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MISSION STATEMENT
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OF THIS WEBSITE

The purpose of this webpage on Lewis And Clark is to provide resource
materials for elementary classroom teachers, and students, interested
in gathering information on the "Corp of Discovery." This
webpage is designed for use in elementary schools and I hope it will
provide you with materials to help
your students learn more about the adventures of Lewis And Clark. However,
I recommend this website for anyone wishing to learn more about Lewis
And Clark. Much of the information in this website is so rare, and hard
to find information, that I know you and your students will enjoy touring
this site.
To explore a particular topic in more
detail click your mouse on all underlined text links and enter a whole
new world of the "Corp of Discovery."
THE CORP OF DISCOVERY

The "Corps of Discovery" departed from St. Louis on May 14,1804.
In a span of 28 months, they covered 8,000 miles, developed friendships
with the Native Americans and learned how to survive in some of America's
most beautiful and treacherous territories.
This is the American Epic that takes us traveling back in time to Virginia;
where Meriwether Lewis and William Clark were born.
Both had leadership qualities as they earned their ranks as Captains
in the US Infantry. Lewis, as Captain in the First Infantry and Clark
in the Fourth.
Their encounter, during a brief period with a rifle company, would
bond them into a friendship. It was because of this friendship, Lewis
called upon Clark to be his co-commander from 1804 -1806 with the "Corps
of Discovery". Together they served harmoniously.
Returning from the Expedition, both Lewis and Clark served as governors.
Lewis as governor of Louisiana Territory and Clark as governor of Missouri
Territory plus an appointment as Superintendent of Indian Affairs in
St. Louis.
Thomas Jefferson

Lewis and Clark were instructed by
President Thomas Jefferson to:
A. Map a new route to the Pacific Ocean
B. Make contact with the Native Americans
C. Obtain specimens for further study
D. Keep a full record of activities during the Expedition
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The
Expedition
In 1803, Congress appropriated funds for the exploration of the
West. Jefferson desperately looked for a leader whom he could trust
to lead the expedition. When he came to his conclusion about who
the leader would be, he had picked Meriwether Lewis, a good friend.
Lewis also brought along his Virginian neighbor to help lead his
expedition. Together they chose forty other men to accompany them.
The purpose of this expedition was to find a water route to the
Pacific, to develop friendship and trade with the Indians, and to
map the new land. Also, they had to take note of the climate and
wildlife of the West.
JEFFERSON NATIONAL EXPANSION
MEMORIAL
This site contains many interesting pages of related information having
to do with settling the American west, as well as information on Lewis
And Clark.

Click Here For The Thomas Jefferson Papers
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The complete Thomas Jefferson Papers from the Manuscript
Division at the Library of Congress consists of approximately 27,000
documents. This is the largest collection of original Jefferson
documents in the world.
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This Website contains many imporant links to a wide variety
of information on Lewis and Clark: including a map of their general route
map, a description of their mission with biographical information on Lewis
and Clark, Federan Lewis and Clark Trail Sites, State and Local Lewis and
Clark Trail Sites, Commercial Trips, Travel and Tourism, Relevant Books and
Publications, Lewis and Clark Bookstores, Lewis and Clark Trail Newsletter.
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MERIWETHER LEWIS
by Charles Willson Peale, c. 1807
Oil on wood panel
Courtesy of Independence National Historic Park
Meriwether Lewis (1774-1809) was born in Albemarle county,
Virginia, into a distinguished family of plantation owners. Both of
his parents were of Welsh descent. His father, an ardent patriot, served
in the Revolutionary War. Lewis early showed an aptitude for both frontier
life and intellectual pursuits, and spent most of his young adulthood
serving in the army. In 1801, shortly after being elected President
of the United States, Thomas Jefferson invited Lewis to serve as his
personal secretary and aide-de-camp. After selecting Lewis to command
what became known as the Corps of Discovery, Jefferson sent him to Philadelphia
to receive training from the leading scientists of the day in zoology,
botany, mineralogy, celestial navigation, and medicine. Lewis was also
responsible for planning, organizing, and supplying the expedition.
