George Drouillard
George Drouillard was a French-Canadian and Shawnee métis frontiersman who served as the expedition's primary hunter, interpreter, and sign language specialist. Considered by many historians as the most valuable member of the Corps after Lewis and Clark themselves, Drouillard supplied more game meat than any other hunter and facilitated critical diplomatic encounters using Plains Indian sign language. Lewis described him as "a man of much merit" and relied on his wilderness expertise throughout the journey. He was killed by Blackfeet warriors in 1810 while trapping on the upper Missouri.
Biography
George Drouillard (c. 1773-1810) was the expedition’s most skilled hunter and one of its most valuable members. Half French-Canadian, half Shawnee, Drouillard served as the primary interpreter through sign language — the lingua franca of the Plains tribes — and as the expedition’s best marksman.
Lewis recruited Drouillard at Fort Massac in November 1803, offering him $25 per month — the highest salary of any enlisted member. This reflected his extraordinary skill set: fluency in sign language, French, English, and several Native languages, combined with exceptional tracking and hunting abilities.
Throughout the journey, when game was scarce and the expedition faced starvation, it was often Drouillard who saved them. During the bitter Bitterroot crossing, his hunting skills kept the party alive. Lewis frequently singled him out for praise, writing that Drouillard was “a man of much merit” and “the best hunter in the party.”
After the expedition, Drouillard joined Manuel Lisa’s fur trading venture on the upper Missouri. He was killed by Blackfeet warriors near Three Forks, Montana in 1810 — one of several expedition veterans who met violent ends in the fur trade.
Related Locations
Note: the longest gap between tagged appearances is about 7 months (Nov 1, 1803 → May 17, 1804). George Drouillard may have been present in the corps during that span but is not named in the journals.
Journal Entries (400)
Wildlife (1)
Cross-Narrator Analyses
AI-assisted scholarly analyses that cite or discuss George Drouillard — showing 24 of the most recent matches.
Letters, Tailors, and a Trunk of Damaged Papers: The Captains Re-enter St. Louis Society
On their second full day back in St. Louis, Clark records a brisk return to civilian correspondence and commerce, while Ordway's published…
On the Eve of the Snowy Crossing: Four Voices Pack for the Bitterroots
On the eve of their second attempt at the Bitterroot Mountains, four expedition journalists record the same day in radically different registers…
A Uniform Coat for a Canoe: Departure Preparations at Fort Clatsop
On the eve of leaving Fort Clatsop, three narrators record the same transactions in markedly different registers — a captain's coat traded…
An Indifferent Canoe and a Laced Uniform Coat: Trade, Game, and Salmon Trout at Fort Clatsop
On March 14, 1806, four expedition journalists record the same day at Fort Clatsop with strikingly different priorities — from elk meat…
Seven Elk, One Bushel of Salt: Provisioning Anxieties at Fort Clatsop
On a wet February day at Fort Clatsop, four narrators record the same hunt and salt delivery in strikingly different registers —…
Marksmen, Medicine, and Barefoot Visitors: Four Views from Fort Clatsop
On a snowy January day at Fort Clatsop, returning hunters arrive with Clatsop assistants bearing elk and deer. Four narrators record the…
Four Pens, Two Errands: The Whale Road and the Beaver Bait
While Clark scaled a precipitous coastal mountain to reach a stranded whale already stripped by the Tillamook, Lewis stayed at Fort Clatsop…
Rain, Spoiling Meat, and a Misplaced Memory at Fort Clatsop
On a sodden December Sunday at Fort Clatsop, Clark catalogues sickness and rotting meat while Ordway manages just four words. Gass's entry,…
At the Forks of an Unknown River: Four Voices Approach the Marias
On June 2, 1805, the Corps of Discovery encamped at a river junction that would soon become a navigational crisis. Four narrators…
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…
Smoke on the Plains: Two Views from Fort Mandan
On a smoky March day at Fort Mandan, Clark and Ordway record overlapping but distinct scenes — burning prairies, returning horses, visiting…
A Boy’s Toes and a Hunter’s Pleurisy: Three Voices at Fort Mandan
On a cold, snow-blown day at Fort Mandan, Clark, Ordway, and Gass record the same hunting party but diverge sharply on medical…
Snow, Sovereignty, and a Misplaced Memory at Fort Mandan
On a snowbound November day at Fort Mandan, Clark confronts British traders' medals while Ordway notes simmering tensions among the men. Gass,…
Stone for Chimneys, A River Still Open: Three Voices at Fort Mandan
On a fine November day at Fort Mandan, Clark and Ordway record the practical labor of chimney-building while Gass narrates terrain miles…
Ice on the Missouri: Three Voices at the Threshold of Winter
On a cloudy November day at the future site of Fort Mandan, three expedition journalists record the same hours through markedly different…
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,…
George Drouillard: Hunter, Interpreter, and Indispensable Man of the Corps
Across nearly three hundred journal entries, George Drouillard emerges as the expedition's most relied-upon hunter, sign-language interpreter, and scout — the man…
Chalk Bluffs, Cobalt, and a Signal Fire on the Prairie
Four narrators record the same August day on the Missouri, but only Clark identifies the mineral in the bluff, only Whitehouse names…
A New Sergeant and a Hill of Little People: Four Voices on August 26, 1804
On a single Sunday near the Missouri's edge, the expedition's four journal-keepers record a quiet but pivotal day: Patrick Gass is promoted…
Council, Punishment, and a Deserter Returned: Two Enlisted Men Record August 18, 1804
Privates Whitehouse and Ordway describe the return of deserter Moses Reed alongside Oto chiefs seeking peace with the Omaha. Their nearly identical…
Awaiting Drouillard: Four Pens at a Camp on the Missouri
On a cool August evening in 1804, the Corps of Discovery waited near the Little Sioux River for word of pursued deserters.…
Four Pens at Council Bluff: Diplomacy, Venison, and a White Heron
On August 2, 1804, four expedition journalists recorded the same day at Council Bluff in strikingly different registers — from Clark's logistics…
White Catfish Camp: Sand, Sutures, and the Beaver-Rich Bottom
On a windblown July day at White Catfish Camp, four expedition journalists record the same scene at radically different scales—from Floyd's terse…
An Empty Village and the Shape of a Day at White Catfish Camp
On July 25, 1804, Drouillard and Cruzatte returned from a fruitless errand to the Oto town. Four narrators record the same day…
From Heacock's Writings
2 mirrored articles by Robert Heacock that mention George Drouillard.