveled for twenty-eight months and traveled across over 8,000 miles.
The
Louisiana Purchase, in 1803, sparked interest in expansion to the west coast. A few weeks after the purchase,
United States President Thomas Jefferson, an advocate of western expansion, had the
U.S. Congress appropriate $2500, "to send intelligent officers with ten or twelve men, to explore even to the Western ocean". They were to study the
Indian tribes,
botany,
geology, Western terrain and
wildlife in the region, as well as evaluate the potential interference of British and French-Canadian hunters and trappers who were already well established in the area. The expedition was not the first to cross North America, but was roughly a decade after the expedition of
Alexander MacKenzie, the first European to cross to the
Pacific Ocean, in 1793.
Jefferson selected
Captain Meriwether Lewis to lead the expedition, afterwards known as the
Corps of Discovery; Lewis selected
William Clark as his partner. Due to bureaucratic delays in the
US Army, Clark officially only held the rank of
Second Lieutenant at the time, but Lewis concealed this from the men and shared the leadership of the expedition, always referring to Clark as "Captain" ([
1]).
The group, initially consisting of 33 members, departed from
Camp Dubois, near present day Hartford, Illinois, and began their historic journey on
May 14, 1804. They soon met-up with Lewis in
Saint Charles, Missouri and the approximately forty men followed the
Missouri River westward. Soon they passed
La Charrette Missouri, the last white settlement on the Missouri River. The expedition followed the Missouri through what is now
Kansas City, Missouri and
Omaha, Nebraska. On
August 20, 1804, the Corps of Discovery suffered its first and only death when Sergeant
Charles Floyd died, apparently from acute
appendicitis. He was buried at
Floyd's Bluff, near what is now
Sioux City,
Iowa. During the final week of August, Lewis and Clark had reached the edge of the Great Plains, a place abounding with elk, deer, buffalo, and beavers. They were also entering Sioux territory.
The first tribe of
Sioux they met, the Yankton Sioux, were more peaceful than their neighbors further along the Missouri River, the Teton Sioux, also known as the
Lakota. The Yankton Sioux were disappointed by the gifts they received from Lewis and Clarkand gave the explorers a warning about the upriver Teton Sioux. The Teton Sioux received their gifts with ill-disguised hostility. One chief demanded a boat from Lewis and Clark as the price to be paid for passage through their territory. As the Indians became more dangerous, Lewis and Clark prepared to fight back. At the last moment before fighting began, the two sides fell back. The Americans quickly headed upriver until winter stopped them at the
Mandan tribe's territory.
In the winter of 1804–1805, the party wintered at
Fort Mandan, near present-day
Washburn, North Dakota. The
Shoshone/
Hidatsa native woman
Sacagawea and her husband,
French Canadian Toussaint Charbonneau, joined the group there and guided them westward. Sacagawea and her
Shoshone tribe came from further west. Not only did Lewis and Clark feel that she could aid them in translation, but they also thought that when they got to that part of the country, she could take them to her native home. In April 1805, some members of the expedition were sent back home from Mandan in the 'return party'. Along with them went a report about what Lewis and Clark had discovered, 108 botanical specimens, 68 mineral specimens, and Clark's map of the United States.
The expedition continued to follow the Missouri to its headwaters and the
Continental Divide. In canoes, they descended the mountains by the
Clearwater River, the
Snake River, and the
Columbia River, past
Celilo Falls and past what is now
Portland, Oregon. At this point, Lewis spotted
Mt. Hood, a mountain known to be very close to the ocean. On a big
pine, Clark carved
"William Clark December 3rd 1805. By land from the U.States in 1804 & 1805"[Bernard deVoto (1962), The Course of Empire (Boston:Houghton Mifflin); p. 552]Clark had written in his journal, "Ocian [sic] in view! O! The Joy!". One journal entry is captioned "
Cape Disappointment at the Enterance of the Columbia River into the Great
South Sea or Pacific Ocean".
By that time the expedition faced its second bitter winter during the trip, so the group decided to vote on whether to camp on the north or south side of the Columbia River. The party agreed to camp on the south side of the river (modern
Astoria, Oregon), building
Fort Clatsop as their winter quarters. While wintering at the fort, the men prepared for the trip home by boiling salt from the ocean, hunting elk and other wildlife. Mostly they just endured the persistent rain.
