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Lewis and Clark Expedition
The Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804-1806) was a US military expedition of exploration, led by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, whose goal was to explore the newly acquired western lands that comprised the Louisiana Purchase and to reach the Pacific Ocean. The journey, which covered about 8,000 miles (13,000 km), was a major step toward the westward expansion of the United States.
Lewis, Clark, and their men – known as the Corps of Discovery – embarked on their journey on 14 May 1804. They moved up the Missouri River, crossed over the Rocky Mountains, and paddled down the Columbia River to the Pacific Ocean. After spending the winter of 1805-06 in present-day Oregon, the expedition began its return journey, arriving back in St. Louis on 23 September 1806, two years and four months after having first set out. The expedition succeeded in exploring the newly acquired western lands and giving the United States a better claim to the Oregon Country. They made around 140 detailed maps, marking out significant mountain ranges, rivers, and plains. The expedition also identified 178 types of plants and 122 animal species and subspecies that had previously been unknown to Euro-Americans.
Additionally, the Corps of Discovery encountered over two dozen Native American nations, some of whom had never encountered White people before. Most of the nations proved hospitable, some of them providing invaluable aid without which the expedition likely never would have succeeded. Sacagawea, a teenage Shoshone woman who had joined the expedition with her husband, acted as an interpreter between the explorers and native peoples they encountered, with her presence helping to assure the Native Americans that the expedition was not a threat. Lewis and Clark learned much about the languages and customs of the Native Americans they met, bringing many artifacts back with them.
Origins & Preparation
President Thomas Jefferson had long been fascinated with the American West. Though he would never travel further west than the Blue Ridge Mountains himself, he had always visualized this region as a land of vast untamed wilderness, where liberty and republicanism could thrive in spite of the corruption in the urbanizing East. Like many Americans before and after him, Jefferson believed the United States was destined to expand westward, to forge a so-called 'empire of liberty' that would one day encompass the entirety of the continent. As the American Revolutionary War was won in 1783, Jefferson was already trying to persuade famed war hero George Rogers Clark to lead a privately funded expedition into the West. Though Clark declined, Jefferson never gave up on his dream of a westward expedition.
After his election to the presidency in 1801, Jefferson finally had the opportunity to realize this ambition. By 1802, he had begun to plan the venture and appointed his private secretary, Meriwether Lewis, to lead it. Lewis was a 28-year-old Virginian, who had served in the militia during the suppression of the 1794 Whiskey Rebellion. He was just as enthusiastic as Jefferson about the West, and although Lewis lacked much formal education, Jefferson was confident in his abilities, writing that "Capt. Lewis is brave, prudent, habituated to the woods & familiar with Indian manners & customs" (Wood, 377). To better prepare the young man for leadership, Jefferson sent Lewis off to Philadelphia to study astronomy, medicine, cartography, ethnology, botany, lunar navigation, and other relevant subjects under the tutelage of some of the most renowned scientific experts in the country. While in Pennsylvania, Lewis purchased a Newfoundland dog named Seaman, who would remain his constant companion for the expedition.
Meriwether Lewis
Charles Willson Peale (Public Domain)
Initially, Jefferson presented the expedition as a merely scientific endeavor, to avoid arousing the suspicions of France, Spain, and Britain, who controlled the western lands that the president hoped to explore. This would change after the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, when France sold the entirety of the Louisiana Territory – some 828,000 square miles (2,145,000 km²) – to the United States. Now, Jefferson could be more open about his exploratory intentions, instructing Lewis to detail and map out as much of the newly acquired western lands as possible, and establish a viable route of travel across the continent. Still, the president hoped the expedition could continue across the Louisiana Territory to the Pacific Northwest, thereby establishing an American presence in the region before the European nations could settle it in earnest. Jefferson also hoped that they could find the fabled Northwest Passage, that was supposed to cut across the continent and link to the Pacific. The expedition still had scientific and anthropological purposes, of course, but the goal of laying claim to the entire northwest came first and foremost.
In the months leading up to the expedition, Lewis decided that he needed a co-commander, someone more experienced with military leadership. In July 1803, he invited William Clark, a 33-year-old army veteran and the younger brother of George Rogers Clark, to share the command. The US secretary of war denied Lewis' request to elevate Clark to the rank of captain and instead commissioned him as a lieutenant, since the concept of joint leadership violated the army's ideas of chain of command. Lewis nevertheless treated Clark as his equal during the expedition, and always referred to him as 'captain' to keep his lower rank a secret from the men. This proved to be a prudent decision. As historian Gordon Wood describes their joint command:
Lewis and Clark seem never to have quarreled and only rarely disagreed with one another. They complimented each other beautifully. Clark had been a company commander and had explored the Mississippi. He knew how to handle enlisted men and was a better surveyor, map-maker, and waterman than Lewis. Where Lewis was apt to be moody and sometimes wander off alone, Clark was always tough, steady, and reliable. Best of all, the two captains were writers: they wrote continually, describing in often vivid and sharp prose much of what they encountered – plants, animals, people, weather, geography, and unusual experiences.
