November 1805 – March 1806

Winter at Fort Clatsop

After reaching the Pacific Ocean in November 1805, the Corps built Fort Clatsop near present-day Astoria, Oregon. During four months of nearly constant rain, Lewis and Clark documented hundreds of plant and animal species, traded with the Clatsop and Chinook peoples, and prepared detailed maps and reports for their return journey.

426
Journal entries
128
Dated days
6
Narrators
128
AI cross-narrator analyses
4
Heacock river features
6
Heacock writings
AI Cross-Narrator Analyses for this phase. 128 editor-reviewed analyses synthesize what each journalist preserved on the same date — drawn directly from the primary-source entries below.
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AI Cross-Narrator Analyses

128 in this phase
In Full View of an Ocean More Raging Than Pacific
Cross-narratorNovember 15, 1805
Pinned for eleven days on a tempest-battered shore at the Columbia's mouth, Clark and Gass record the same restless camp move in strikingly different registers — one expansive and aggrieved, the other terse and matter-of-fact.
Drying Out at the End of the Voyage: Three Views of a Pacific Encampment
Cross-narratorNovember 16, 1805
On the south shore of the Columbia near the Pacific, Gass, Ordway, and Clark each record the same day of drying baggage and hunting — but their entries reveal sharply different registers, from triumphal summary to wary diplomacy with visiting Chinook Indians.
Reckoning the Continent: Mileage, Manners, and the Chinook Encounter
Cross-narratorNovember 17, 1805
On the south shore of the Columbia, Patrick Gass tallies a continent in miles while William Clark negotiates uneasy gift-exchange with the Chinook. Two narrators, two registers — one fixated on distance, the other on diplomacy and the coastal nation now camped at their door.
Two Routes to the Pacific: Splitting the Party at Cape Disappointment
Cross-narratorNovember 18, 1805
On November 18, 1805, members of the Corps of Discovery split into parties to glimpse the Pacific. Gass and Ordway record the same expedition from opposite vantages — one in camp tallying game, the other scrambling over headlands to the sea.
Two Scales of Witness on the Columbia Shore
Cross-narratorNovember 19, 1805
On a rainy November day near the Pacific, Clark ranges miles up a sand beach measuring a condor's wingspan while Gass, in camp, records a Chinookan visitor's cedar-and-bear-grass hat traded for an old razor. Their entries reveal contrasting habits of attention.
A Belt of Blue Beads for a Sea Otter Robe
Cross-narratorNovember 20, 1805
On the Columbia's south shore, Clark and Gass record a single November day from sharply different vantages — one narrator counting wingspans and pumice stones, the other negotiating diplomacy, river crossings, and a coveted sea otter robe finally secured with Sacagawea's blue-bead belt.
A Belt of Blue Beads for a Sea-Otter Robe
Cross-narratorNovember 21, 1805
On a wind-bound day at the mouth of the Columbia, three expedition narrators record the same trade — a sea-otter robe purchased with Sacagawea's beaded belt — but only Clark turns his attention to the Chinookan villagers themselves.
The Storm at the Columbia's Mouth: Two Voices on a Day of Violence
Cross-narratorNovember 22, 1805
On November 22, 1805, a southeasterly gale battered the expedition's exposed camp near the Columbia's mouth. Patrick Gass and William Clark recorded the same tempest in starkly different registers — one terse and practical, the other anguished and exclamatory.
Names Carved, Otters Refused: Three Pens at the Mouth of the Columbia
Cross-narratorNovember 23, 1805
On a damp November day near the Pacific, Clark, Gass, and Ordway record the same camp from radically different vantages — a ritual of names carved into trees, a stalemate over sea-otter pelts, and a redheaded Clatsop visitor who appears in only one journal.
How Two Sergeants Recorded the Same Vote — November 24, 1805
Cross-narratorNovember 24, 1805
The famous vote at Station Camp survives in our memory because Clark wrote a roster. Gass and Ordway, writing the same evening, tell us how the act felt — Gass formally, Ordway as collective opinion. Their language matters.
Turning Back from the Crossing: Three Views of a Wind-Bound Day on the Columbia
Cross-narratorNovember 25, 1805
On a wind-tossed November day near the Columbia's mouth, Ordway, Gass, and Clark each record the same failed crossing — but their journals reveal sharply different priorities, from logistical brevity to cartographic ambition to strategic reasoning about winter survival.
Crossing to the South Shore: Three Views of a Rainy Reconnaissance
Cross-narratorNovember 26, 1805
On a wet November day along the lower Columbia, three expedition journalists describe the same crossing and Cathlamet village encounter — but with strikingly different levels of ethnographic detail, geographic precision, and narrative economy.