On the journey, he demonstrated outstanding abilities as a naturalist,
ably describing flora and fauna of the country and collecting and preparing
specimens. Following the expedition, Jefferson appointed Lewis Governor
of the Louisiana Territory. In addition, Jefferson charged him with
writing and publishing the official account of the expedition. Unfortunately,
in 1809, Lewis died under somewhat enigmatic circumstances at a roadside
inn while en route from St. Louis to Washington.
Meriwether Lewis commanded the first exploration by
white people of the Missouri and Columbia rivers and the area between
them. He also served as Governor of the Louisiana Territory. In 1801,
Lewis became private secretary to President Thomas Jefferson. Both of
them were interested in discovering a land route to the Pacific Ocean.
The Completion of theLouisiana Purchase in 1803 made exploration urgent.
In 1804, an expedition led by Lewis and William Clark started from a
camp near St. Louis. By late fall the explorers had reached the Mandan
Indian villages where they spent the winter. The following spring, Sacegawea,
an Indian woman, accompanied the expedition up the Missouri River and
across the Rocky Mountains. When the explorers reached the Columbia
River, they traveled to the Pacific in canoes. On the return trip, Lewis
followed the Marias River and Clark went down the Yellowstone River.
They reached St. Louis in September 1806, and found they had been given
up for lost In 1807, Lewis became governor of the Louisiana Territory.
1809, he started for Washington, D.C, from St. Louis. He stopped for
a night at an inn in Tennessee an was found fatally wounded the next
day. It has never has been determined whether he committed suicide or
was murdered. Lewis was born in Albemarle County, Virginia. At age 20
he helped put down the Whiskey Rebellion. The Lewis and Clark Centennial
Exposition was held in Portland, Oregon, in 1905.

PORTRAIT
OF MERIWETHER LEWIS WEARING A FUR SHAW GIVEN TO HIM BY THE SHOSHONE
TRIBE
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FROM THE DIARY OF MERIWETHER LEWIS
- July 19, 1805
Friday, July 19th, 1805. Early in the morning, and soon passed
the remains of several Indian camps formed of willowbrush, which
seemed to have been deserted this spring. At the same time he
observed that the pine trees had been stripped of their bark about
the same season, which our Indian women says her countrymen do
in order to obtain the sap and soft parts of the wood and bark
for food. About eleven o'clock he emt a herd of elk and killed
two of them; but such was the want of wood in the neighborhood
that he was unable to procure enough to make a fire, and was therefore
obliged to substitute the dung of the buffalo, with which he cooked
his breakfast. They then resumed their course along an old Indian
road. In the afternoon they reached a handsome valley, watered
by a large creek, both of which extended a considerable distance
into the mountain. This they crossed, and during the evening traveled
over a mountainous country covered with sharp fragments of flint
rock; these bruised and cut their feet very much, but were scarcely
less troublesome than the prickly-pear of the open plains, which
have now become so abundant that it is impossible to avoid them,
and the thorns are so strong that they pierce a double sole of
dressed deer-skin; the best resource against them is a sole of
buffalo-hide in parchment. At night they reached the river much
fatigued, having passed two mountains in the course of the day,
and traveled 30 miles. Captain Clark's first employment, on lighting
a fire, was to extract from his feet the briars, which he found
17 in number.
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Meriwether Lewis' Grave Site

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Check out these links on the mysterious
death
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of Meriwether Lewis
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MERIWETHER
LEWIS GRAVESITE
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THE
GHOST OF MERIWETHER LEWIS
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A
GHOST STORY ABOUT MERIWETHER LEWIS
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MERIWETHER
LEWIS MURDER OR SUICIDE?