The explorers started their journey home on
March 23,
1806. On the way home, Lewis and Clark used four dugout canoes they bought from the Native Americans, plus one that they stole [
2]. Less than a month after leaving Fort Clatsop, they abandoned their canoes because crossing across all the falls proved too much a challenge.
On July 3, Lewis and Clark split into two teams so Lewis could explore the
Marias River. Lewis' group of four met the
Blackfeet Indians. Their interview was cordial, but during the night, the Blackfeet tried to steal their weapons. In the struggle, two Indians were killed. The group of four--Lewis, Drouillard, and the Field brothers fled over 100 miles in a day before they camped again. Clark, meanwhile, had entered Crow territory. The
Crow tribe were known as horse thieves. At night, half of Clark's horses were gone, but not a single Crow was seen. Lewis and Clark stayed separated until they reached the confluence of the
Yellowstone and
Missouri Rivers on August 11, when one of Clark's hunters, Pierre Cruzatte, blind in one eye and nearsighted in the other, mistook Lewis for an elk and fired, injuring Lewis in the thigh. From there, the groups were reunited and able to quickly return home by the Missouri River. They reached St. Louis on September 23, 1806.
The Corps of Discovery returned with important information about the new United States territory and the people who lived in it, as well as its rivers and mountains, plants and animals. The expedition made a major contribution to mapping the North American continent.
See Timeline of the Lewis and Clark Expedition for more detailAlso for a better journal kept by the Corps of Discovery |
Black tailed Prairie Dog |
*The U.S. gained an extensive knowledge of the
geography of the
American West in the form of maps of major rivers and mountain ranges
*Observed and described 178 plants and 122 species and subspecies of animals (see
List of species described by the Lewis and Clark Expedition)
*Encouraged Euro-American fur trade in the West
*Opened Euro-American diplomatic relations with the Indians
*Established a precedent for Army exploration of the West
*Strengthened the U.S. claim to
Oregon Territory*Focused U.S. and media attention on the West
*Produced a large body of literature about the West (the Lewis and Clark diaries)
*Captain
Meriwether Lewis (1774 – 1809) was private secretary to President Thomas Jefferson and leader of the Expedition.
*Captain
William Clark (1770 – 1838) shared command of the Expedition, although technically second in command. His carved date is the only physical remains of the expedition that can be seen today.
*
York (ca. 1770 – 1831) as Clark's manservant (slave), he shared the dangers of the journey, but not the rewards.
*Sergeant
Charles Floyd (1782 – 1804) was the Expedition's quartermaster, but died early in the trip. He was the only person who died during the expedition.
*Sergeant
Patrick Gass (1771 – 1870) was chief carpenter, promoted to Sergeant after Floyd's death.
*Sergeant
John Ordway (ca. 1775 – ca. 1817) was responsible for issuing provisions, appointing guard duties, and keeping records for the Expedition.
*Sergeant
Nathaniel Hale Pryor (1772 – 1831) was leader of the 1st Squad; he presided over the
court martial of privates John Collins and Hugh Hall.
*Corporal
Richard Warfington (1777 – ?) conducted the return party to St. Louis in 1805.
*Private
John Boley (dates unknown) was disciplined at River Dubois and was assigned to the return party.
*Private
William E. Bratton (1778 – 1841) served as hunter and blacksmith.
*Private
John Collins (? – 1823) had frequent disciplinary problems; he was court-martialed for stealing whiskey which he had been assigned to guard.
*Private
John Colter (ca. 1775 – 1813) charged with mutiny early in the trip, he later proved useful as a hunter; he earned his fame
after the journey.
*Private
Pierre Cruzatte (dates unknown) was a one-eyed French fiddle-player and a skilled boatman.
*Private
John Dame (1784 – ?) killed a pelican.
*Private
Joseph Field (ca. 1772 – 1807) was a woodsman and skilled hunter, brother of Reubin.
*Private
Reubin Field (ca. 1771 – 1823?) was a woodsman and skilled hunter, brother of Joseph.
*Private
Robert Frazer (? – 1837) kept a journal that was never published.
*Private
George Gibson (? – 1809) was a fiddle-player and a good hunter; he served as an interpreter (probably via sign language).
*Private
Silas Goodrich (dates unknown) was the main fisherman of the expedition.
*Private
Hugh Hall (ca. 1772 – ?) was court-martialed with John Collins for stealing whiskey.