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Most Mentioned in This Phase

Aggregated from journal entries via AI entity extraction

Most mentioned people

  1. Drewyer (78)
  2. Collins (45)
  3. Shannon (36)
  4. Willard (32)
  5. Gibson (31)
  6. Sergt. Gass (30)
  7. Sergt. Pryor (27)
  8. Capt Lewis (22)
  9. Capt. Lewis (19)
  10. Bratten (18)

Most mentioned tribes

  1. Clatsops (53)
  2. Clatsop (33)
  3. Chinnooks (28)
  4. natives (20)
  5. Indians (13)
  6. Kil a mox (11)
  7. Chinnook (9)
  8. Killamucks (9)
  9. Cathlahmahs (9)
  10. Snake Indians (6)

Most mentioned places

  1. Columbia (54)
  2. Missouri (43)
  3. Netul (37)
  4. fort (36)
  5. Fort Clatsop (29)
  6. the fort (29)
  7. Rocky Mountains (25)
  8. Salt works (19)
  9. Point Adams (17)
  10. Fort (15)

Most mentioned wildlife

  1. Elk (185)
  2. deer (42)
  3. elk (40)
  4. Deer (26)
  5. beaver (25)
  6. whale (20)
  7. Sea otter (17)
  8. dogs (16)
  9. fish (12)
  10. Sturgeon (12)