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THE
DEATH OF MERIWETHER LEWIS
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ENCYCLOPEDIA
LINKS TO LEWIS
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PLUS
ARCIVE PHOTOS
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FIND A GRAVE:
WHERE EVERYBODY WHO WAS ANYBODY IS BURIED
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A
SMALL WEBSITE DEVOTED TO
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MERIWETHER
LEWIS
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WILLIAM CLARK
by Charles Willson Peale, c. 1810
Oil on paper
Courtesy of Independence National Historic Park
William Clark (1770-1838) was born in Virginia and was
the younger brother of frontiersman and military hero George Rogers
Clark. An experienced soldier and outdoorsman with strong leadership
and diplomatic skills, Clark was in command of an elite rifle company
when he met ensign Meriwether Lewis in 1795, and was thirty-three years
old when Lewis invited him to share command of the Corps of North West
Discovery. On the expedition west, Clark displayed considerable talent
as a negotiator, boatman, engineer, geographer, and cartographer. He
spent the rest of his life in St. Louis, where he served as Governor
of Missouri Territory and Superintendent of Indian Affairs. His St.
Louis home contained a formal council chamber and museum housing objects
presented to him by Indian people, among whom he was known as the "red-headed
chief."
While traveling with the Corps of Discovery, Clark developed
a high regard for Sacagawea, the Shoshoni wife of Toussaint Charbonneau,
and their infant son, Jean Baptiste (whom Clark nick-named "Pompy").
Following the expedition, Clark assumed responsibility for educating
Jean Baptiste, and also served as a patron and supporter of the artist
George Catlin. He named his first born son "Meriwether Lewis Clark"
in honor of his friend and co-commander.
William
Clark Exploring The West
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William
Clark - A Historic Frontiersman
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Excerpt
From Microsoft Encarta On William Clark
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Interesting
Biography On William Clark
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The
Top 10 Most Visited Websites On William Clark
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William Clark's Gravesite
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Click here
to visit William Clark's gravesite.
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Sacajawea? Sakakawea? Sacagawea?

In 1800, when she was about 12 years old, Sacagawea
was kidnapped by a war party of Hidatsa Indians -- enemies of her people,
the Shoshones. She was taken from her Rocky Mountain homeland, located
in today’s Idaho, to the Hidatsa-Mandan villages near modern Bismarck,
North Dakota. There, she was later sold as a slave to Toussaint Charbonneau,
a French-Canadian fur trader who claimed Sacagawea and another Shoshone
woman as his “wives.” In November 1804, the Corps of Discovery
arrived at the Hidatsa-Mandan villages and soon built a fort nearby.
In the American Fort Mandan on February 11, 1805, Sacagawea gave birth
to her son Jean-Baptiste Charbonneau, who would soon become America’s
youngest explorer.
History has accorded the Shoshoni Indian woman member
of the Lewis and Clark Expedition a most novel place in the hearts and
minds of generations of Americans. That her fame is deserving is evident
from historical records. However, early in the twentieth century she
was elevated by romanticists to a legendary status far beyond her mortal
achievements, and placed at the very pinnacle of renown as America’s
most famous Indian heroine.

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With the recent news that Sacajawea
will be featured on the new U.S. dollar coin, many are interested
in the real history of this woman. Click here
to visit this site. And click here
for another viewpoint on the new dollar coin to be minted in honor
of Sacajawea. A projected timeline for this coin is at this
site.
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Visit
The Sacajawea State Park
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Click here
to visit an interesting site on Sacajawea and the debate on the
correct spelling of her name. Also, click here
to read a history of Sacagawea.
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Click
here to visit the supposed
grave of Sacajawea.
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MONTANA
HISTORY ON SACAGAWEA
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BIOGRAPHICAL VIGNETTES OF
EACH MEMBER OF THE
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LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION
The following are biographical vignettes of each of the 33 permanent
party members, which you can see by clicking here. All the men were
hand-picked; the two officers for their leadership abilities, and
their detachment for frontier, hunting, woodcutting, specialized
craftmanship, and interpreting skills. Those who distinguished themselves
during the mission for their more than routine contributions, or
were unique members, are treated individually. A total of 12 who
made no special mark are listed collectively, with their individual
activities noted in appropriate journal entries. Click here
to visit this site.
