<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>York Archives - Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</title>
	<atom:link href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/key-figure/york/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/key-figure/york/</link>
	<description>A digital archive of treaties, documents, artwork, and 360° trail panoramas from the Corps of Discovery</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Fri, 01 May 2026 13:17:12 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en-US</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>
	hourly	</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>
	1	</sy:updateFrequency>
	
	<item>
		<title>York of the Corps of Discovery</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/research-articles/york-of-the-corps-of-discovery/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2026 01:27:40 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/research-articles/york-of-the-corps-of-discovery/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>A groundbreaking study of York, the enslaved African American who accompanied the Lewis and Clark Expedition, examining his contributions, treatment, and the contested accounts of his later life.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/research-articles/york-of-the-corps-of-discovery/">York of the Corps of Discovery</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Betts provides one of the first serious scholarly studies of York, the enslaved man owned by William Clark who became a full participant in the Lewis and Clark Expedition. The article documents York&#8217;s significant contributions to the journey, including his role as hunter, laborer, and cultural intermediary — many Native nations had never encountered a Black person, and York became a figure of intense curiosity and, in some cases, reverence. Betts examines the remarkable moment when York was allowed to vote in the democratic decision about winter camp location in November 1805, an act without precedent for an enslaved person. The article then traces the troubling aftermath, as Clark refused York&#8217;s repeated requests for freedom following the expedition, eventually hiring him out and possibly separating him from his wife. Betts evaluates the conflicting accounts of York&#8217;s ultimate fate, including Clark&#8217;s 1832 claim that York had been freed but died of cholera.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/research-articles/york-of-the-corps-of-discovery/">York of the Corps of Discovery</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>York&#8217;s Account of the Lewis and Clark Expedition</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-11190503tmb/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2026 00:35:56 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-11190503tmb/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>A recording from the Tent of Many Voices collection.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-11190503tmb/">York&#8217;s Account of the Lewis and Clark Expedition</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>everyone welcome to the core of Discovery 2 tene voices if you folks could this program does get filled up because uh the program you&#8217;re about to hear is very good if you don&#8217;t mind there&#8217;s a space uh SE in between you to sit close together if you can um just so we can get more people in here uh during the program I would appreciate that for those of you who are not familiar with us we are a traveling exhibit we&#8217;ve been traveling the Lou and Clark Trail since January year of 2003 and we finally made our way Westward to the Pacific Ocean and we&#8217;ll be doing the return trip again next year back to St Louis like L Clark did 200 years ago well 200 years ago on the Expedition Captain Clark brought along his slave York and today York is here to tell his side of the story to be told for the first time so please help me welcome York we have been away from the eyes of the whole world almost 3 years thousands of miles away from civilization lifetimes away from the madness all them civilized men called slavery there was me a young Shoni woman named sag C Lewis C Clark and more than three dozen what I call volunteer Patriots now our mission seem simple enough all we had to do was cut a path through the Savage Northwest Territories all the way to the Pacific Ocean cross 4,000 mil of the highest mountains and fastest rivers in the americ ever seen before President Thomas Jefferson called us his core of Discovery and every day we live is the day we all prepared to die just on the word of the president we left St Louis a small army of men 3 years later we returned more like a Band of Brothers not one day went by that every man was tested past his limits only way you survive that kind of pain if every man willing to give what the one beside him need to stay alive well when had said in hard on us talk around Camp was if our luck didn&#8217;t change we might be looking at starvation soon one day C Le called me up says y want you to go out there try your gift for hunting see what relief you can bring to us now I took that request more like an order gathered up my rifle and started out early only been gone by an hour so before I come across some fresh tracks