Historical Figure

Alexander Willard

Private Alexander Hamilton Willard (1778–1865) was a blacksmith and gunsmith from New Hampshire who served in the Corps of Discovery. He was court-martialed early in the expedition for falling asleep on guard duty—a capital offense—but was sentenced to 100 lashes instead of execution. Willard assisted John Shields at the forge and proved a reliable soldier throughout the journey. After the expedition, he settled in Wisconsin and later California, becoming one of the longest-lived members of the Corps.

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Biography

Alexander Hamilton Willard (1778-1865) was a blacksmith and gunsmith who served as one of the expedition’s most versatile craftsmen. He was one of the “Nine Young Men from Kentucky” who formed the core of the permanent party.

Willard is notable for being court-martialed for falling asleep while on sentinel duty on July 12, 1804 — a serious offense that technically carried a death sentence. He was found guilty and sentenced to 100 lashes on his bare back, administered at 25 lashes per day over four days. Despite this harsh punishment, Willard continued to serve capably throughout the journey.

His blacksmithing skills proved particularly valuable at Fort Mandan, where the expedition traded metalwork to the Mandan and Hidatsa in exchange for food — a crucial arrangement that helped them survive the brutal winter of 1804-1805.

After the expedition, Willard lived the longest of any Corps member, dying in 1865 at the remarkable age of 87 in Sacramento, California. He lived to see the Civil War and the completion of the transcontinental railroad — a transformed America that the expedition had helped make possible.

Related Locations

Pin color = Planning (1801–1804) Westward (1804–1805) Fort Clatsop (1805–1806) Return (1806) Post (1806–1812)
Master expedition route

Note: the longest gap between tagged appearances is about 11 months (Aug 1, 1804 → Jun 18, 1805). Alexander Willard may have been present in the corps during that span but is not named in the journals.

Journal Entries (84)

Grizzly Bear and Four Bighorn Taken in Steady Rain
Jul 30, 1806
Grizzly Bear Killed; Swept into Sawyers by Moonlight
Aug 4, 1806
Lewis Rejoins Party After Blackfeet Confrontation
Jul 28, 1806
Colter Kills Beaver; Headwinds Halt Progress
Jul 14, 1806
Slippery Mountain Roads; Horses Fall in Thunderstorm
Jun 15, 1806
Eight Hunters Return Laden from Weippe Prairie
Jun 13, 1806
Twisted Hair Sends for Horses; Ammunition Retrieved
May 9, 1806
Elk Killed; Willard Reported Very Sick
Feb 27, 1806
Eleven Buffalo Killed; Clark Surveys the Great Falls
Jun 20, 1805
La Liberty Dispatched to Summon the Otoes
Jul 29, 1804
Horses Recovered; Collins Shoots 134-Pound Buck
Aug 1, 1804
Nemaha River Surveyed; Willard Court Martialed
Jul 12, 1804
Clark Surveys and Measures the Great Falls
Jun 20, 1805
Revisiting Pleasant Camp Near Corvus Creek
Aug 28, 1806
Reunion with Labiche After Passing the White River
Aug 29, 1806
Violent Thunderstorm Snaps Cables, Scatters Two Canoes
Aug 31, 1806
Passing Milk River and Rattlesnake Encounter
Aug 4, 1806
Joyful Reunion with the Canoe Party
Jul 28, 1806
Reuniting Horse and Canoe Parties at Madison River
Jul 13, 1806
Canoes Cached; Hard Winds Hamper Missouri Departure
Jul 12, 1806
Rain and Slippery Roads Slow Departure from Quamash
Jun 15, 1806
Slick Roads and Fallen Timber Test Rainy Departure
Jun 15, 1806
Eight Deer Taken but Buzzards Spoil One Kill
Jun 13, 1806
Eight Deer Taken Near Collins Creek Before Departure
Jun 13, 1806
Broken Arm Visits; Hunters Return with Five Deer
Jun 3, 1806
Broken Arm Stays the Night; All Patients Improving
Jun 3, 1806
Failed Trading; Drouillard Sent to Recover Tomahawks
Jun 1, 1806
Pack Horse Falls; Trade Raft Capsizes with Cargo
Jun 1, 1806
Indians Distinguish Between White and Grizzly Bears
May 31, 1806
Native Bear Classifications Revealed; Reddish Skin Purchased
May 31, 1806
Canoe Construction Begun; Trade Goods Divided Among Men
May 21, 1806
Canoe Building Underway; Willow Lodge Proves Comfortable
May 21, 1806
Multicolored Bears Declared One Species Distinct from Black Bear
May 15, 1806
Bear Hunt Yields Debate on Species Variation
May 15, 1806
Scattered Horses Delayed Departure; Hunters Return Empty
May 9, 1806
Twisted Hair's Camp Reached; Twenty-One Horses Recovered
May 9, 1806
Skillute Salmon Ritual Witnessed During Portage
Apr 19, 1806
Chief Twice Cancels Bargains; Few Horses Obtained
Apr 17, 1806
Lewis Notes Drier Plains; Awaits Clark's Horse Trade
Apr 17, 1806
Clannarminamon Guides Lead Party Past Snowy Mountains
Mar 29, 1806
Elk Meat Retrieved; Party Reaches Cathlamah Village
Mar 24, 1806
Storms Delay Departure from Fort Clatsop
Mar 20, 1806
Lewis Reflects on Winter at Fort Clatsop
Mar 20, 1806
Hunters Return Empty-Handed; Provisions Nearly Exhausted
Mar 21, 1806
Last Day's Provisions; Drouillard Ordered to Hunt
Mar 21, 1806
Collins Kills Three Elk at Point Adams
Mar 8, 1806
Mixed Hunting Results; Pox Patients Nearly Recovered
Feb 27, 1806
Collins Kills Buck Elk; Willard Remains Very Ill
Feb 27, 1806
Storm Confines Party; Celestial Observations Frustrated
Feb 25, 1806
Rain and Wind; Willard Worsens at Fort Clatsop
Feb 25, 1806
Cedar Hats Purchased; Drouillard Seeks Dogs
Feb 22, 1806
Tahcum the Chinook Chief Visits with Twenty-Five Men
Feb 20, 1806
Rain Drives Hunters Back; Fisher Spotted and Lost
Feb 21, 1806
Ordway's Salt Works Party Returns to Fort Clatsop
Feb 21, 1806
Clatsop Women Deliver Custom Cedar-Bark Hats
Feb 22, 1806
Willard's Tomahawk Wound; Gibson Gravely Ill
Feb 10, 1806
Gibson Too Ill to Move at Salt Camp
Feb 10, 1806
Ice Blocks River; Fields Reports Two Elk Killed
Jan 31, 1806
Ice Halts Hunting Party; Two Elk Located
Jan 31, 1806
Comowool Departs; Collins Arrives from Salt Camp
Jan 25, 1806
Comowool's Party Leaves; Colter Reports Scarce Game
Jan 25, 1806
Last Blue Beads Traded for Sea Otter Skin
Jan 19, 1806
Comowool Brings Whale Blubber from Tillamook Shore
Jan 3, 1806
Willard and Wiser Return with Salt and Whale Blubber
Jan 5, 1806
Salt Camp Established; Whale Blubber Gifted by Killamuck
Jan 5, 1806
Twelve Men Retrieve Elk; Otter Taken from Traps
Jan 2, 1806
New Year's Salute; Boiled Elk and Wappetoe for Dinner
Jan 1, 1806
Elk Retrieved While Willard and Wiser Remain Absent
Jan 2, 1806
Sun Briefly Appears; Shannon Sent to Check Salt Makers
Jan 3, 1806
Chimneys and Bunks Finished; Salt Makers Assigned
Dec 27, 1805
Hunters Dispatched; Salt Camp Established at the Shore
Dec 28, 1805
Wahkiakum Men Caught Stealing Gig and Basket
Nov 14, 1805
Eleven Days of Rain End; Bedding Finally Dried
Nov 15, 1805
Hailstorm Forces Relocation to Creek Mouth
Nov 12, 1805
Clark Climbs Steep Spur Through Massive Spruce Forest
Nov 13, 1805
Party Splits; Clark Races Ahead for Provisions
Sep 18, 1805
Berry Pudding for Cameahwait; Shoshones Fear Ambush
Aug 15, 1805
Baggage Hauled to High Plain for Portage Advance
Jun 21, 1805
Clark Measures the Magnificent Forty-Seven-Foot Falls
Jun 18, 1805
Distant Gunfire Reported Near Indian Knob Creek
Jul 28, 1804
Resting in Camp; Clark Surveys Nemaha Mounds
Jul 12, 1804
Hunters' Bears and Deer Loaded at Grand Prairie
Jun 16, 1804
Detachment Orders Organize the Corps of Discovery
May 26, 1804
Navigating the Treacherous Devil's Race Ground
May 24, 1804