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A
roster of all the people who travelled with Lewis and Clark
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Distinguished
Members of the Regiment
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In Memory Of
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Sergent Charles Floyd, Jr.
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SEARGENT
CHARLES FLOYD, JR
Today, Floyd enjoys the honor of having had erected at his gravesite
in present Sioux City, Iowa, the most prestigious memorial of the
explorers. A 100 foot high sandstone masonry obelisk, second in
size only to that of the Washington Monument, was dedicated in fitting
ceremonies on Memorial Day 1901. Dedication speaker for the occasion
was Dr. Elliott Coues, editor of the 1893 annotated reprint of the
1814 Biddle Allen edition of the journals. Coues spoke eloquently
of the exploring enterprise.
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JOURNALS OF LEWIS AND CLARK
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THE
JOURNALS OF LEWIS AND CLARK
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Chapters 1 through 28 from the American Studies at
The University of Virginia. This site also contains a search engine.
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LEWIS AND CLARK JOURNAL EXCERPTS
1804-1806
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The following journal
excerpts were compiled by Florentine Films in preparation for
the making of “Lewis and Clark: The Journey of the Corps of
Discovery.” The excerpts – drawn from the separate, more
extensive journals of Captains Meriwether Lewis and William Clark,
Sergeants Charles Floyd, Patrick Gass, and John Ordway, and Private
Joseph Whitehouse – were then put together in chronological
order. Altogether, the entries of these seven Corps members span
March 3, 1804, to September 26, 1806, totalling more than 140,000
words.
Because the journal writers did not use consistent spelling –
the word “mosquito” is spelled in the journals at least
15 different ways – the journal excerpts are not searchable
by keyword. However, you can search them by author, date and year.
Or, if you’d simply like a good read, you can browse through
them in their entirety. Click here to visit this exciting website
on the Journals of Lewis And Clark.
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THE
JOURNALS OF LEWIS AND CLARK
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THE
JOURNALS OF LEWIS AND CLARK LISTED BY CHAPTER AND EVENT
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Teacher's
Guide For Lewis and Clark Journals
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Brief
Samplings Of The Lewis And Clark Journals
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NEW SPECIES OF PLANTS AND ANIMALS
DISCOVERED
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BY LEWIS AND CLARK
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ANIMALS
DISCOVERED BY LEWIS & CLARK
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Lewis and Clark recorded hundreds of species
previously unknown to science, including those at this website.
Click here
to visit.
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Visit the Fermilab Flora and Fauna exhibit of plants
and animals Lewis & Clark encountered on their journey. Click
here.
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The Lewis and Clark Herbarium
Lewisia rediviva
From "Curtis's
Botanical Magazine"
The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia is home to more
than 200 priceless specimens of plants collected by Meriwether Lewis
and William Clark on their historic journey from 1803-1806 through
what would become the western part of the United States. The dried
and pressed plants housed in the Academy are virtually all that
remains of the physical specimens brought back by the two explorers.
These plants are historic treasures from an age in exploration and
national growth that dramatically changed the United States. But
they are more than museum pieces, the specimens are also scientific
treasures to modern researchers studying the flora of North America.
Click here
to visit this website.
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PLANTS
DISCOVERED BY LEWIS & CLARK
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THE
DISCOVERY OF PLANTS BY
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LEWIS
AND CLARK
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ANIMALS
ON LEWIS AND CLARK'S TRAIL
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| NATIVE
AMERICANS LEWIS AND CLARK DISCOVERED |


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THE
NATIVE AMERICANS LEWIS AND CLARK DISCOVERED
While Lewis and Clark were the first Americans to see much of what
would become the western United States, those same lands had long
been occupied by native peoples. Over the course of the expedition,
the Corps of Discovery would come into contact with nearly 50 Native
American tribes. Quickly, the captains learned how many different
definitions there really were for the word “Indian.” The
Mandans lived in earth lodges, farmed corn and were amenable to
trade with America. The Teton Sioux slept in tepees, hunted buffalo
and guarded their territory fiercely against anyone who passed through,
whether foreign or Indian. Some tribes had never seen a white or
black man before Lewis and Clark. Others spoke bits of English and
wore hats and coats they received from European sea captains.