*Private
Thomas Proctor Howard (1779 – ?) was court-martialed for setting a "pernicious example" to the Indians by showing them that the wall at Fort Mandan was easily scaled.
*Private
François Labiche (dates unknown) was a French fur trader who served as an interpreter and boatman.
*Private
Hugh McNeal (dates unknown) was the first white explorer to stand astride the headwaters of the Missouri River on the Continental Divide.
*Private
John Newman (ca. 1785 – 1838) was court-martialed and confined for "having uttered repeated expressions of a highly criminal and mutinous nature."
*Private
John Potts (1776 – 1808?) was German immigrant and a miller.
*Private
Moses B. Reed (dates unknown) attempted to desert in August 1804, convicted of desertion and expelled from the party.
*Private
John Robertson (ca. 1780 – ?) was a member of the Corps for a very short time.
*Private
George Shannon (1785 – 1836) was lost twice during the expedition, once for sixteen days.
*Private
John Shields (1769 – 1809) was a blacksmith, gunsmith, and a skilled carpenter; with John Colter, he was court-martialed for
mutiny.
*Private
John B. Thompson (dates unknown) may have had some experience as a surveyor.
*Private
Howard Tunn (1770 – ?) was a hunter and navigator.
*Private
Ebenezer Tuttle (1773 – ?) may have been the man sent back on June 12, 1804; otherwise, he was with the return party from Fort Mandan in 1805.
*Private
Peter M. Weiser (1781 – 1828) had some minor disciplinary problems at River Dubois; he was made a permanent member of the party.
*Private
William Werner (dates unknown) was convicted of being absent without leave at
St. Charles, Missouri, at the start of the expedition.
*Private
Isaac White (ca. 1774 – ?) may have been the man sent back on June 12, 1804; otherwise, he was with the return party from Fort Mandan in 1805.
*Private
Joseph Whitehouse (ca. 1775 – ?) often acted as a tailor for the other men; he kept a journal which extended the Expedition narrative by almost five months.
*Private
Alexander Hamilton Willard (1778 – 1865) was a blacksmith and assisted John Shields. He was convicted on July 12, 1804, of sleeping while on sentry duty and given one hundred lashes.
*Private
Richard Windsor (dates unknown) was often assigned duty as a hunter.
*Interpreter
Toussaint Charbonneau, Sacagawea's husband, served as a translator and often as a cook.
*Interpreter
Sacagawea, Charbonneau's wife, translated Shoshone to Hidatsa for Charbonneau and was a valued member of the expedition.
**
Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, Charbonneau and Sacagawea's son, born February 11, 1805; his presence helped dispel any notion that the expedition was a war party, smoothing the way in Indian lands.
*Interpreter
George Drouillard (? – 1810) was skilled with Indian sign language and was the best hunter on the expedition.
*Dog
Seaman, Lewis's black Newfoundland dog.
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Piegan-Blackfoot tipis |
In the 1997
Ken Burns documentary
Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of Discovery, historian
Stephen E. Ambrose, author of the book
Undaunted Courage about the expedition, compared the significance and impact of the Lewis and Clark Expedition to Americans of that era with the American landing on the moon for subsequent generations. The expedition not only answered questions about vast uncharted areas of North America (everything between the Missouri River in North Dakota to Mount Hood in western Oregon) but also gave Americans an electrifying sense of the vastness of their new country after the Louisiana Purchase and America's almost limitless natural resources and potential as an emergent nation. He also views the expedition as a quintessential American saga, with a cast of characters that included a French Canadian trapper, President Thomas Jefferson, the heroic personalities and camaraderie of both Captain Lewis and Captain Clark, a platoon of American soldiers reminiscent of
Rogers' Rangers, the muscular Black American servant of Clark named York, colorful Indian tribes (
Sioux,
Mandans,
Nez Percé,
Blackfeet), Captain Lewis' shaggy dog named Seaman, numerous close shaves with death for everyone on the expedition, quick "think-on-your-feet" diplomatic innovation to defuse hostility and enlist the support of exotic tribes, scientific observation of awe-inspiring naturalistic phenomenon, a case of close combat with Indians, encounters with grizzly bears, harrowing navigation of wild rivers amidst magnificent scenery, and a difficult passage through the snow clad
Bitterroot Mountains of Western
Montana and
Idaho. Despite all the trials, tribulations, and close calls, the expedition did not lose a person between
North Dakota and
Oregon and lost no one on the return trip.