Journal Entries

426 items
Clark: November 15, 1805
November 15, 1805
November 15th Friday 1805 Rained all the last night at intervales of Sometimes of 2 hours, This morning it became Calm & fair, I prepared to Set out at which…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 15, 1805
November 15, 1805
and clear off, but the river remained still rough. So we were obliged to continue here until about 1 o’clock, when the weather became more calm, and we loaded and…
Clark: November 16, 1805
November 16, 1805
November 16th Satturday 1805 a fine morning cool the latter part of the night, I had all our articles of every discription examined, and found much wet, had all put…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — John Ordway: November 16, 1805
November 16, 1805
went out a hunting, we put our baggage out to dry. towards evening the hunters all except one returned to Camp had killd four Deer and a number of geese…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 16, 1805
November 16, 1805
pretty high. We could see the waves, like small mountains, rolling out in the ocean, and pretty bad in the bay. LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION © 175 CHAP. XVI. E…
Clark: November 17, 1805
November 17, 1805
November 17th Sunday 1805 a fair cool windey morning wind from the East. every tide which rises 8 feet 6 Inches at this place, comes in with high Swells which…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 17, 1805
November 17, 1805
hunters went out. About noon they all came in: but the hunter who remained out last night did not return. He had killed 2 deer and the other men brought…
John Ordway: November 18, 1805
November 18, 1805
more of the party set out in order to go down and see the passiffic 1 Baker Bay. The camp for the next ten days was near the southeast, or…
Patrick Gass: November 18, 1805
November 18, 1805
and 10 men went down to Cape Disappointment, to get a more full view of the ocean; and 3 went out to hunt. In the course of the day we…
Clark: November 19, 1805
November 19, 1805
November 19th Tuesday 1805 began to rain a little before day and Continued raining untill 11 oClock I proceeded on thro emencely bad thickets & hills crossing 2 points to…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 19, 1805
November 19, 1805
of the hunters went out. About 1 o’clock the natives, who, had been with us some time, went away; and at 4 another party of the same nation came, and…
Clark: November 20, 1805
November 20, 1805
Novr. 20 Wednesday 1805 Some rain last night despatchd. 3 men to hunt Jo. Fields & Cotter to hunt Elk & Labich to kill some Brant for our brackfast The…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 20, 1805
November 20, 1805
remained at our camp; and Capt. Lewis gave one of them a medal, as he ranked as a chief in the nation. One of the men went out to hunt…
Clark: November 21, 1805
November 21, 1805
November 21st Thursday 1805 a Cloudy morning most of the Indians left us, The nation on the opposit Side is Small & Called Clap-soil, Their great chief name Stil-la-sha The…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — John Ordway: November 21, 1805
November 21, 1805
tude of Hailys bay or at our Incampment at the point above is 46° 19′ 11^ Min North, the Natives value their Sea otter Skins verry high, our officers being…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 21, 1805
November 21, 1805
LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION _ 179 the natives left us. The wind blew so violent to-day, and the waves ran so high, that we could not set out on our…
Clark: November 22, 1805
November 22, 1805
Novr. 22nd Friday 1805 Some little rain all the last night with wind, before day the wind increased to a Storm from the S. S. E. and blew with violence…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 22, 1805
November 22, 1805
we were not yet able to set out; the wind blew very hard from the south, and the river was rougher than it has been since we came here. At…
Clark: November 23, 1805
November 23, 1805
November 23rd Saturday 1805 The Cloudy and Calm, a moderate rain the greater part of the last night, Sent out men to hunt this morning and they Killed 3 Bucks,…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — John Ordway: November 23, 1805
November 23, 1805
Several men went out a Short time a hunting and killed 3 Deer and 21 fowls, a number of Savages visited us &C.
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 23, 1805
November 23, 1805
more calm. Some of the men went out to hunt and some to mend the canoe which had been split in the storm yesterday. The natives still stay with us,…
John Ordway: November 24, 1805
November 24, 1805
Several men went out a hunting we put out our baggage to air. The Columbian River at this place is three miles 660 yards wide. Some of two nations of…
Patrick Gass: November 24, 1805
November 24, 1805
As this was a fine clear day, it was thought proper to remain here in order to take some observations, which the bad weather had before rendered impossible. The latitude…
Clark: November 25, 1805
November 25, 1805
November 25th Munday 1805 a fine day Several Indians Come up from below, we loaded and Set out up the river, and proceeded on to the Shallow Bay, landed to…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 25, 1805
November 25, 1805
with a white frost. We loaded our canoes and proceeded on: * Geographers have stated that the Columbia enters the ocean in latitude 46° 18 north. The difference is therefore…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — John Ordway: November 25, 1805
November 25, 1805
canoes in the River [and] loaded up. our officers bought two more sea otter Skins of the natives, we then Set out and came about 9 miles up the River…
Clark: November 26, 1805
November 26, 1805
November 26th Tuesday 1805 Cloudy and Some rain this morning at daylight wind blew from the E N. E, we Set out and proceeded on up on the North Side…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 26, 1805
November 26, 1805
wet; but we set out early, went about a mile and then crossed the river; passing in our way several islands. Immediately after we crossed we came to a small…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — John Ordway: November 26, 1805
November 26, 1805
eairly went about one mile then crossed the River and went down along the the South Shore passed Several Islands, halted at a village of the Clatsop nation, they gave…
Clark: November 27, 1805
November 27, 1805
November 27th Wednesday 1805 Some rain all the last night & this morning at day light 3 Canoes and 11 men Came down with roots meat, Skins &c. to Sill,…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 27, 1805
November 27, 1805
coasted round, and turned a sharp cape about a mile; when we found the swells running so high that we had to halt, unload our canoes and haul them out…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — John Ordway: November 27, 1805
November 27, 1805
dians came from the village to trade their wapetoes roots with us. we went on across a bay then turned a cape & where we could perceive a considerable of…
Clark: November 28, 1805
November 28, 1805
November 28th Thursday 1805 Wind Shifted about to the S. W. and blew hard accompanied with hard rain all last night, we are all wet bedding and Stores, haveing nothing…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — Patrick Gass: November 28, 1805
November 28, 1805
the hunters went out, but had no luck. It rained all day; and we had here no fresh water but what was taken out of the canoes as the rain…
Exploring for winter camp site, south shore of Columbia — John Ordway: November 28, 1805
November 28, 1805
the N. West. Several men went out to hunt but killed nothing hard rain all day.3
Clark: November 29, 1805
November 29, 1805
November 29th Friday 1805 Blew hard and rained the greater part of the last night and this morning, Capt Lewis and 5 men Set out in our Small Indian canoe…