Cross-Narrator Analyses

AI-assisted scholarly analyses that cite or discuss Alexander Willard — showing 10 of the most recent matches.

August 4, 1806

Sawyers by Moonlight: Four Voices on a Near-Drowning Above Milk River

On a single August day in 1806, four expedition narrators record the same descent past Big Dry and Milk Rivers — yet…

November 15, 1805

In Full View of an Ocean More Raging Than Pacific

Pinned for eleven days on a tempest-battered shore at the Columbia's mouth, Clark and Gass record the same restless camp move in…

Figure: Silas Goodrich

Silas Goodrich: The Expedition’s Fisherman

Private Silas Goodrich served as the Corps of Discovery's most dedicated angler, contracted syphilis at Fort Clatsop, and was among the small…

Figure: William Bratton

William Bratton: Hunter, Saltmaker, and Patient of the Corps of Discovery

A Virginia-born private whose journey through the journals traces a path from messmate and marksman to gravely ill convalescent — and finally,…

Figure: John Colter

John Colter: The Hunter Who Walked Away From Home

From Pryor's mess at Camp Dubois to a solitary parting on the upper Missouri, John Colter emerges in the journals as one…

March 2, 1805

Forge Smoke and Company News: Two Views from Fort Mandan

On a thawing March day at Fort Mandan, Ordway and Clark capture two faces of the same post: a humming Indian trade…

February 6, 1805

Sheet Iron for Corn: Diplomacy and Provision at Fort Mandan

On a fair February day at Fort Mandan, Lewis details a clever economic exchange with the Mandan while Ordway records only the…

January 28, 1805

Ice, Iron, and Illness: Two Views from a Stalled Fort Mandan

On a mild January day at Fort Mandan, Sergeant Ordway and Captain Clark both record the frustrating struggle to free the iced-in…

January 24, 1805

Empty Game Bags and the Quiet Work of Coal Wood

On a fine winter Thursday at Fort Mandan, three expedition journalists record a day of fruitless hunting and steady fuel-cutting. Their brief,…

December 31, 1804

Sand on Ice, Corn for Iron: Three Views from Fort Mandan’s Last Day of 1804

On the final day of 1804, Clark observes wind-mixed sand and snow on the Missouri ice while Mandan women trade corn for…

From Heacock's Writings

2 mirrored articles by Robert Heacock that mention Alexander Willard.

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