look kind of like Bear Tracks to me now I don&#8217;t know how many yall Tred bringing down a b before let me just tell you anything a man goes through with half a heart anything a man goes to with a whole mind either if you ask me but we was desperate I was determined to show Captain Lewis that his faith in me was well placed I thinkig you since the wind was blowing in my face been doing so all morning I might to follow these tracks out the ways without that obey but knowing was coming and if I was to catch up to him we&#8217;d have to see where was what so I follow some tracks out a mile or so come over to he and there was way off in the distance now that was a slow moving giant of a bear but by that time I&#8217;d already made up my mind and folks that know will tell you once your make up his mind there ain&#8217;t nothing in this world set to change it so I found a good size tree laid out my shot and powder and I showed him a rifle I was adjusted for the long range of the shot about to pull up a little more to account for the wind been blowing in my face all morning about that time I realized the wind wasn&#8217;t blowing in my face no more mostly kind of that old B on his nose and he let how to grow Sho the tree right beside me I knew my time for thinking was done boom that first shot fell between the shoulders gr on this come charging back in me CLA and face so I du back behind start pring the whole time I make my first mistake with rle right there I was pretty sure it was going to be my last mistake with that rifle it seemed like it took me about I to get that neck shot Lord the whole time I think the B must be beating right down the back of my neck I can&#8217;t hear nothing cuz my heart is beating so fast and loud sound like Dr in my ears somehow I got that neck shot loaded I come around the tree I was pull the tricker before I even seted up boom that second try to hit him in the arm it didn&#8217;t even slow him down and I knew there wasn&#8217;t going to be a third shot so I L my rifle Ste out and smoke to the right side of the tree and I pulled my Axe and my knife and I waited for him see I waited cuz it don&#8217;t make no sense a man trying to out run a wound and Angry Bear all that&#8217;s going do get you cut up from behind way I see it my best chance maybe my only chance is to Stand My Ground and face him like a man so I waited for him said a quick prayer for my wife and family back to L I said a couple longer prayers for myself mind you then I waited boom boom about that time a do report come from my left side it turns out K Clark sent a couple boys to check on my success and I was so glad he did both shots po that old b square in the chest by that time it must have been nothing but pain and rage prob through that great big body of his that finally give out on him that&#8217;s in 10 Paces Where I Stood waiting I took a second to gather the whis thank them boys for their good timing thank them for their better shooting and we set the skin that to clean as much of that bear as we could as fast as we could because with all that smoke and Noise with all that blood see we knew the Wolves was coming and that is the last place a man wants to be when the wolves come so we packed as much meat as we could carry and headed back to Camp arrived like conquering Heroes that night we feasted like kings and the laughter that have been abent from our fires for weeks slowly returned as hard cold men began to speak more farly of home of families their dreams and that night thousands of miles away from this civilization on hard Cold Ground I slept asleep of the day dreamed of my wife and family back in Louisville praying to God please W don&#8217;t you just let me see see her face one more time these old eyes of mine before you decide to tear me out of this here World yours my name is York just y it is the name that my daddy carried before me I was born a slave no I was born to be the slave to be the property of another man and that is the shame my daddy carried before me but I have seen a world that few white men might ever dream of I have climbed to the top of snow capap mountains swarm Rivers so Swift that the Buffalo lose their foot watched whales Dan across the Cool Waters of two oceans and and I have walked among the people those Americans you call Indian have welcomed me into their land with open arms like some long lost brother and now I ask you hear of the things that I have seen so that when I am gone from here my name my voice my story does not die here with me for that is the way of the people that is the only thing of value I have left to give now the hardest part for me was always the not know him see many times before Master thought and I would go on adventures sometimes leaving home for months at a stress but always with the understanding we was coming back once we sell from New Orleans all the way around to New England took us 9 months at Sea soon as we touch ground we headed for home there&#8217;s something different about this mission of Discovery well everybody talking about where we going and what we doing ain&#8217;t nobody said a word about when we coming home and that concerned me that in the fact when nobody ever asked if I wanted to be part of the president&#8217;s grave mission of Discovery if I wanted to lay my life down for this nation cuz I was just a slave