See all 426 journal entries for this phase →

Key Figures

24 items
Alexander Willard
Served as one of the expedition's blacksmiths alongside John Shields. He was court-martialed and sentenced to 100 lashes for sleeping while on sentinel duty — a capital offense. He was the second-to-last surviving member of the expedition, dying in California at age 86.
Chinook
A powerful trading people who controlled commerce at the mouth of the Columbia River. Led by Chief Comcomly, they were skilled diplomats who viewed the Corps as another potential trading partner. The Chinook Jargon trade language was widely used throughout the region.
Clatsop
A Chinookan people on the southern shore of the Columbia River estuary. The expedition built Fort Clatsop in their territory and wintered there from December 1805 to March 1806. Chief Coboway was consistently hospitable.
Coboway
Principal chief of the Clatsop tribe. Lewis wrote he "had been much more kind and hospitable to us than any other Indian in this neighbourhood." The expedition left Fort Clatsop to Coboway when they departed in March 1806.
Comcomly
A prominent Chinook leader and power broker on the lower Columbia River. A skilled diplomat and trader, he met Lewis and Clark in 1805. He later became a key figure in the Pacific fur trade.
Francois Labiche
An experienced boatman and Indian trader who spoke English, French, and several Native American languages. Labiche served as one of the expedition's key translators and was assigned alongside Pierre Cruzatte to man the bow of the keelboat.
George Gibson
Born in Pennsylvania and recruited in Kentucky, Gibson was a skilled hunter and fiddle player who entertained the Corps alongside Pierre Cruzatte. He served as an interpreter using sign language and was one of Clark's most trusted men.
Hugh Hall
Born in Massachusetts and recruited from the 2nd Infantry Regiment. Court-martialed alongside John Collins for being drunk on duty, receiving 50 lashes. Despite this early trouble, he completed the entire expedition.
Hugh McNeal
Accompanied Lewis on the first crossing of the Continental Divide at Lemhi Pass in August 1805, where he reportedly straddled a small stream and declared that he had "lived to bestride the mighty Missouri."
Jean Baptiste Lepage
A French-Canadian trapper who had lived among the Mandan and explored the Black Hills. Hired at Fort Mandan on November 2, 1804 to replace the expelled John Newman. At 43, the oldest member of the permanent party.
John Collins
Born in Maryland, Collins was a reliable hunter ranked in the top five of the Corps. He was court-martialed and received 100 lashes for tapping the expedition's whiskey barrel. Believed killed by Arikara warriors in 1823 during the Ashley-Henry fur trading expedition.
John Potts
Born in Germany and formerly a miller. After the expedition, he returned to the upper Missouri as a fur trapper. He was killed by Blackfeet warriors near Three Forks while trapping with John Colter, who narrowly escaped the same ambush.
John Thompson
Clark praised him as "a valuable member of our party." He served the entire journey without significant incident and was among the most quietly dependable members of the Corps.
Nathaniel Hale Pryor
A cousin of Sergeant Charles Floyd, Pryor led the First Squad of six privates during the expedition. Lewis praised him as one of the most capable men on the journey. After the expedition, he served in the War of 1812, became a fur trader, and eventually settled among the Osage Nation.
Peter Weiser
Served reliably throughout the expedition. Afterward worked for fur trader Manuel Lisa, returning to Montana in 1807. He traveled alone through western Idaho during winter 1807-1808; the Weiser River in Idaho now bears his name.
Pierre Cruzatte
Half French and half Omaha, Cruzatte was recruited for his expert skills as a Missouri River boatman and his fiddle playing, which provided entertainment and facilitated diplomacy with Native peoples. Blind in one eye and nearsighted in the other, he accidentally shot Meriwether Lewis while hunting elk in August 1806.
Richard Windsor
Best remembered for a harrowing incident on June 7, 1805, when he nearly fell from a 300-foot cliff along the Missouri River. Lewis, who was on the same narrow trail, talked him through the crisis. A reliable hunter throughout the expedition.
Robert Frazer
Joined the permanent party on October 8, 1804 after Moses Reed's expulsion. He kept a journal and created a map of the expedition route that, while crude, provided an early cartographic record. His journal manuscript was lost.
Seaman
A large Newfoundland dog purchased by Lewis in Pittsburgh for $20. Seaman accompanied the expedition for its entire duration, serving as a hunter, guard against grizzly bears and buffalo, and valued companion. The only animal to complete the entire trip.
Silas Goodrich
The Corps' most accomplished fisherman, Goodrich regularly supplied the expedition with fresh fish throughout the journey. At the Great Falls, he caught large numbers of cutthroat trout that supplemented the Corps' diet and provided Lewis with specimens for scientific study.
Thomas Howard
From Massachusetts. Court-martialed in February 1805 for climbing the Fort Mandan wall after hours rather than using the gate, potentially compromising the fort's security. Completed the entire journey.
Tillamook
A Salishan-speaking people of the northern Oregon coast encountered during the winter at Fort Clatsop. Clark's whale-blubber trading party visited a Tillamook village in January 1806.
William Bratton
One of the "Nine Young Men from Kentucky," Bratton served as hunter, blacksmith, and gunsmith. In spring 1806 he was incapacitated by a severe back ailment until a Native American sweat lodge treatment cured him. He later served in the War of 1812 at the Battle of New Orleans.
William Werner
Had a fight with John Potts at Camp Dubois during preparation and was convicted of being absent without leave. Despite disciplinary issues, he completed the full journey to the Pacific and back.

