Cover

Lewis and Clark Anchor WS

By wilseib
  • Starting Point

    Starting Point
    Clark and some men set off from their starting pint of St. Louis. They later meet with Lewis to makea total of around two dozen men. They depart in boats. It is "a Cloudy morning fixing for a Start."
  • The Expedition Experienced a Peaceful Trade Exchange with a Native Tribe

    The Expedition Experienced a Peaceful Trade Exchange with a Native Tribe
    They tell the Indians how they ought to behave and tell them about the United States. They show off some of their technology, including an air gun that astonishes them. They claim that they have a new "great father" in the east. They repeat this procedure with all the Indian people they meet with later.
  • A Spot Where the Expedition Experiences a Casualty

    A Spot Where the Expedition Experiences a Casualty
    Sergeant Floyd dies from what historians now believe is a ruptured appendix. They name a small river and hill in his honor. He is the first US soldier to die west of the MIssissippi,. Before his death he says to Clark, "I am going away. I want you to write me a letter-"
  • A Spot Where a Baby Is Born

    A Spot Where a Baby Is Born
    They meet with the Yankton Sioux. A baby is born. Lewis wraps the boy up in an American flag and pronounces him "an American."
  • Experience with a Sioux Tribe

    Experience with a Sioux Tribe
    They meet with the Teton Sioux. At first the Tetons see them as enemies, but their chief brings the situation down to a more friendly level.
  • Expedition Is Aided by Members of a Native Tribe

    Expedition Is Aided by Members of a Native Tribe
    During this time the member of the expedition stay with the Teton Sioux. There are great ceremonies involving dances and songs. Because many of these ceremonies take place at night, Clark notes that "I am verry unwell I think for the want of Sleep."
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    The Expedition is Aided by Members of a Native Tribe

    During this time the members of the expedition stay with the Teton Sioux. There are great ceremonies involving dances, songs, and smoking. Because many of these ceremonies take place at night, Clark notes that "I am verry unwell I think for the want of Sleep"
  • Experience at Fort Mandan

    Experience at Fort Mandan
    The expedition adds two new members. One is a native woman called Sacagawea. The other is man called Charbonneau.
  • An Animal Affects the Expedition

    An Animal Affects the Expedition
    The men hunt down a grizzly bear, previously an unknown species to Americans. Initially, Lewis believes accounts of the bears' ferocity were exaggerated. They spend the followng days being chased by more. Lewis writes that the "curiosity of our party is pretty well satisfied with respect to this animal."
  • Experience with the Shoshone Tribe

    Experience with the Shoshone Tribe
    The members of the expedition meet with the Shoshone to trade. They try to get the all-important horses they need to cross the mountains. The chief of the village happens to be Sacagawea's brother.
  • Members of the Expedition Become Ill

    Members of the Expedition Become Ill
    The members of the expedition meet with the Nez Perce people of Idaho. They get sick from eating too much salmon and camas fruit. One of the Indians shows them how to make new canoes.
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    Members of the Expedition Become Ill

    The members of the expedition meet with the Nez Perce people of Idaho. They get sick from eating too much salmon and camas root. One of the Indians shows them how to make new canoes.
  • An Experience that Ocured in Present Day Idaho

    An Experience that Ocured in Present Day Idaho
    Near what will later become Orofino, Idaho, the men push their canoes into Clearwater River. This is the first time they have gone with a river's current since St. Louis. Clark's boat springs a leak while he is in it.
  • An Experience at Fort Clatsop

    An Experience at Fort Clatsop
    They celebrate Christmas at Fort Clatsop. The officers give gifts of hankerchiefs, whiskey , and tobacco. There is an entire continent between them and home.
  • Weather Influences the Expedition

    Weather Influences the Expedition
    The constant rain in the month of Januray dampens the men's moods and amplifies feelings of homesickness. There are only 12 days in the month on which it does not rain. Tones of the diaries are more negative.
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    Weather Profoundly Influences the Expedition

    The constant rain in the month of January dampens the men's moods and amplifies feelings of homesickness. There are only 12 days in the month on which it does not rain. The tones of the diaries change and are more negative.
  • A Plant or Tree Affected the Expedition

    A Plant or Tree Affected the Expedition
    The men ran out of whisky several months ago. Now they run out of tobacco. They "use crab-tree bark as a substitute."
  • Someone from the Expedition Killed a Person from a Native Tribe

    Someone from the Expedition Killed a Person from a Native Tribe
    They meet with the Blackfoot Indians. Later they find Blackfoot warriors stealing their horses. In the ensuing fight, two indians die. This is the only occasion where members of the expedition kill Indians.
  • The Journey Ends

    The Journey Ends
    The men reutrn to St. Louis. The people had assumed they were dead after their absence of more than two years. There is much public excitement. They are the first Americans ever known to see the west coast.