Undaunted Courage reads like real life imitating
Hollywood, which makes it all the more surprising that Hollywood has never made a feature motion picture about the epic journey.
* The episode
Margical History Tour of the American TV series
The Simpsons contains a fictional retelling of the Lewis and Clark expedition.
* The rescue ship in
Science fiction/
Horror film Event Horizon is named the
Lewis and Clark.
* The
Comedy Almost Heroes starring
Chris Farley features a fictional party attempting to best Lewis and Clark in their journey to the
Pacific Ocean.
* Often parodied in the comic strip
The Far Side by
Gary Larson.
* The cartoon series Hysteria had one segment called Lewis and Clark, which had Clark's animation style and voice based on the Superman: The Animated series version of Clark Kent. Spoofing the TV-series "Lois and Clark - The new adventures of Superman" which in turn spoofed the original naming of Lewis and Clark.
* A song titled "Lewis and Clark" is found on The Mystery CD by
Tommy Emmanuel.
* In 1955 the movie
The Far Horizons was released, starring
Fred MacMurray as Meriwether Lewis,
Charlton Heston as William Clark,
Donna Reed as Sacajawea, and
Barbara Hale as Julia Hancock. The movie perpetuates the myth of a romantic relationship between Sacajawea and William Clark. The end has Sacajawea and Julia Hancock realizing they are both in love with the same man. Realizing she can never fit into white society, Sacajawea goes back to her people.
*
Timeline of the Lewis and Clark Expedition*
History of the United States*
USS Lewis and Clark and
USNS Lewis and Clark*A contemporary explorer was
Zebulon Pike (as in
Pikes Peak) who in 1805-1807 traveled from the upper
Mississippi River down to the
Spanish territories near the Rocky Mountains.
*
Jefferson National Expansion Memorial - has a museum commemorating the expedition
History
Lewis and Clark Among the Indians,
James P. Ronda, 1984 - ISBN 0803238703
Undaunted Courage,
Stephen Ambrose, 1997 - ISBN 0684826976
National Geographic Guide to the Lewis & Clark Trail,
Thomas Schmidt, 2002 - ISBN 0792264711
The Lewis and Clark Journals: An American Epic of Discovery (abridged), edited by
Gary E. Moulton, 2003 - ISBN 080322950X
The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 13-Volume Set, edited by
Gary E. Moulton, 2002 - ISBN 0803229488
*
The complete text of the Lewis and Clark Journals online, University of Nebraska-Lincoln (in progress)
In Search of York: The Slave Who Went to the Pacific With Lewis and Clark,
Robert B. Betts, 2002 - ISBN 0870817140
*
Online text of the Expedition's Journal at
Project GutenbergNotable fiction
These popular fictionalized historical novels have varying degrees of historical accuracy, which is unfortunate as they shaped much of the popular American understanding of the expedition.
The Conquest,
Eva Emery Dye, 1902 -
out of printSacagawea,
Grace Hebard, 1933 -
out of printSacagawea,
Anna Lee Waldo, 1984 - ISBN 0380842939
I Should Be Extremely Happy in Your Company,
Brian Hall, 2003 - ISBN 0670031895
From Sea to Shining Sea,
James Alexander Thom, 1986 - ISBN 0345334515
New Found Land,
Allan Wolf, 2004
To the Ends of the Earth: The Last Journey of Lewis and Clark,
Frances Hunter, 2006 - ISBN 0977763625
*
Full text of the Lewis and Clark journals online – edited by Gary E. Moulton, University of Nebraska-Lincoln**
National Archives photos dating from the 1860s-1890s of the Native cultures the expedition encountered *
Lewis and Clark: The National Bicentennial Exhibition*
National Council for the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial*
Lewis and Clark, Mapping the West - Smithsonian Institution*
Lewis and Clark - National Geographic - a variety of resources, including an Interactive Journey Log
*
Lewis and Clark - PBS*
Trip's Journal Entry - Search Engine*
Discovering Lewis and Clark*
Lewis and Clark by Air - A book with a perspective of L&C from the air
*
Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail - United States National Park Service*
Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail Interpretive Center in Great Falls, Montana
*
Back to School with Lewis and Clark*
A 21st Century pictorial of the original route*
C-SPAN American Writers, Lewis&Clark in three parts, realvideo, 2001*
Lewis and Clark in Kentucky*
Lewis and Clark Expedition