this even funny thing is you know that if I were a free man I could not have volunteered to lay my life down for the president but but since I was just a slave nobody cared to ask but once we crossed over Missouri River but for me it was like crossing over the river Jordan found myself the other side a changed man to the Indians we met many had seen or at least heard of a white man before but they ain&#8217;t never seen nobody like me start to give me names like black Indian or Big Medicine some even said that I was a gift straight from God you know I kind of like the way the Indians is thinking out there now we set our second win camp at the Manan Village called it Fort Mandan for meaga and her husband shano now I called him her husband but we all heard how this Indian girl was stole from her family when she was young how this old Frenchman shano bought her and trade from the adop Indians then decided to make her his wife and maybe that&#8217;s why we so close me and her kind she&#8217;s the only one out there know like I know what it means to be called the property of another man she was great with child give birth a little poy over the winter I sit outside the lodge waiting for him to come into the world when I hear him crying I told C clock I says C clock as long as that girl that baby with us you ain&#8217;t got to word for whatever it takes to keep him safe I am prepared to give it even if it cost me my life and it show as I&#8217;m standing here today we all best believe I kept them safe now that winner is also with metal one ey chief of the H Indians now he refused to come and visit for a long time kind of the hadashi Indians had supported the British doing that Revolutionary War I guess we all know how that turned out for him anyway they say that word of the black man finally got the old one he couldn&#8217;t take it no more had to come see what everybody been talking about so he come to the Fort demanding to see me I stood there in front of him and the first thing he did was to lick his thumb good and start to rub as hard as he could thinking he might take the black right off of man he said he was afraid it might be another trick by the white man and he had to be sure but when it didn&#8217;t come off but that&#8217;s when he start to look at me like the others like I&#8217;m somebody special and then I did what I always did with a new Chief or tribe I stripped my shirt down bare and I stood there before him with my arms out as far as I can hold them and I let two sometimes i&#8217; let three indian warriors get up in each hand and then I pick them up till all their feet was off the ground and let me tell you something well they Ain never seen a man that powerful before said that a man like that they said that this black man right here had to be touched by God and C CLK he was quick to agree with him he say surely you ought to respect a man with that kind of power he says but if you respect this man then you must respect the white man cuz before the white man come along this York and All His Kind they were nothing but Savage animals and the white man captured him and the white man tamed him the white man made him a slave if you&#8217;re going to respect that kind of power then ain&#8217;t you got to respect the man that can take that power and make it his slave and then sometimes c l will file the air gun once or twice to get everybody&#8217;s attention back and that&#8217;s when they start to explain to him how they&#8217;re going to be part of a new tribe now called the United States how they going to have a new Chief and great father now we call the president they have this Duty protect the president&#8217;s Warriors in your lands or suffer dearly for it now I don&#8217;t know how many times I heard him tell one Chief or another tribe that story before I understood what it was they were saying what they was telling all them Indians is they going to be American not like y&#8217;all get to be American they was going to be more colored Americans and by my figuring well the kind of misery I call life ain&#8217;t got room for more souls I wish I could have made myself so ferocious I could have scared them all away or at least one but I don&#8217;t speak the languages besides who was I just y slave of Master William Clark so sometimes I just excuse myself from the lodge go out to the cold night air and you know what the little Indian children that they always follow right behind said they knew that a gift like this could stay with him forever so they want to be as close as they can until God decide to send them on his way and sometimes I&#8217;d ask God one day he might forgive this man what he couldn&#8217;t do for all the men and children but we stayed with the man Dan the GE been flying North about 3 weeks when the ice started to break on the Lakes the captain agreed it&#8217;s time for us to make our push for the Rock Mountain now the man that say any man got a hope of making them mountains need three things good supplies better horses and a man that knows the way they say the Shon Indians is the best place for all three so our mission changed before we can go to the mountain we got to find the sashon Indians we got to find the snake people for the next few weeks moving up Riv we had no contact and finally Captain Clark says maybe a small detailer then working Inland from the