Lewis and Clark Expedition
Encyclopedia Article from Encarta
Introduction
Lewis and Clark Expedition, first United States overland
exploration of the American West and Pacific Northwest,
beginning in May 1804 and ending in September 1806. The
expedition was commissioned by President Thomas Jefferson and
led by army officers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark. The
exploration covered a total of about 13,000 km (about 8,000
mi), from a camp outside St. Louis to the Pacific Ocean and
back. Like other scholars in his time, Jefferson believed in
the existence of a Northwest Passage, or some kind of water
connection between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The
principal goal of the expedition was to locate such a route
and survey its potential as a waterway for American westward
expansion. Although Lewis and Clark did not find this route,
the expedition succeeded in making peaceful contact with
Native Americans and uncovering a wealth of knowledge about
the peoples, geography, plants, and animals of the western
United States.
Background
Although Jefferson had long been interested in the American
West, it was not until 1802 that he began to plan an
expedition to the Pacific. After reading Voyages from
Montréal (1801) by Canadian explorer and fur trader Sir
Alexander Mackenzie in the summer of 1802, the president began
to make preparations for an American expedition aimed at
countering Mackenzie’s plans to make the West and Pacific
Northwest part of the British Empire. Influenced by the
renowned 18th-century journeys of Captain James Cook and
Captain George Vancouver, Jefferson envisioned an official
expedition that combined diplomatic, scientific, and
commercial goals. He believed that the nation that dominated a
water passage through the continent could control the destiny
of all North America. He was also convinced that the West
would be a paradise for American farmers.
Preparations
The president turned to his young private secretary,
Captain Meriwether Lewis, for leadership in this enterprise.
An army officer and experienced naturalist, Lewis had the
background, energy, and dedication to fulfill the challenging
assignment. In June 1803 Jefferson completed his demanding
exploration instructions after receiving advice from leading
American scientists, including physicians Benjamin Rush and
Benjamin Smith Barton, and the noted surveyor Andrew Ellicott.
In a detailed letter now recognized as a classic exploration
document, Jefferson itemized more than a dozen areas of
inquiry for the expedition, ranging broadly from astronomy and
botany to linguistics and zoology.
The president sought information about plants, animals,
rivers, mountains, and native cultures, which Lewis and Clark
recorded in journals during the expedition.
The demands of the expedition were enormous, and Lewis soon
turned to William Clark, a friend from his army days in Ohio,
to act as co-commander. Despite the fact that Clark was
officially a lieutenant, and therefore of lower rank than
Lewis, a captain, Jefferson and Lewis considered Clark an
equal leader of the party.
In 1803, after Jefferson had written his instructions for
the team, the United States acquired a vast portion of the
central North American continent from France in the Louisiana
Purchase. The land purchase increased the importance of the
expedition. Since the team would now be exploring United
States lands, Lewis and Clark had the added duty of announcing
American sovereignty in the new territory.
The Expedition
The Corps of Discovery, as the expedition party was
properly known, demanded more people than Jefferson first
imagined. Before reaching their base camp at Wood River
outside St. Louis, Lewis and Clark recruited a sizable number
of civilian hunters, army soldiers, and French boatmen. While
not all made the entire journey to the Pacific, some 48 men
were part of the team when it left St. Louis heading up the
Missouri River. The expedition roster included Clark’s
slave, York, who some Native Americans called "Big
Medicine," along with many other adventurers who came to
play a major role in American expansion, such as the hunters
John Colter and George Drouillard. Other members of the
expedition who also kept journals were Sergeants Charles
Floyd, Patrick Gass, and John Ordway, and Private Joseph
Whitehouse. The Corps and its supplies went up the river on a
large keelboat (a riverboat used for freight) and several
smaller boats, requiring the experience of French boatmen.
The Voyage Westward
The Corps of Discovery’s route across the continent was
dictated by Jefferson’s notions of American geography. The
president believed that the most practical passage across the
continent followed the Missouri River to its headwaters in the
Rocky Mountains. Once over the mountains by a presumably short
and easy portage, Jefferson was sure that his explorers would
find another river leading directly to the ocean. However, the
president’s assumptions about geography did not match
Western realities.