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The
Ethnograpy of Lewis & Clark
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Native
American objects and the American Quest for commerce and science
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These sites contain links, and information,
about the following tribes. Click on each tribe name for a quick
direct link:
Arikaras,
Assiniboins,
Blackfeet,
Chinooks,
Clatsops,
Hidatsas,
Mandans,
Missouris,
Nez
Perce, Otos,
Shoshones,
Teton
Sioux, Tillamooks,
Walla
Wallas, Wishrams,
Yanton
Sioux
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Lewis and Clark
Trail
Heritage Foundation, Incorporated
The mission of the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation is to honor
the remarkable historic legacy of Lewis and Clark through research,
education, preservation, promotion, and coordination. Click here
for an interesting website on these topics.
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ALONG
THE TRAIL WITH LEWIS & CLARK
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TIMELINE OF THE
VOYAGE OF LEWIS & CLARK
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PICTORAL
TIMELINE OF THEIR VOYAGE
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Wander
The Trail of Western Adventure
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Lewis and Clark
National Historic Trail
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The
South Dakota Trail
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MAP
OF THE CORP OF DISCOVERY
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Here is a Map of the Corp of Discovery in Idaho and
Washington, October 2nd to December 5th, 1805.
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LEWIS &
CLARK’S GENERAL ROUTE
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The Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail is approximately
3,700 miles long, begins near Wood River, Illinois, and passes through
portions of Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, North
Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington.
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NINETEENTH
CENTURY EXPLORERS
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The first of many explorers of the uncharted regions
of the newly acquired Louisiana Territory were Meriwether Lewis
and William Clark. They were followed by other government sponsored
expeditions led by pathfinders Pike, Long, and Frémont, among
others. These men established important new routes for many who
followed.
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President Thomas Jefferson commissioned army officers
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to explore the Louisiana Territory,
investigate potential resources, establish trade with the Indians
and most importantly discover a passage to the Pacific Ocean through
the Northwest. In 1803 President Jefferson presented Captain Lewis
with a list of written instructions, saying that, "The object
of your mission is to explore the Missouri River, and such principal
streams of it which may offer the most direct and practicable water
communication across the continent for the purposes of commerce..."
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Detailed Color Maps
Of The Lewis And Clark Journey
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This website contains maps, a living history, a forum
with Ken Burns, classroom resources, and related things. Click here
to check this site out!
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FOLLOW IN THEIR FOOTSTEPS
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If you've been reading about Lewis and Clark and
you're eager to follow in their footsteps, here's a suggested 13-day
itinerary along the route, abridged from Traveling the Lewis
& Clark Trail
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Lewis And Clark's
Historic Trail
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Point
and Click Maps Of
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Lewis
And Clark Journey
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Timeline
Of Their Journey
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IMPORTANT WEBSITES
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DEVOTED TO LEWIS
AND CLARK
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HOME PAGE OF
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DISCOVERING LEWIS AND CLARK
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welcome to the home
page of Discovering Lewis and Clark, a prototype and workshop
for a CD-ROM. This is a progressive Web site. It is enhanced by
at least one new interpretive episode each month.
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Its centerpiece is a 19-part overview of the expedition
by Harry Fritz, Professor of History at the University of Montana,
illustrated with selections from the journals of the expedition,
photographs, maps, moving pictures, and sound files.
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Clicking on any still image or highlighted word will
lead you to another branch, or level of insight, into the significance
of the Lewis and Clark expedition in Amerian history, and in contemporary
life.
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You can also navigate through Discovering Lewis and
Clark by using the "Journal Excerpts" or the "Discovery
Paths" menus. The word-search utility can be used to find references
anywhere in the text.
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Click here
for Lewis & Clark on the Information Superhighway. This is a
huge site with many links and subject matter is broken down into
alphabetical groupings. Enjoy!
