Nez Perce
The Nez Perce (Nimiipuu) occupied a large territory encompassing the Clearwater, Salmon, and Snake River drainages in present-day central Idaho, southeastern Washington, and northeastern Oregon. The expedition encountered the Nez Perce in September 1805, arriving in their territory starving and exhausted after the harrowing Bitterroot crossing; the Nez Perce, led by chiefs including Twisted Hair and Cut Nose, provided food, shelter, and canoe-building assistance that almost certainly saved the expedition from disaster. The Corps left their horse herd in Nez Perce care for the winter, retrieving them on the return journey in spring 1806, during which they spent nearly a month among the Nez Perce waiting for snow to melt on the Lolo Trail. The Nez Perce were master horse breeders, skilled fishermen, and camas gatherers whose hospitality and practical assistance rank among the most significant Native contributions to the expedition's survival.
Portrait: Wikimedia Commons / Wikipedia: Nez Perce
Most Mentioned in Nez Perce-tagged Entries
People
- Drouillard (38)
- Capt. Lewis (18)
- Charbonneau (16)
- Reubin Field (15)
- Shannon (13)
- Gibson (11)
- Collins (11)
- Colter (10)
- Hohastillpilp (10)
- Capt. Clark (9)
Places
- Columbia River (30)
- Rocky Mountains (28)
- Snake River (26)
- Clearwater River (25)
- Missouri River (20)
- Bitterroot River (18)
- Collins Creek (14)
- Chopunnish river (12)
- Colter's Creek (7)
- Fort Clatsop (6)
Biography
The Nez Perce (Nimiipuu, meaning “The People”) of the Clearwater and Snake River plateaus became some of the expedition’s most important allies. Their assistance was crucial at two critical junctures: when the expedition emerged from the Bitterroots in September 1805, and during the return journey in 1806.
When Clark’s advance party stumbled onto the Weippe Prairie half-starved after the Bitterroot crossing, a Nez Perce woman named Watkuweis — who had been treated kindly by Euro-Americans in her youth — reportedly urged her people not to harm the strangers. This intervention may have saved the expedition.
The Nez Perce provided food, helped build canoes, cared for the expedition’s horse herd for months, and furnished guides for the return Bitterroot crossing. The expedition spent more time with the Nez Perce than with any people except the Mandan — producing detailed ethnographic records of their culture.
The Nez Perce’s generosity was remembered when, 70 years later, Chief Joseph cited the Lewis and Clark friendship during the Nez Perce War of 1877. The broken promises that followed the expedition cast a long shadow over this initially hopeful relationship.
Territory & Encounter Locations
Note: the longest gap between tagged appearances is about 4 months (Apr 18, 1805 → Aug 14, 1805). No journal entries during that window were explicitly tagged with this nation.
Treaties (4)
Tent of Many Voices (23)
21:18
27:04
38:19
42:53
14:49
50:08
17:50
62:42
47:26
49:59
48:35
62:47
51:17
51:48
17:32
62:38
48:25
44:33
50:29
42:29
42:25
48:24
48:17
Journal Entries (104)
Cross-Narrator Analyses
AI-assisted scholarly analyses that cite or discuss Nez Perce — showing 24 of the most recent matches.
