Historical Figure

Charles Floyd

Not to be confused with Sergeant Charles Floyd. Multiple men surnamed Floyd served in various capacities connected to the expedition and the fur trade era on the Missouri River.

0 treaties 49 total items 49 mapped locations

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 19 months (Nov 2, 1804 → Jun 2, 1806). Charles Floyd may have been present in the corps during that span but is not named in the journals.

Journal Entries (49)

Oto Grand Chief and Warriors Arrive at Camp
Aug 17, 1804
Devil's Rock Decorated with Painted Figures
Jun 7, 1804
Pressing Past Grand River Without Hunting
Sep 18, 1806
Seine Nets and Pike at Maha Creek
Aug 15, 1804
Sergeant Charles Floyd Dies Despite All Efforts
Aug 20, 1804
Trading for Roots; Mountains Prove Impassable
Jun 5, 1806
Mineral Deposits of Sulfur, Brass, and Copperas Examined
Aug 22, 1804
Deserter Moses Reed Tried and Sentenced to Run Gauntlet
Aug 18, 1804
La Liberty Dispatched to Summon the Otoes
Jul 29, 1804
Drouillard Kills Buck; Beaver Caught Alive
Jul 31, 1804
Clark and Ordway Scout High Prairies Beyond Faun Creek
Jul 15, 1804
Passing Nodaway Island; Hunters Kill Several Deer
Jul 8, 1804
Nemaha River Surveyed; Willard Court Martialed
Jul 12, 1804
Missing Men Found Asleep; Passing Wolf Creek
Jul 10, 1804
Gooseberries and Raspberries; Boat Towed at Rocky Stretch
Jun 19, 1804
Thunder and Lightning; Hunters at Big Fire Creek
Jun 22, 1804
Large Coal Deposits Found Along Missouri Bank
Jun 25, 1804
Ripe Mulberries and the Two Chariton Rivers
Jun 10, 1804
Lewis Investigates Salt Lick at Big Devil Creek
Jun 7, 1804
Hailstorm Travel to Grind Stone Creek
May 30, 1804
Camp on South Bank of the Missouri
May 24, 1804
Lewis and Clark Deliver Speech and Present Medals
Aug 19, 1804
Sergeant Charles Floyd Dies After Midday Dinner
Aug 20, 1804
Moses Reed's Desertion Recounted by Floyd
Aug 7, 1804
Council Bluff Camp; Horses Lost, Floyd Recovered
Jul 31, 1804
Searching Ten Miles for Timber Along the River
Jul 21, 1804
Rest Day; Drouillard Kills Three Deer in Prairie
Jul 17, 1804
Biscuit Creek and Frog Tree Creek Passed Southward
Jul 1, 1804
After Severe Thunderstorm, Passing Little Fire Creek
Jun 22, 1804
Windbound Camp; Osage Pirogue Passes with Pelts
May 31, 1804
Rain Clears to Favorable Wind Along Rich Bottomlands
May 15, 1804
Coat Buttons Bartered for Three Bushels of Roots
Jun 2, 1806
Buttons and Medicines Traded for Roots and Bread
Jun 2, 1806
Patrick Gass Promoted to Sergeant After Floyd's Death
Aug 26, 1804
Jerking Elk Meat; Shannon and Horses Still Missing
Aug 26, 1804
Council with Oto and Missouri Chiefs at Bluffs
Aug 19, 1804
Flagpole Raised at Camp Awaiting the Oto Indians
Jul 30, 1804
Clark Walks Overland to Mouth of Nemaha Creek
Jul 15, 1804
Reuniting with Ordway; Cook Assigned to Each Mess
Jul 8, 1804
Detachment Orders Appointing Provision Superintendents
Jul 8, 1804
Court-Martial of Collins and Hall for Stealing Whiskey
Jun 29, 1804
High Winds Force Halt; Arms Inspected Ashore
Jun 23, 1804
Scouting the Mine River and Rich Southern Lands
Jun 8, 1804
Detachment Orders Organize the Corps of Discovery
May 26, 1804
Corps Returns Triumphantly to St. Louis
Sep 23, 1806 · William Clark
Timber and Charcoal Work at Fort Mandan
Nov 2, 1804 · Patrick Gass
Floyd's Final Journal Entry Before His Death
Aug 18, 1804 · Charles Floyd
Sergeant Floyd Dies: Expedition's Only Fatality
Aug 20, 1804 · William Clark
Corps Departs Camp River Dubois on the Missouri
May 14, 1804 · William Clark

Cross-Narrator Analyses

AI-assisted scholarly analyses that cite or discuss Charles Floyd — showing 24 of the most recent matches.

