hare
Animal · mentioned in 21 journal entries
Planning
Westward
Fort Clatsop
Return
Post-expedition
NPS L&C NHT trail data © National Park Service
AI-extracted reference. Each entry below was identified by AI as mentioning hare. Spelling variants may not be merged. see related variants →
Also discussed in Coues 1893 (4-vol edition):
2
mentions via 1
variant:
hare (2)
Matching wildlife/plant records:
Missouri River near White River — Joseph Whitehouse: September 14, 1804
Joseph Whitehouse · Sep 14, 1804 · Missouri River near White River
"killed by hunters"
Clark: September 14, 1804
William Clark · Sep 14, 1804 · Missouri River near White River
"killed by Shields, 6.5 lb"
— transcribed as Hare
Missouri River near White River — Patrick Gass: September 14, 1804
Patrick Gass · Sep 14, 1804 · Missouri River near White River
"killed by man with horse"
Clark: September 20, 1804
William Clark · Sep 20, 1804 · Missouri River near Big Bend
"ran into hole on hillside"
Clark: September 24, 1804
William Clark · Sep 24, 1804 · Missouri River near Big Bend
"saw one hare today"
Fort Mandan, North Dakota — Patrick Gass: November 14, 1804
Patrick Gass · Nov 14, 1804 · Fort Mandan, North Dakota
"killed by man traveling by land"
Clark: January 3, 1805
William Clark · Jan 3, 1805 · Fort Mandan (winter)
"killed by hunters"
Fort Mandan (winter) — Patrick Gass: January 12, 1805
Patrick Gass · Jan 12, 1805 · Fort Mandan (winter)
"killed by Clarke, changing white to grey"
Fort Mandan (winter) — John Ordway: January 21, 1805
John Ordway · Jan 21, 1805 · Fort Mandan (winter)
"one killed by hunters"
Departure from Fort Mandan, Missouri River — Patrick Gass: April 12, 1805
Patrick Gass · Apr 12, 1805 · Departure from Fort Mandan, Missouri River
"changing colour from white to grey"
Clark: April 12, 1805
William Clark · Apr 12, 1805 · Departure from Fort Mandan, Missouri River
"killed, changing color from white to grey"
— transcribed as Hare
Lewis: April 26, 1805
Meriwether Lewis · Apr 26, 1805 · Yellowstone-Missouri confluence
"feeds on willow in winter"
Joseph Whitehouse: May 26, 1805
Joseph Whitehouse · May 26, 1805 · Missouri River near Judith River area, central Montana
"killed by hunter, weighed 8 pounds"
Lewis: August 25, 1805
Meriwether Lewis · Aug 25, 1805 · Lemhi Valley, preparing to cross Bitterroots
"several large ones observed"
— transcribed as hares
Columbia River near Wallula Gap — Patrick Gass: October 17, 1805
Patrick Gass · Oct 17, 1805 · Columbia River near Wallula Gap
"many in the plains"
— transcribed as hares
Clark: February 15, 1806
William Clark · Feb 15, 1806 · Fort Clatsop, winter quarters
"native wild animal"
Lewis: February 15, 1806
Meriwether Lewis · Feb 15, 1806 · Fort Clatsop, winter quarters
"native wild animal"
Clark: February 28, 1806
William Clark · Feb 28, 1806 · Fort Clatsop, winter quarters
"extensively described in entry"
— transcribed as Hare
Lewis: February 28, 1806
Meriwether Lewis · Feb 28, 1806 · Fort Clatsop, winter quarters
"extensive description of plains hare"
Clark: July 6, 1806
William Clark · Jul 6, 1806 · Lewis: to Great Falls / Clark: to Three Forks
"large mountain species killed by Shields"
Missouri River through Kansas-Missouri area — Patrick Gass: September 18, 1806
Patrick Gass · Sep 18, 1806 · Missouri River through Kansas-Missouri area
"killed by Clarke"