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APPROPRIATION OF FUNDS FOR THE LEWIS
AND CLARK EXPEDITION BY CONGRESS
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How
much money did they start with to plan their journey?
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The
History of the Lewis and Clark Expedition
West of the Divide: July
1805 to November 1805
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WANT TO KNOW ANYTHING THERE
IS ABOUT LEWIS & CLARK?
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Check
this out, WOW!
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Lewis
& Clark Frequently Asked Questions
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VIRTUALLY WALK IN
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THE BOOTS OF LEWIS &
CLARK
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Here is your opportunity to "virtually"
walk in the boots of Lewis and Clark as they lead the Corps of Discovery
across the nation in search of an all-water route to the Pacific
Ocean.
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President Jefferson has already tried three times
to launch such an expedition, and now as President, he's giving
it a fourth try. He selects his personal secretary, Meriwether Lewis,
to lead the journey, and the two begin making plans...
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Now's the time for you to enter the picture! Follow
through the story below, and see if you would have made the same
decisions that Lewis and Clark did 200 years ago. Click here
to visit this website.
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The
Lewis & Clark Center
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Bargains
Galore at Lewis & Clark's Yard Sale
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Lewis
And Clark Introduction from the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and
Tehnology, Harvard University
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Lewis
And Clark Introduction from the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and
Tehnology, Harvard University
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Peabody
Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology,
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Harvard
University
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On-Line
Images Of The Voyage Of Discovery
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Art/Artifacts/Manuscripts/Maps/Photographs/Sacagawea/Sites
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The National Lewis &
Clark
Bicentennial Council
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Created to commemorate the journey and legacies
of the Lewis and Clark Expedition
2003 - 2006
Click here
and join us!
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National
Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Council News
Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Journal
Published by the
National Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Council
1101 Officers Row, US Grant House
Vancouver, Washington 98661
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National Coordinating Conference Heads for Washington
State
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Fourth Annual National Coordinating Conference
April 21 - 24, 1999 Vancouver, Washington
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American Treasures of the
Library of Congress: Reason
The Lewis and Clark Expedition
In June 1803, President Thomas Jefferson wrote to Meriwether Lewis
(1774-1809), his private secretary and a U.S. army captain, instructing
the expedition to explore the Missouri basin by crossing over the
Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean. Among the Library's significant
collection of manuscripts and published maps documenting the expedition
of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark (1770-1838) to the Pacific
Northwest between 1800 and 1803 are published maps issued with the
final reports of the expedition, interim composite maps showing
the progress of the expedition, and maps used or consulted in planning
the expedition. Also there are links to press copy in the hand of
Thomas Jefferson from 1803.Click here
to visit this site.
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The Manuscript Division's holdings,
more than fifty million items in eleven thousand separate collections,
include some of the greatest manuscript treasures of American history
and culture and support scholarly research in many aspects of political,
cultural, and scientific history. Click here
to visit the Library of Congress Manuscript Reading Room Manuscript
Divison.
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Congressional
Investigation
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Of
The Lewis And Clark Journey
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AMERICAN RIVERS
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EXPLORED BY LEWIS AND CLARK
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In May of 1804 the Lewis
& Clark expedition set out in a 55' keel boat along with two
pirogues on their now famous expedition of discovery. Keel boats
of this era were pushed, pulled, rowed, and sailed up the Missouri
river. The red pirogue and the white pirogue were a form of longboat
which closely resembled other small river craft plying the Missouri
and Mississippi rivers in the early 1800's. Click here to visit an interesting site on keel boats.
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THE
SCENIC WHITE CLIFS ON THE MISSOURI RIVER THAT LEWIS AND CLARK DISCOVERED
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The
River of Lewis and Clark
Lewis and Clark, Pioneering Naturalists
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Far more than explorers, Lewis and Clark were also
pioneering naturalists who recorded scores of plants, insects, fish,
birds and furbearers previously unknown to science, including grizzly
bears, interior least terns, prairie dogs and cutthroat trout.
