One year after the United States doubled its territory with the Louisiana Purchase, the Lewis and Clark expedition left St. Louis, Missouri on a mission to explore the Northwest from the Mississippi to the Pacific.
Even before the Government concluded purchase negotiations with France, President Thomas Jefferson commissioned his private secretary Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, an Army captain, to lead an expedition into what is now the American Northwest. On 14 May 1804, the Corps of Discovery, featuring approximately 45 men (although only approximately 33 men would make the full journey), left St. Louis for the American interior.
The expedition traveled up the Missouri River in a fifty-foot long keelboat (painting) and two smaller boats. In November, Toussaint Charbonneau, a French-Canadian fur trader, accompanied by his young Native American wife Sacagawea, joined the expedition as an interpreter. The group wintered in present-day North Dakota before crossing into present-day Montana, where they first saw the Rocky Mountains. On the other side of the Continental Divide, they were met by Sacagawea’s tribe, the Shoshone, who sold them horses for their journey down through the Bitterroots. After passing through the dangerous rapids of the Clearwater and Snake rivers in canoes, the explorers reached the calm of the Columbia River, which led them to the sea. On 8 November 1805, the expedition arrived at the Pacific, the first European explorers to do so by an overland route from the east. After pausing there for the winter, the explorers began their long journey back to St. Louis.
On 23 September 1806, after almost two and a half years, the expedition returned to St. Louis, bringing back a wealth of information about the largely unexplored region, as well as valuable American claims to the Oregon Territory.
No comments:
Post a Comment
No more Anonymous comments, sorry.