water have better luck so when he called the name of the three that would accompany him well my name was on that list because he knew when the step he could take that I wasn&#8217;t prepared to follow so he walked 5 days almost 75 miles by the end our boots were tore through and our feet blooded had to wait for the others to catch up when they did well Captain Lewis drew a fresh detail of in and they proceeded on few days later we got word they finally met the Shon we was to get there fast as we could on kind there was a lot of concern a lot of agitation well this many armed white men so far in the Indian country was making everybody nervous but they told him was traving with an Indian girl and a baby was s me eat some fig no self-respect the man going to go to war when not with women and children but they say the word of black man already made himself up River they all just standing around waiting to see what everybody else been talking about so when I step out the boat everybody gather around me like the others then C Lewis called Chicago over to translate with words seeing she speak the language to all that hand talking JW are so good at now that&#8217;s when we got our real surprise remember I told y&#8217;all this Indian girl was sto her family when she was young how this old Frenchman Sho bner decided to make it his wife well she say she don&#8217;t remember much about being a child all but what she do remember is her big brother his name KEH away turns out when a man be Shashi called chief he carrying that same name without even trying to we found a way to bring a family back together now I don&#8217;t know about where y&#8217;all come from but in my life whenever the change of R tear family apart ain&#8217;t nothing sort of DME going to make it right this right here was a miracle God working well he give us a good reason to celebrate at least made it easy to trade for supplies and horses kamway was so pleased he give us his best tracker an old man he say know them Ms like nobody living now the old man&#8217;s name was awful hard to pronounce c Le say is cuz civilized tongu were never meant to speak such Savage words just called the old man told me be done with it he said now I was with the Mind well I figure any man going to lead me through the mountains I&#8217;m looking at here and promise to keep me alive the other side well I figure a man like that ought to be called whatever he like to be called but nobody asked me what I was thinking and I wasn&#8217;t up for volunteer so old Toby lead us into the bitter rot before we got in good we come across the Flathead Indians now they was like all the others except maybe more so when it come to me see the Flathead Indians tell us that an Atri when a man goes off to war and he is brave when a man goes to battle and he is strong The Greatest Warrior on the field they say that&#8217;s the only man done earn the right to paint his skin black with the cold from the warfire so when you come back to the tribe everybody know without asking which man among them was The Greatest Warrior which man among them was the strongest which man was touched by God that day so the Flathead figure if God took it to mind to make a man black like that for good ain&#8217;t that got to mean he great I sure like the way him Flathead was thinking out there but we only stayed with him a short to sh cuz we had this mountain now if I was to Never See Another Mountain until the day that I die it still be about 10 days too soon for me only thing I knew about the mountain we looking at here is ain&#8217;t no way a man going to make it out the other side of life it&#8217;s going to save us a brave market for the president&#8217;s brave men of discovered and I wouldn&#8217;t the only one thinking it but we couldn&#8217;t turn back we had ourselves a mission from the president we either complete or we perish in the attempt so we pushed on to the bitter once we got in good a storm come out of nowhere dropped 10 hard inches of snow we lost our path started throwing packs and losing animals got so bad we had to put down two coats we shot them dead and we ate them whole as we were staring we were dying in those mountains finally C Clark says maybe the only chance we got to small detail and working way the other side of this mountain hard as they can gather whatever they can gather and coming back for the rest it&#8217;s only chance he said now when he called out the name the five or six men he trust to compy him on this Mission will you best believe my name was on that list because he knew when it come to his life this mission of the president ain&#8217;t nobody breathing he ever counted on more than me so we push hard against that mountain until they finally give us way in the other side and the next person they was kind enough to trade us for roots berries and sand we gathered everything we could carry and went back in for our friends now once we made it out the other side we stayed with the next first several weeks took a few days just to feel the bones and our bodies again we were that cold while we healed up we made new canoes now the Indians taught us how to fire boats out see always before if a man want a good canoe you take a tree trunk you put the axe to it and you call yourself a boat right but the envian taught us how to fight you take that trunk lay red hot Co across