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Lewis and Clark recorded hundreds of species
previously unknown to science.
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Celebrating 26 years of bringing rivers to life,
American Rivers is North America's leading national
river-conservation organization. Our mission is to
protect and restore America's
river systems and
to foster a river stewardship ethic.
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Rivers
Of Lewis and Clark
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The
Original River Prior To Dams
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GREAT FALLS
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One of the most extraordinary chapters of the Lewis
and Clark Expedition was the legendary portage around the "great
falls." The mighty blue Missouri River now serves as the
perfect guide for those who want to view firsthand the glorious
sights that Lewis encountered in June of 1805. Many of the historic
points have been preserved and now stand as important monuments
to the Corps of Discovery.
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CHANGES
ON THE MISSOURI RIVER SINCE THE TIME OF LEWIS AND CLARK
Great
Falls Chamber Of Commerce
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Missouri River: A Voyage
To Recovery
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Of all the projects planned for the upcoming Lewis
and Clark Bicentennial, none may be as significant as "Voyage
of Recovery," an American Rivers-sponsored campaign to restore
at least some stretches of the Missouri River to the state they
were in when the Corps of Discovery made its way west in 1804-1805.
Click here
to visit this site.
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It was on a wet Christmas Eve day in 1805 that the
explorers of the Lewis & Clark Expedition moved into a stockade
fort surrounded by lush old-growth forest, wetlands, and wildlife.
Named in honor of the local Clatsop Indians, the fort was home for
the 33-member party for the winter of 1805-1806.
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The original fort deteriorated in the wet climate,
but in 1955, using Clark's sketches, area citizens and service clubs
constructed a replica on the same site. Three years later it became
a unit of the National Park Service.
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Today, park rangers dress in buckskin, make candles,
smoke meat, carve dugout canoes, and fire flintlock rifles and muskets
to reenact what life might have been like for the explorers.
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Welcome
to the Fort Clatsop National Memorial!
This site celebrates the 1805-06 winter encampment of the 33-member
Lewis and Clark Expedition. A 1955 community-built replica of the
explorers' 50'x50' Fort Clatsop is the focus of this 125-acre park.
The fort, historic canoe landing, and spring are nestled in the
coastal forests and wetlands of the Coast Range as it merges with
the Columbia River Estuary. The Salt Works unit commemorates the
expedition's salt-making activities. Salt obtained from seawater
was essential to the explorers' winter at Fort Clatsop and their
journey back to the United States in 1806.
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Lewis
and Clark at Fort Clatsop
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General
Management Plan
Development Concept Plans
Final Environmental Impact Statement
June 1995
for Fort Clatsop National Memorial
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Fort
Clatsop National Memorial
Enabling Legislation
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Historical
archaeologists from the Museum of the Rockies (Montana State
University, Bozeman, MT), under the leadership of Ken Karsmizki
(Associate Curator of Historical Archaeology), in conjunction with
and funded by the National Park Service, have continued their excavations
at Fort Clatsop, near Astoria, Oregon. Historical archaeologists
combine digging with research using documents such as period maps,
journals, deeds and photographs. These archaeologists are attempting
to locate the site of the original fort as well as trying to find
artifacts that can be confirmed as being attributed to occupation
of the site by members of the Corps of Discovery during the winter
of 1805-1806. A replica fort was built in 1955 but likely does not
lie on the exact site of the original fort. Although the journals
of Lewis and Clark describe the overall size of the fort (50 feet
square) and the layout of the rooms, the orientation of the walls
with respect to the cardinal directions and the actual site remain
a mystery.
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FORT CLATSOP NATIONAL MEMORIAL
Planning
Your Trip
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Lewis
& Clark Sites : Fort Clatsop Site Map
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FORT
CLATSOP NATIONAL MEMORIAL
PROGRAM CALENDAR
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A
Class Visit To Fort Clatsop
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Visiting Fort Clatsop At Christmas
Past
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Festivities
at the national memorial will recall Lewis and Clark's winter there.
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