Historical Figure

Silas Goodrich

Private Silas Goodrich was the Corps of Discovery's most accomplished fisherman, consistently providing fresh fish to supplement the expedition's diet of game meat. Lewis frequently praised Goodrich's skill in his journal entries, noting the various species he caught including cutthroat trout, which were new to science. Goodrich caught fish at nearly every major waterway the expedition encountered, from the Missouri to the Columbia. His catches contributed to the expedition's important ichthyological discoveries and scientific documentation of western fish species.

0 treaties 41 total items 41 mapped locations

Biography

Silas Goodrich was the expedition’s most accomplished fisherman, frequently catching fish that supplemented the party’s meat-heavy diet. Lewis praised his angling skills repeatedly in the journals.

Goodrich’s catches provided important scientific specimens as well as food. He was the first to catch cutthroat trout, sauger, and goldeye for the expedition’s collections. At the Great Falls of the Missouri, Goodrich caught trout “from sixteen to twenty three inches in length” that Lewis carefully described and measured.

After the expedition, Goodrich’s trail grows cold. He is believed to have contracted syphilis — a disease that afflicted several expedition members who had contact with Native women — and may have died from its effects within a few years of the journey’s end.

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 8 months (Oct 13, 1804 → Jun 5, 1805). Silas Goodrich may have been present in the corps during that span but is not named in the journals.

Journal Entries (39)

Eleven Buffalo Killed; Clark Surveys the Great Falls
Jun 20, 1805
Men Dress Skins at the River Forks Camp
Jun 5, 1805
Lewis Scouts Southern Fork Toward Snowy Mountains
Jun 11, 1805
Captains Examine Curious Round Naked Knob
Sep 7, 1804
Halting at the Mouth of the Grand River
Oct 8, 1804
Lewis Departs for South Snowy Mountain with Four Men
Jun 11, 1805
Windbound Camp; Goodrich Fishes While Whitehouse Sews
Jun 5, 1805
Arikara Wintering Camp of Sixty Lodges Observed
Oct 7, 1804
Lewis's Detachment Rejoins Clark's Party at Last
Aug 12, 1806
Rapid Descent Hunting Bighorn in the Rain
Jul 30, 1806
Guns Repaired; Indians Hired as Guides
Jul 2, 1806
Twelve Deer Killed; Expedition Split Planned
Jul 1, 1806
Final Plans Drawn for Dividing the Corps
Jul 1, 1806
Trading Scrap Iron and Files for Root Bags
Jun 7, 1806
Sparse Trade for Pack Ropes at Commeap Creek
Jun 7, 1806
Indians Distinguish Between White and Grizzly Bears
May 31, 1806
Native Bear Classifications Revealed; Reddish Skin Purchased
May 31, 1806
Goat Hair Gathered; Roots and Bread Replenish Stores
May 28, 1806
Goodrich Returns with Roots and Goat Hair
May 28, 1806
Failed Sweat for Chief; Child's Condition Worsens
May 25, 1806
Ailing Nez Perce Chief Too Weak for Sweat
May 25, 1806
Pryor Scouts Downriver; Cliffs Block Route
May 22, 1806
Canoe Construction Begun; Trade Goods Divided Among Men
May 21, 1806
Canoe Building Underway; Willow Lodge Proves Comfortable
May 21, 1806
Fair Day; Baggage Aired and Roots Dried in Sun
May 22, 1806
Chopunnish Man Returns Lost Powder; Horses Scarce
Apr 18, 1806
Clark Crosses River to Bargain for Horses
Apr 16, 1806
Collins Kills Three Elk at Point Adams
Mar 8, 1806
Hunting Parties Dispatched Toward Point Adams
Mar 8, 1806
Collins Kills Buck Elk; Willard Remains Very Ill
Feb 27, 1806
Ten Elk Located; Two Abandoned on Inaccessible Mountain
Jan 27, 1806
Twelve Pack Animals Acquired; Wiser Treated for Colic
Aug 24, 1805
Hidden Cache Built; Packsaddles Fashioned from Oar Blades
Aug 20, 1805
Two Grizzlies Killed with Single Shots Each
Jun 12, 1805
Fishing at Great Falls; Rattlesnake Beside Lewis
Jun 15, 1805
Shields Repairs Air Gun During Drying of Stores
Jun 10, 1805
Lewis Ill; Elk Killed Near Rose River Branch
Jun 11, 1805
Stone Idol Creek and the Arikara Transformation Legend
Oct 13, 1804
Detachment Orders Organize the Corps of Discovery
May 26, 1804

Cross-Narrator Analyses

AI-assisted scholarly analyses that cite or discuss Silas Goodrich — showing 3 of the most recent matches.

From Heacock's Writings

2 mirrored articles by Robert Heacock that mention Silas Goodrich.

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