it and you burn away one layer at a time so when you&#8217;re done you got a boat that run smooth in the water you got a boat ain&#8217;t got no leaks you got a good craft the Indians taught us that and a lot more they kept us alive out there once we all healed up the captain say it&#8217;s time for us to make our run for the ocean we left our horses and a few supplies with the next purse on the promise of returning and we proceeded on now the next few months it was much of the same thing new Chiefs new tribes tell them about the United States and the president C CL even named a group of islands after me called him York&#8217;s eight Islands ain&#8217;t that got a nice sound to it and then one day we come down the colia and the captain start to shout Ohan oh Ohan we had made it to the Pacific Ocean 4,000 miles of high mountains and fast Rivers all that way all of that suffering and pain and we only lost one man but he was a good man his name was Sergeant Charles Floyd come with us up out of Kentucky he grew up in Louisville but his family figur the god they know and love ain&#8217;t never intend one man owning the soul of another man say they don&#8217;t want no part of the state that make it the law so he move across the river to Indiana to to free country I was with s Floyd from die I did my best to keep him comfortable I cried with him I cried for all the men might never know one true God loving soul on account of him early passing this world and all but we made it to the ocean you see so we had our own reason to be celebrating now the first order of business at Station Camp was to set our last one of Fortune and the captains put it to a vote which Sal we settle one better for hunting the other good for building and supplies and every man went around saying one way or the other what he thought it ought to be and they got to me and everybody looking at me like I&#8217;m supposed to say something here now y&#8217;all know better than I do with the law of this nation say a negro man ain&#8217;t got the right under the Constitution or under God to put his word up beside a white man C clock well C clock says it took took every man his blood and his sweat and his whole heart to get us this far on the most important mission for a nation for a president the way I see it means every man will earn the right to say where we go from here y it&#8217;s time to put up your word it&#8217;s time for you to vote so I voted right there beside all all them white men I put my word up and it counted for something and some say maybe that made me the first negro man this whole country to vot Legal beside a white man don&#8217;t know if that&#8217;s true but I know it felt good it sure felt right so we decided to settle the south side of the river and we set to build in Fort Clon now for the next few weeks I was putting my back into it some days I was holding trees as big around as my body all by myself I wanted to show all of them men how much I deserve that vote see I couldn&#8217;t leave no room for questions C Clark as I was working so hard I fatigued my body was made up a few days but I think I made my point clear once we said Camp we start making regular Journeys down to the ocean sometimes just to bring water back to boil down for salt to have something to put on that awful food we&#8217;ve been eating for 2 years and some days we sit at that water for hours y&#8217;all ever seen the whale before well have you the way move across the water so smooth you can hardly see him there they don&#8217;t bring that body all the way out and see just how great he is before he dive down and disappear all together I would sit at that water for hours watching them whs trying to see in my head where it be like if a man had that kind of Freedom if a man could run as far as he want around and nobody telling it&#8217;s time to come back or you ain&#8217;t got a right to be there just CU of the color of your skin you know I couldn&#8217;t even see it but that kind of Freedom would look like one day C clar come through he says y&#8217; it&#8217;s about time for us to put our mind back on civilization our mission for the president&#8217;s complete our success will be going home soon now them words I&#8217;ve been waiting to hear since before we left St Louis me the only man out here away from the world got a wife and family back home able to give them up a dead by now I couldn&#8217;t wait to get home one night Cam Lewis call us all around the fire say been think about what he might tell the president of these United States about his brave men of discovery about these men that sacrific more than any Patron ought to volunteer for his Nation about these Heroes that made a president&#8217;s dream come alive and he start to call out the names one after the other like he might presented to the president and after every name that be a ho or Hollow cuz I started theid we was having ourselves a good time we was having so much fun that I don&#8217;t think anybody even knows I mean besides me maybe they just didn&#8217;t notice see after C Le finished calling out the name of those brave men sacrifice more than any Patriot volunteers Nation to we finish listing out the name of them Heroes make the president&#8217;s Dream Come Alive well my name wasn&#8217;t on that list you see and maybe that&#8217;s when come clear to me what it is C