Crossing the Koos-koos-ke: Bears, Horse Surgery, and a Six-Thumbed Trophy
On a frosty October morning along the Clearwater, Gass records a day rich with detail — successful bear hunts, the gelding of…
Four Camps, Four Worlds: A Continental Divide of Experience on the Yellowstone and Marias
On a single July day in 1806, the divided Corps of Discovery produced four radically different journal entries — from a ceremonial…
Parting at Travelers’ Rest: Four Voices on a Divided Fourth of July
As the Corps of Discovery split into two parties on Independence Day 1806, four journal-keepers recorded the same farewell to their Nez…
Parting at Travelers’ Rest: Four Voices on a Pivotal Division
On the day the Corps of Discovery split into two reconnaissance parties at Travelers' Rest, four journalists recorded the same departure with…
Four Pens at Travelers’ Rest: Dividing the Corps for the Homeward Reconnaissance
On the eve of the expedition's boldest tactical gamble, four journalists record the same council at Travelers' Rest. Their accounts reveal striking…
Summer on One Slope, Winter on the Other: Four Voices on the Bitterroot Snow
On a single ridge above the Nez Perce fishery, four expedition journalists record the same halt — but reveal sharply different observational…
A Conic Mound of Stones: Four Voices on the Bitterroot Summit
On June 27, 1806, four expedition narrators describe the same harrowing snowbound ridge crossing — but each filters the scene through a…
Ten Feet Ten Inches: Measuring the Snowbound Bitterroots on the Return Crossing
On the second day of their successful return passage over the Lolo Trail, Patrick Gass and John Ordway both record the depth…
Fir Trees Aflame: Four Accounts of a Single Day on Hungry Creek
On June 25, 1806, four expedition journalists recorded the same day's march toward Hungry Creek, but only two captured the Nez Perce…
Four Pens, One Reunion: Converging Accounts at Fish Creek
On June 24, 1806, the scattered detachments of the Corps of Discovery reunited on a branch of Collins's Creek with three Nez…
Securing Guides at Weippe: Four Voices on a Pivotal Decision
On the eve of recrossing the Bitterroots, the captains scramble to secure Nez Perce guides while a small detachment hurries ahead to…
Eight Deer, Three Bear, and a Pocketful of Beads at Weippe Prairie
On a pleasant June day at Weippe Prairie, four narrators record the same hunt with strikingly different yields. A pocketful of forgotten…
Retracing Steps to the Quamash Flats: Mortification and Unexpected Aid
On June 21, 1806, the expedition turned back from the snowbound Bitterroots toward the Weippe Prairie. Lewis and Clark recorded near-identical entries…
Four Pens, One Bear: Diverging Registers at the Weippe Camp
On June 20, 1806, four expedition journalists record the same hungry day at Weippe Prairie. A short-clawed bear, seven salmon-trout, and a…
A Day of Waiting at Weippe: Four Pens on Hunger, Fish, and Lost Horses
On June 19, 1806, four expedition journalists record the same anxious day of rest at Weippe Prairie. Their overlapping accounts of failed…
Potts’s Wound and a Rifle for a Guide: Retreat from the Bitterroots
On June 18, 1806, the Corps fell back from their failed mountain crossing. Three narrators record the day's accidents and a desperate…
Retrograde March: Four Voices on the Bitterroot Snow Wall
On June 17, 1806, the Corps confronted snow twelve to fifteen feet deep atop the Bitterroot divide and turned back. Lewis, Clark,…
Eight Deer, One Trade, and a Census of Nations
On a single waiting day at the edge of the Bitterroots, four narrators record the same small events with strikingly different priorities…
Camas in Bloom and the Mirror of the Captains’ Journals
On a warm June day at the foot of the Bitterroots, four expedition journalists record the same camp — but Lewis and…
Quamash in Bloom: Four Views from a Camas Flat at the Foot of the Bitterroots
On a single June day at the camas prairie below the snowbound Bitterroots, four expedition journalists record the same hunt and the…
Four Pens at the Quamash Flats: Botany, Brevity, and the Shadow of the Mountains
On the eve of their second assault on the Bitterroots, Lewis and Clark produce nearly identical botanical catalogues while Gass distills the…
Eagles, Footraces, and a Falling River: Four Voices on the Eve of Departure
On the eve of leaving Camp Chopunnish, four expedition journalists record the same day with strikingly different emphases — from horse trades…
Foot Races, Fiddles, and a Warning About the Mountains
At Camp Chopunnish on June 8, 1806, four narrators record the same Sunday of horse trades, prisoner's base, and a sobering Nez…
Four Pens at Camp Chopunnish: Trade Errands, a Gift Horse, and a Naturalist’s Eye
On a cold June day at Long Camp, four expedition journalists record the same trading party crossing the Flathead River — but…
From Heacock's Writings
5 mirrored articles by Robert Heacock that mention Nez Perce.