As commanding officers for the expedition, Lewis and Clark
informally divided leadership responsibilities: Lewis became
the party’s naturalist, and Clark served as the mapmaker and
negotiator. The expedition set out on May 21, 1804. In its
first season of travel (May to October 1804), the expedition
made its way up the Missouri, built Fort Mandan in present-day
North Dakota, and spent the winter among the Mandan and
Hidatsa peoples. Although some of the travel was physically
demanding, this stretch of the river already was well known to
St. Louis merchants and traders. On August 20, 1804, near
present-day Sioux City, Iowa, the expedition suffered its only
fatality when Sergeant Charles Floyd died of a ruptured
appendix.
The second travel season (April to December 1805) proved
far more challenging as the expedition moved into country
unknown to the nonnatives. The Corps of Discovery now counted
33 members in the permanent party, including a Native American
woman, Sacagawea,
her husband, French Canadian interpreter Toussaint Charbonneau,
and their infant son Jean Baptiste, all of whom joined the
group at Fort Mandan. Sacagawea, a Shoshone
who had been captured by the Hidatsa
tribe and then sold to Charbonneau, helped the party as an
interpreter and peacemaker. She proved instrumental in
negotiating for horses and supplies along the way.
The expedition struggled around the Great Falls of the
Missouri, searched for a pass over the Continental
Divide, and was stunned not to find a water passage direct
from present-day Idaho to the ocean. Instead, the party
labored in deep snow over the Lolo Trail, crossing the border
of present-day Montana into Idaho, where they encountered the
Native American tribe known as the Nez
Perce. The Nez Perce taught them how to eat camas roots
and assured them that the rivers ahead were navigable. The
explorers then traveled on the Snake
River into present-day Washington before finally reaching
the Columbia
River. By the time Lewis and Clark reached the Pacific
Ocean in November 1805 and built Fort Clatsop, their winter
residence near present-day Astoria,
Oregon, they had a much clearer sense of the continent’s
geographic complexity.
The Return Voyage
The return journey from Fort Clatsop to St. Louis (March to
September 1806) held its own unique dangers and
accomplishments. With several important exploration tasks
still planned, Lewis and Clark divided the Corps of Discovery
into two parties. Clark led one group on a reconnaissance of
the Yellowstone
River. Meanwhile, Lewis took a small detachment into
present-day north central Montana, thinking that the course of
the Marias River might provide an American claim to fur-rich
country in what is now the Canadian province of Alberta.
In August the groups reunited on the Missouri River, near the
mouth of the Yellowstone. They arrived in St. Louis on
September 23, 1806.
Relations with the Native Americans and Spanish
The Lewis and Clark Expedition made a journey through the
homelands of native people. What American explorers called
"wilderness" and "unknown" was more
properly Native American homes, gardens, and hunting
territories. Without the active support of native people, the
expedition could not have accomplished its goals, much less
survived in a sometimes-difficult country. Native people
provided Lewis and Clark with vital geographic information,
food, shelter, and transportation. In many ways Sacagawea
symbolized the cooperation between native people and the Corps
of Discovery. While she was not a guide in the fullest sense
of the word, her presence assured many Native Americans that
the Corps of Discovery was not a hostile war party. At a key
juncture Sacagawea was reunited with her brother Cameahwait, a
Shoshone chief who provided vital assistance to the
expedition.
In two-and-a-half years of travel and exploration, there
was only one fatal encounter between the Corps of Discovery
and Native Americans. The incident occurred during Lewis’s
exploration of the Marias River. In late July 1806 Lewis’s
party came upon a group of Piegan Blackfoot
warriors. When the Piegans attempted to take guns and horses,
Lewis’s men retaliated, killing two natives.
While native people saw the expedition more as an
opportunity for trade than as a threat to tribal sovereignty,
Spanish officials in Mexico City had a different reaction to
Jefferson’s enterprise. The Spanish had long been deeply
suspicious of American ambitions in the West and since the end
of the American Revolution (1775-1783) were certain that the
new American republic intended to reach across the continent
to the Pacific. Alerted to the Corps of Discovery, possibly by
secret agent General James
Wilkinson, the Spanish made several unsuccessful attempts
to stop the expedition and capture Lewis and Clark.
Relations Among the Explorers
The explorers themselves were undoubtedly transformed by
their journey. What began as a diverse and unruly set of
characters became in the course of the expedition a tight-knit
community. At Fort Mandan, Lewis described the expedition
members as enjoying "a most perfect harmony."