CL been saying all this time he say YK it&#8217;s time for us to put our mind back on civilization he said y it&#8217;s time for us to put our mind back on walking three steps behind and not looking a white man in the eyes when you pass y it&#8217;s time for you to put your mind back on not speaking let somebody tell you to speak it&#8217;s time for you to put your mind back in change boy cuz cuz we going to civilization cuz we going home now folk ask all the time they say if you had so good out there with the Indians they treating you like God and all then why would a man come back to living like this well I had my reasons my wife my family see a man can&#8217;t run away pretending he free if he ain&#8217;t got the ones he Lov beside him cuz that ain&#8217;t Freedom besides I figure all them children need to know what it was I seen they need to know there&#8217;s a place that this country people see you coming they don&#8217;t run you off to the corter they don&#8217;t spit in your face instead they ask you to come and to sit down right beside them they ask you to eat the food off of their plate because it means they have been touched by God I figure if I didn&#8217;t tell them they might never know that they was more than slaves so I had to come back now the truth be told I fig it&#8217;s only a matter of time us coming back to civilization me gaining my own Freedom before we left on this mission for the president Master Clark freed Ben went on and on about see as how servitude for life is against God&#8217;s Will and against the natural order of mankind I&#8217;m giving men his freedom for faithful service for Ben a good boy you been with us a while but not like me I doing Master Clock my whole life more than 30 years by his side without fail I fig after the last three years we didn&#8217;t had all he got to do is make it home and he going to make me a free man so I could not wait to come back starting back up River we was making such good time like we was walking on water if we try we get too we trade more horses for both the faster we go by the time we got back to the next person C order us trade everything we don&#8217;t need to survive he said trade it for root I don&#8217;t know if y&#8217;all ever had root before well it ain&#8217;t the best tasting thing in the world the truth is it is the worst thing I have ever put in my mouth and that said a lot after the three years out there dog and horse included but we know that R will keep a man alive all we had to do was survive this in Mountain we was going home C L he cut the buttons off his uniform and give them to me to trade all told I come back with 20 bushes of fruit we had more than any man ever want to eat his whole life and once we cleared that mountain we started back for home past sh and the the M the the Sue all the way back into civilization we got to St Louis look like a parade started up folk line the road as far as I could see and most of to give us up a dead years ago for a few days they stopped me on the street asked me about the president&#8217;s mission of discovery about the Indians we met the great things we see I went back to my duties I tried to smile and to not look a white man in the eyes when I passed him on the street but it was hard to lower my head again and finally it was time to go on home when I got to Lille I sent the word out when the word day through and all the chores was done everybody&#8217;s the around and if it take all night best be prepared to sit all night I tell them everything I can remember about the last 3 years and I told them everything now most of them they couldn&#8217;t even believe but I told them anyway and then it was time to go on to Washington report from the presid he give every man 320 Acres of good farmland for his hard work every man double duty pay in gold coin for a sacrifice every man the appreciation of an entire nation for making the president&#8217;s Dream Live I was in the slave cours waiting to be called before the president but that that call never came for long it was time to go on home Master Clock say he been promoted to General Chief Indian agent for the the entire nation I fig he deserved it he&#8217;s a good soldier like his brothers before but he said to carry out his new duties he was going to be moving his house to St Louis permanent say can&#8217;t see himself going about new service in a Strange Land without his most prized possession without his most favorite slave you&#8217;re right there beside him so I asked him I said Master Clark if we move to St Louis for good then then what about my wife what about family and he asked me he said what about him I can give you a lawful order he says not expect you to follow without question it&#8217;s time for you to be done with that wife y she said I order you to be done with that wife there are plenty of slaves in St Louis I&#8217;ll find you a new wife there now I couldn&#8217;t believe them words coming out of his mouth like that see the whole time we out there away from the world he going on and on about Miss Julia Hancock of Virginia how he can&#8217;t wait to get back to this civilization and take her hand can&#8217;t see itself growing old without the woman he loves standing right there beside him so I thought that meant he knew how a man needs somebody he can run home to when the world been standing on his