May 14, 1804

Departure from Camp Dubois: Four Voices on a Single Afternoon

Four expedition journals record the Corps of Discovery's launch up the Missouri. Comparing Whitehouse, Floyd, Ordway, and Clark reveals striking patterns of…

May 15, 1804

A Heavy Stern and a Rainy Morning: The Barge in Trouble Below St. Charles

On the second day out from River Dubois, the captains and the enlisted journalists record the same nine-mile push in strikingly different…

May 17, 1804

Court-Martial at St. Charles: Discipline on the Eve of Departure

While three enlisted men reduce the day to weather and waiting, Clark's journal and Ordway's orderly book document a court-martial that tested…

May 18, 1804

Three Registers at St. Charles: Cargo, Courtship, and a Single Line

On a fine May morning at St. Charles, three expedition journalists record the same day in radically different registers — Clark's logistical…

May 19, 1804

Captain Lewis Arrives at St. Charles in the Rain

Four narrators record the same rainy Saturday at St. Charles as Captain Lewis rejoins the Corps from St. Louis. Their entries —…

May 20, 1804

Lewis Joins the Party at Petit Côte

On a rain-soaked Sunday in St. Charles, Lewis finally rejoined Clark and the Corps. The five journals diverge sharply in scope —…

May 21, 1804

Three Cheers and a Violent Rain: Departing St. Charles

Four narrators record the same afternoon departure from St. Charles, but their accounts diverge sharply in detail, register, and emphasis—revealing how rank,…

May 22, 1804

A Kickapoo Promise Kept at the Mouth of a Small Creek

On the second full day above St. Charles, the expedition passes Bonhomme Creek, encamps under cliffs, and receives venison from Kickapoo hunters…

May 23, 1804

The Tavern Cave and a Captain’s Near-Fall: Four Voices on a Missouri Landmark

On May 23, 1804, four expedition narrators record a stop at the Tavern Cave below the Osage Womans River. Their accounts diverge…

May 24, 1804

The Retrograde Bend: Four Voices on a Near-Disaster

When the keelboat's tow rope snapped in the Missouri's violent current, four expedition journalists recorded the same crisis in radically different registers…

May 25, 1804

The Last Settlement: Four Voices at the Edge of the Known World

On May 25, 1804, four expedition journalists recorded the Corps of Discovery's arrival at a small French village marking the westernmost outpost…

May 26, 1804

Detachment Orders Amid the Thunder

While four narrators record only rain, a creek, and a campsite, Lewis devotes the day to a sweeping reorganization of the Corps…

May 27, 1804

Mouth of the Gasconade: Five Voices, One Camp

On a Sunday in May 1804, the expedition reached the Gasconade River and met traders descending from three Indian nations. Four sergeants…

May 28, 1804

A Wet Pirogue, a Measured River, and a Cave That Wasn’t There

At the mouth of the Gasconade, five narrators record the same storm and the same dead deer — but Whitehouse's entry drifts…

May 29, 1804

A Missing Hunter and the Echo of Guns: Four Voices from Deer Creek

On a rain-soaked Tuesday above the Gasconade, four expedition journalists record the same brief march and the same lost hunter — but…

May 30, 1804

Rain, Hail, and a Lost Hunter: Four Voices on a Soggy Missouri Day

Four expedition journals record the same rain-soaked passage past Monbrun's Tavern, but only Ordway and Clark identify the mysterious gunfire heard the…

May 31, 1804

A Wind-Bound Day and a Letter Burned on the Arkansas

Five narrators record the same wind-bound camp near the Gasconade, but only Clark preserves the political news riding downriver in the trader's…

June 1, 1804

Arrival at the Osage: Five Pens at the Confluence

On June 1, 1804, the Corps reached the mouth of the Osage River. Five narrators record the same arrival, but each preserves…

June 2, 1804

Measuring the Confluence: A Day of Instruments and Returning Hunters

At the mouth of the Osage, Clark turns surveyor while his companions log the same river widths in shrinking detail. Two lost…

June 3, 1804

A Sore Throat, an Obscured Sun, and Signs of War Parties

On a Sunday split between fair morning and clouded afternoon near the Osage, five narrators record the same five-mile push to Murrow…

June 4, 1804

The Broken Mast and the Singing Bird

Five narrators record June 4, 1804 — a day defined by a snapped mast, a nighttime bird's song, and a rumored lead…

June 5, 1804

The Painted Devil and the Burned Beaver: Two Frenchmen on the Missouri

A chance midday encounter with two French trappers descending from the Kansas River yields the expedition's first secondhand intelligence on the plains…

June 6, 1804

Salt Springs, Split Rock, and a Boat Nearly Lost

Five narrators describe the same stretch of Missouri shoreline, but each preserves a different fragment: Clark's salinity arithmetic, Gass's near-disaster at the…

June 8, 1804

The Mine River and a Cache of Buried Skins

On June 8, 1804, the expedition reached the mouth of the Mine River. Five narrators record the same day with strikingly different…

From Heacock's Writings

1 mirrored articles by Robert Heacock that mention Charles Floyd.

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