Aftermath and Achievements
Lewis and Clark received a hero’s welcome when they
returned from the expedition, despite some disappointment that
they had not found an easy water route to the Pacific. After
Lewis’s death in 1809, Clark and American diplomat and
financier Nicholas
Biddle took over the task of compiling the report. They
finally published an abridged, two-volume collection of the
journals in 1814. This version left out most of the material
the party had compiled about plant and animal life. The most
recent scholarly edition of the journals was edited in 11
volumes by historian Gary E. Moulton under the title, The
Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, and published from
1983 to 1997 by the University of Nebraska Press.
Thomas Jefferson had repeatedly insisted that the Corps of
Discovery had one central mission—to find what he called
"the most direct and practicable water communication
across this continent for the purposes of commerce."
However, Lewis and Clark did not find a Northwest Passage, nor
did they pioneer the route that became the Oregon
Trail. Although Lewis and Clark strengthened U.S. claims
in the West, American claims in subsequent diplomatic disputes
with Britain were based not so much on Lewis and Clark as on
the Columbia River explorations of American explorer Captain Robert
Gray in 1792 and the building of Fort Astoria in 1811. But
Jefferson was by no means disappointed with his Corps of
Discovery. The journals, maps, plant and animal specimens, and
notes on Native American societies amounted to a Western
encyclopedia.
The expedition also established peaceful contact with many
Native American peoples. Finally, the expedition set a pattern
for government-sponsored scientific exploration in the United
States.
Scientific Findings
The Lewis and Clark Expedition discovered 122 animal
species and subspecies and 178 new plant species, and 223
plant specimens from the expedition survive. Among the animal
species and subspecies previously unknown to science were the grizzly
bear, the California condor,
the coyote,
the black-footed
ferret, the black-billed magpie,
the black-tailed prairie
dog, the pronghorn,
and the gray
wolf. The two explorers left their names imprinted on two
bird species, Lewis’s woodpecker and Clark’s nutcracker,
and the scientific name for the westslope cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus
clarki lewisi). Among the plant species they described for
science for the first time were the western red cedar,
eastern cottonwood,
red flowering currant,
the mountain hemlock,
the whitebark pine,
Sitka spruce,
Oregon
grape, and the Pacific yew.
A trained naturalist, Lewis was especially noted for his
meticulous observations and exacting measurements of new
species. Perhaps more important for the future settlement of
the West, Lewis and Clark returned with stories of the rich
abundance of wildlife.
The Fate of the Explorers
Following the expedition, President Jefferson appointed
Lewis the governor of the new Louisiana Territory. Lewis
reportedly struggled with the demands of the position, fell
into a depression,
and three years after the expedition’s end, most historians
agree, committed suicide. In 1807 Clark was appointed as the
U.S. government’s representative to the Native American
tribes living west of the Mississippi River, a role he
retained until his death in 1838. Clark initially refused York’s
requests that he be given his freedom in exchange for his
service to the expedition but eventually relented in 1816.
York went into the freight business and reportedly died in
1832. Sacagawea died in 1812 at the age of 25 at Fort Manuel
in present-day South Dakota. Her two children, Jean Baptiste
and a daughter Lisette who was born after the expedition, were
adopted by Clark. Her husband Charbonneau continued living
among the Mandan and Hidatsa. His death date is unknown but
his estate was settled in 1843 by his son Jean Baptiste, the
youngest member of the expedition.
Bicentennial Celebrations
More than 200 years after the Lewis and Clark expedition
was first commissioned, the journey still captures the
imagination of the American people. It was not always so. The
first history of the expedition, published in 1814, saw only
1,417 copies printed. By the mid-1800s, the expedition was
largely forgotten. Since then, however, the fame of the
expedition has grown considerably. Bicentennial celebrations
in the United States began in January 2003, the anniversary of
Jefferson’s request to Congress for funding. Over the course
of the next four years, more than 30 million people were
expected to travel to some part of the Lewis and Clark trail
as part of the bicentennial commemoration. Parts of the trail,
such as the White Cliffs of the Upper Missouri River, the
Lemhi Pass in the Rocky Mountains, along the Lolo Trail in
Idaho, and portions of the Columbia River estuary are
considered nearly unchanged since the time of the expedition.
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