Reading every journal at once. What no human has done.
For every date with two or more expedition narrators writing, this database produces a side-by-side analysis comparing what each preserved. Long-form thematic essays trace patterns across years. Every claim cites a specific journal entry. Every analysis is reviewed before publication.
The Silence of Meriwether Lewis: What Clark and the Sergeants Preserved, August 1805–January 1806
For roughly 135 days spanning the Bitterroot crossing, the descent of the Columbia, and the founding of Fort Clatsop, Meriwether Lewis put down his pen. The expedition's most consequential geographic transit survives only through the eyes of Clark, Ordway, Gass, and Whitehouse — a documentary absence that shapes everything we…
Read the analysisFeatured analyses
A curated mix — thematic essays, per-figure deep dives, and rich multi-narrator dates.
Diet Across the Expedition: A Seasonal Analysis
From the bison-rich winter at Fort Mandan to the salmon and wapato of the Pacific coast, the Corps of Discovery's diet shifted dramatically with season, geography, and Indigenous…
Sacagawea: The Shoshone Interpreter of the Corps of Discovery
From her recruitment at Fort Mandan in November 1804 to her family's farewell at the Mandan villages in August 1806, Sacagawea — the young Shoshone wife of Toussaint…
Cameahwait: The Shoshone Chief Who Saved the Expedition
Brother to Sacagawea and chief of the Lemhi Shoshone, Cameahwait provided the horses and guidance without which the Corps of Discovery could not have crossed the Rocky Mountains.
Choosing Ground: The Day the Corps Found Its Winter
On November 1, 1804, the Corps drifted downstream from the Mandan villages to select a site for winter quarters. Five narrators preserve the day in fragments — diplomatic,…
The Sioux Pass of the Three Rivers: Four Pens at a Diplomatic Crossroads
On a clear September day in 1804, four expedition journalists recorded the same stretch of the Missouri near the Big Bend. Their accounts of buffalo swimming the river…
Two Camps, Two Registers: Skins, Goose Berries, and a Missing Pair
On August 9, 1806, the expedition's two halves remain separated. Lewis waits for Clark while his men dress skins; Clark drifts downriver killing the fattest elk of the…
Pursuing a Deserter: Four Journals on the Hunt for Moses Reed
On August 7, 1804, the Corps dispatched four men to retrieve the deserter Moses Reed — dead or alive. Gass, Whitehouse, Floyd, and Clark each record the order…
A Buffalo in the Camp: Two Sergeants Recount a Near Disaster on the Missouri
On the night of May 28-29, 1805, a buffalo bull charged through the sleeping expedition camp. Sergeant Gass and Private Whitehouse both recorded the incident, but their accounts…
Thematic essays
Long-form analyses that cut across many dates — diet, illness, language, weather, copying patterns, naming conventions.
Diet Across the Expedition: A Seasonal Analysis
From the bison-rich winter at Fort Mandan to the salmon and wapato of the Pacific coast, the Corps of Discovery's diet shifted…
Diet Across the Expedition: A Seasonal Analysis
From buffalo feasts on the northern plains to dog meat purchased on the Columbia and elk steaks rationed at Fort Clatsop, the…
Per-narrator studies
One essay for each expedition diarist — their distinctive voice, omissions, recurring themes, and how their writing evolved.
Key figure profiles
AI-assisted biographical syntheses drawn from every entry that mentions each person or nation.
Jean Baptiste Charbonneau: The Infant Traveler of the Corps of Discovery
Born at Fort Mandan in February 1805, Sacagawea's son 'Pomp' became the youngest member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, carried across…
John Shields: The Expedition’s Indispensable Artisan
Blacksmith, gunsmith, and woodworker John Shields proved one of the most practically valuable men of the Corps of Discovery — repairing arms,…
Toussaint Charbonneau: The Interpreter Who Brought Sacagawea
A French-Canadian fur trader hired at the Mandan villages, Charbonneau served as interpreter across the continent — though his greatest contribution to…
The Arikara Nation: Diplomatic Crossroads on the Upper Missouri
Across forty-two journal entries, the Arikara emerge as central players in the expedition's diplomatic strategy — corn-growing villagers caught between Sioux pressure…
The Yankton Sioux: Calumet Bluff and the Long Shadow of Diplomacy
From the ceremonial council at Calumet Bluff in August 1804 to chance encounters with traders bound for their villages two years later,…
Sergeant Nathaniel Pryor: A Steady Hand of the Corps of Discovery
From squad leader at Camp Dubois to trusted lieutenant of small parties, Sergeant Nathaniel Pryor emerges from the journals as one of…
York: The Enslaved Man Who Crossed a Continent
Enslaved by William Clark from boyhood, York walked, paddled, hunted, voted, and traded across 8,000 miles with the Corps of Discovery —…
The Shawnee Nation in the Lewis & Clark Record
Though the Corps of Discovery did not encounter the Shawnee homeland during their westward journey, the Shawnee people occupied a notable place…
The Mandan Nation: Heart of the Upper Missouri
From October 1804 through April 1805, the Mandan villages on the upper Missouri became the expedition's home, classroom, and trading partner —…
The Otoe Nation: First Diplomatic Council on the Missouri
The Otoe (Oto) people were the first Native nation with whom Lewis and Clark held a formal diplomatic council, meeting at the…
The Iowa Tribe in the Lewis & Clark Journals: A Note on Absence
Although the Iowa (Ioway) Nation appears peripherally in the broader ethnographic horizon of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, the corpus of journal…
Charles Marion Russell: The Cowboy Artist and the Lewis & Clark Imagination
Charles Marion Russell (1864–1926) does not appear in the Lewis and Clark journals — he was born nearly six decades after the…
Browse by date
853 date-bound analyses, in chronological order.
How these analyses are written
AI-Assisted Each analysis is drafted by Anthropic Claude using only the primary-source journal entries cited within it, then reviewed by a human editor before publication. AI surfaces patterns that single-narrator scholarship cannot — copying lineages, prose-register shifts, side-by-side accounts of the same day from opposite sides of the camp. Every claim must trace to a specific journal entry. We're transparent about the method because we believe it's defensible scholarship, not a substitute for it.