Artwork

6 items
Clark's Manuscript Map of 1810
William Clark, 1810
Clark's manuscript map of 1810 is a hand-drawn cartographic document covering the trans-Mississippi West, executed in ink on paper. It traces the courses of the Missouri, Yellowstone, Columbia, Snake, and their major tributaries, along with…
Lewis and Clark on the Lower Columbia
Charles Marion Russell, 1905
Russell's watercolor depicts the Corps of Discovery's encounter with Chinookan peoples along the lower Columbia River. In the foreground, a large dugout canoe carrying Native paddlers approaches from the left, its occupants raising hands in…
Map of Lewis and Clark's Track (1814)
William Clark (cartographer), Samuel Lewis (engraver), 1814
The 1814 "Map of Lewis and Clark's Track, Across the Western Portion of North America" is an engraved map that synthesizes the geographic information gathered during the Corps of Discovery's 1804–1806 expedition. It depicts the…
Mount Hood, Oregon
Albert Bierstadt, 1869
Bierstadt's "Mount Hood, Oregon" presents the 11,250-foot stratovolcano rising above the forested Cascade foothills, its snow-covered peak catching light against a sky banked with cloud. The composition follows the artist's standard formula for his major…
Mount St. Helens, Columbia River, Oregon
Albert Bierstadt, 1889
Bierstadt's painting depicts Mount St. Helens rising in the distance above the Columbia River, its snow-covered cone catching light against a sky of broken clouds. The foreground occupies the lower third of the canvas with…
Puget Sound on the Pacific Coast
Albert Bierstadt, 1870
Bierstadt's canvas shows a storm-battered stretch of the Pacific Northwest coast, with breaking surf in the foreground, a beached or foundering vessel listing on the rocks, and shadowy figures of Native fishermen working among the…

Weapons & Equipment

12 items
Battle Axes (Shields's Fort Mandan Manufacture)
During the winter of 1804-1805 at Fort Mandan, expedition blacksmith John Shields and fellow smith Alexander Willard devised an ingenious economy: they cut a burned-out stove into small squares and…
Clark's Elegant Fusil
Clark brought what the expedition journals describe as “an elegant fusil” — a lightweight gentleman’s sporting smoothbore. A fusil (from the French) was a lighter, more refined version of a…
Girandoni Air Rifle
The Girandoni air rifle was arguably the most significant weapon of the entire expedition, serving more as a diplomatic instrument than a weapon of war. Designed by Italian-Tyrolean watchmaker and…
Indian Peace Medal (Jefferson)
The Indian peace medals carried by Lewis and Clark were among the most important diplomatic tools of the expedition, second only to the air rifle in their impact on Native…
Keelboat Swivel Gun
A small naval cannon mounted on a swivel in the bow of the keelboat (the 55-foot vessel that carried the expedition up the Missouri River from May 1804 to April…
Lance / War Spear
War lances were prestige weapons carried by prominent warriors and military society leaders among the Plains nations. Unlike bows and clubs, which were primarily practical weapons, the lance was often…
Lewis's Fowling Piece
Lewis brought a personal fowling piece — an extra-long smoothbore shoulder gun used primarily for bird hunting. Fowlers were common sporting arms of the era, with long barrels (typically 42-48…
Native Tomahawks (Traditional and Trade)
The tomahawk existed in two broad categories during the Lewis and Clark era: traditional stone-headed versions (a shaped stone lashed to a wooden handle) and European-manufactured trade versions (iron or…
Northwest Trade Gun (Fusil)
By the time of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Northwest trade guns were the most common firearms among Native peoples of the Upper Missouri and beyond. Lewis described the tribes…
Plains Indian Bow and Arrows
The bow and arrow remained the primary ranged weapon of most Native American nations encountered by the Lewis and Clark Expedition, even as trade guns became increasingly available. The short,…
Scalping Knife / Hunting Knife
Every member of the Corps of Discovery carried a large knife that served as an all-purpose tool for butchering game, preparing food, cutting wood, making repairs, and self-defense. These “scalping…
Tomahawk (Trade and Military)
Tomahawks were among the most ubiquitous and versatile tools carried by the Corps of Discovery. Each member was issued a tomahawk or hatchet that served as a weapon, tool for…