(378)
So, with Clark onboard, Lewis went to the federal arsenal at Harper's Ferry, Virginia, to procure weapons while Clark went to Kentucky to enlist men for the expedition, which was now referred to as the Corps of Discovery. By December, the Corps consisted of 45 men, including officers, enlisted men, civilian volunteers, and York, an enslaved African American man owned by Clark. The Corps established Camp Dubois at the mouth of the Missouri River, 18 miles (29 km) away from St. Louis, where they spent the winter gathering supplies and training.
William Clark
Charles Willson Peale (Public Domain)
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Expédition Lewis et Clark
L'expédition Lewis et Clark (1804-1806) fut une expédition militaire américaine d'exploration, menée par Meriwether Lewis et William Clark, dont l'objectif était d'explorer les terres occidentales nouvellement acquises qui constituaient l'achat de la Louisiane et d'atteindre l'océan Pacifique. Le voyage, qui couvrit environ 8 000 miles (13 000 km), constitua une étape majeure dans l'expansion vers l'ouest des États-Unis.
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Self-portrait at the @AmPhilSociety , with a vignette cannonade by Megalonyx jeffersonii, during today's "Education of Meriwether Lewis" event . . . The suite I am wearing was crafted by the talented hand of Kim Hanley, Executive Director of American Historical Theatre . . . #ThomasJefferson #YourThomasJefferson #MeriwetherLewis #AmericanPhilosophicalSociety #groundsloth #paleontology #history #science #LewisAndClark #POTUS #USA #America (at American Philosophical Society)
#thomasjefferson#yourthomasjefferson#meriwetherlewis#americanphilosophicalsociety#groundsloth#paleontology#history#science#lewisandclark#potus#usa#america
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Thank you Ann and Jeff Thoni @south40farm for the great visit and photo send off! Taking the Natchez Trace ...beautiful route. #natheztrace #meriwetherlewis #exploring #vanlife #fern #roadtrip #happiness (at Natchez Trace Parkway) https://www.instagram.com/p/CMQ_OSbhTU_/?igshid=2nr2x55o4hlk
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#Travel #PacificOcean #Oregon #Seside #LewishAndClarkTrail #MeriwetherLewis #WilliamClark #Seaman #NewfoundlandDog #StanleyWanlass #BriceDailyPhoto https://www.instagram.com/p/CLpTREThTsE/?igshid=1rc6oxg7khq3o
#travel#pacificocean#oregon#seside#lewishandclarktrail#meriwetherlewis#williamclark#seaman#newfoundlanddog#stanleywanlass#bricedailyphoto
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Checking out the past in Meriwether Lewis Campground in Tennessee #meriwetherlewis #tennessee #meriwetherlewiscampground https://www.instagram.com/p/B4eHQtklkKy/?igshid=1emex0wuygee9
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Why does the name Meriwether not exist any more? Bring that shit back
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(via Meriwether Lewis)
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If it’s hard to tell what’s being said, here’s what’s being said:
Botanist: You should take particular care to notice if the leaves are opposite from one another along the stem or if they are staggered.
Lewis: That makes a difference, then?
Botanist: Does it make a diff---????? OF COURSE, IT DOES!!!!
Now please focus your attention upon the leaf bundles.
I really like this picture. It’s so hilarious, but poor Lewis though...I would’ve been a chill botanist if it was me, but oh, well lol XD
Anyway, have a worrisome Lewis trying to learn Botany.
Image comes from Nick Bertozzi’s “Lewis and Clark” :D
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Meriwether Lewis ve William Clark ile Amerika Batı'ya genişliyor
Meriwether Lewis ve William Clark ile Amerika Batı'ya genişliyor #williamclark #meriwetherlewis #usa #indian #siu #sacagawea #ToussaintCharbonneau #thomasjefferson #tarih #history OKUMAK İÇİN =>
Meriwether Lewisve William Clark isimli iki Amerikalı kaşif 26 Mayıs 1805 günü güneşli bir öğleden sonra, Missouri Irmağı’na bakan bir tepeye tırmandı. Karşısında geçen bir yıl içinde yaşanan tüm tehlikeleri, çekilen zorlukları ve uğranan başarısızlıkları unutturacak bir manzara uzanıyordu. Amerika’nın batısına doğru düzenlenen ilk keşif seferinde, öncüler, Missouri Irmağı’nın dolambaçlı yolunu…
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(via Meriwether Lewis)
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Kevin Abrams as Meriwether Lewis
Manifest Destiny: The Lewis & Clark Musical Adventure (2016)
http://www.manifestdestinymovie.com
#manifestdestiny#manifestdestinymovie#lewis#meriwetherlewis#kevinabrams#jerandkev#lewisandclark#musical#reaction#reactiongif#leaveme#whydidyouleaveme#anthonyparisi
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Casting for HBO miniseries begins | northdakota.allembru.com
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(via Meriwether Lewis)
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(via Meriwether Lewis)
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(via Dennis Quaid Movies)
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