Documents

13 items
Clark's Letter to Brother Jonathan Announcing Return
William Clark, 1806
Clark wrote to Jonathan from St. Louis on September 23, 1806, the day of their triumphant return. His letter provided personal details about the journey that he would not have…
Council with the Teton Sioux at Bad River
Meriwether Lewis, William Clark, 1804
The encounter began with a council on September 25, 1804, where communication was hampered by the lack of a competent Sioux interpreter. After distributing gifts, tensions escalated when warriors seized…
Lewis's Astronomical Observations and Calculations
Meriwether Lewis, 1804
Lewis was trained in celestial navigation by Andrew Ellicott and Robert Patterson before the expedition. Using a sextant, chronometer, and artificial horizon, he recorded observations of the sun, moon, and…
Lewis's Description of the Great Falls of the Missouri
Meriwether Lewis, 1805
Lewis wrote: “I wished for the pencil of Salvator Rosa or the pen of Thompson, that I might be enabled to give to the enlightened world some just idea of…
Lewis's Descriptions of New Animal Species
Meriwether Lewis, William Clark, 1806
Among the most notable species described were the grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) — which nearly killed several expedition members — the pronghorn antelope, the black-tailed prairie dog (live specimens…
Lewis's Descriptions of New Plant Species
Meriwether Lewis, 1806
Lewis received botanical training from Benjamin Smith Barton at the University of Pennsylvania before the expedition. Throughout the journey, he collected and described specimens including Lewis’s monkey-flower (Mimulus lewisii), bitterroot…
Lewis's Letter to Jefferson Announcing the Expedition's Return
Meriwether Lewis, 1806
Writing from St. Louis, Lewis summarized the expedition’s key findings: “In obedience to your orders we have penetrated the Continent of North America to the Pacific Ocean.” He described the…
Lewis's Letter to Jefferson from Fort Mandan
Meriwether Lewis, 1805
This letter accompanied the keelboat returning from Fort Mandan with a crew of soldiers, traders, and the Arikara chief. Lewis described the expedition’s encounters with Native nations, the geography of…
Private Whitehouse's Journal
Joseph Whitehouse, 1804
Two versions of Whitehouse’s journal exist: an original rough journal and a later paraphrased version that Whitehouse apparently prepared for publication (which never occurred). The journal provides unique observations about…
Sergeant Floyd's Journal
Charles Floyd, 1804
Floyd’s journal is the shortest of the expedition journals, ending abruptly as his illness worsened. His entries record the daily progress up the Missouri, encounters with the Oto and Missouri…
Sergeant Gass's Journal (Published 1807)
Patrick Gass, 1807
Gass’s account was published as “A Journal of the Voyages and Travels of a Corps of Discovery” in 1807. As the expedition carpenter, Gass provided unique details about the construction…
Sergeant Ordway's Journal
John Ordway, 1804
Ordway’s journal is particularly valuable because it covers the entire expedition without the gaps found in Lewis’s journal. It documents daily routines, hunting results, weather observations, and events in camp…
The Journals of Lewis and Clark
Meriwether Lewis, William Clark, 1804
Lewis and Clark each maintained separate journals, though Lewis’s entries are notably absent for long periods (leading to enduring speculation about what he was doing during these gaps). Clark was…

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