back all day a shoulder that he can cry it if he got to somebody tell him long as you know somebody love you tomorrow got to be better than today I thought he knew what it was for a man to give his heart away here he tell me he ordered me to be done with my wife like she some stray dog I found on the side of the road so we packed the house Master Clock went by boat and I left the slaves and wagons overline to St Louis when we got there I come up with a plan I went to Master Clock I says Master Clark seems to me you got lots of business interest still attend to in Louisville re you need somebody you can trust to handle all that see as I took care of your business most of our life together figure I&#8217;m the right man for the job you can send me back to Louisville I&#8217;ll take care of your business and be close to my wife and family sound like a good plan he said he can see what I was getting that he wasn&#8217;t going to stand for much of that kind of talk but he allowed me back to Louis for four or five weeks to finish up his business and to sell his boat for St Louis when you return he says I expect you to be done with that wife of yours set to get back to your duties as an obedient slave in my house four or 5 weeks for a man to throw his heart away well about 5 months later he sent word to his brother I must have misunderstood his orders cuz I&#8217;ve been gone four months too long but some yall know about that when a lot of misunderstanding see sometime a man got to do what&#8217;s right by him instead of what another man tell but I knew if I didn&#8217;t sell that boat for St Louis directly that&#8217; be the devil to pain Master CL thre before to show me what real slavery is like he said he sell Me Down New Orleans they say a man find himself a slave down New Orleans he ain&#8217;t never going to see nothing he love again the rest of his short painful life they got ways down there of crushing a man&#8217;s Soul then they grind his bones into the dirt I done seen it you don&#8217;t want to find yourself a slave down new ORS so I had to sell that boat for St Louis now before I push off my wife come down the water and see me she say the man she call M well he decided to move his house further south in the slave country she said well if you plan on selling that that boat back to St Louis well I reckon you best turn on around here y&#8217;all turn around here now okay one last long look at you why cuz the chances is he ain&#8217;t never going to lay lies on again now them few words them few words almost dead but the hardest three years of my whole life could not do almost stop my heart beating dead in this test M but I knew if I did not sell I was going to lose everything I ever loved I didn&#8217;t have a choice here slaves don&#8217;t have choices so I had to sell for St Louis but when I got home I made up my mind to see and folks to know tell you and said once you don&#8217;t make up his mind there ain&#8217;t nothing in this world set to change it so I went back to master CL said Master CL since we&#8217;ve been together our whole life more than 30 years by your side we was little boys we used to wrest together hunt fish ride horses all day long up and down the rivers when we was older well I went about my duties with respect you ain&#8217;t never have to question my loyalty to you or your kid and when you fell down I picked you up and when you were sick I made you better and if somebody was to threaten your life don&#8217;t you know that I would kill a man with my bare hands or I would lay my own life down just to see you safe and for three years me and you we stood side by side against the whole world that up there and I did get one acre good farmland for it and nobody dropped the gold cord into my pocket and President Jefferson he don&#8217;t even know my name Master CL Billy way I see it you&#8217;re the onlyest man in the whole world got the power to give me what I need most right now you can make me a free man Billy you can save my family I thought Master F going to hurt himself count of how hard he was laughing what it was I had to say he said he thought it funny me believ in any service I my whole life more than 30 years by his side was more than what a slave does for his rightful Master under God said if he was to ever see such immense surface he&#8217;d be the man to rewarded but it ain&#8217;t come yet besides he said you much too valuable piece of property for a man to just let go like that that&#8217;s what he said much too valuable a piece of property for a man to just let go if any was to ever ask me what my thoughts was of Master William Clark of the Clark family i&#8217; been quick to say that he was honest but he was fa in the right company I would I would have called him my friend for life right there he made it clear more than 30 years almost every day of his life he ain&#8217;t never looked into this Brown face of mine and seen nothing but a slave so I fig if it&#8217;s about my value well I can do something there started to agitate doing things just enough wrong he can see it was by my choice so he knew what I was getting that it wasn&#8217;t going to stand for much but mind you I tried to smile and to not look a white man in the eyes when I pass but I couldn&#8217;t lower my head again so Master Clark had me strapped to the poster he paid a man good money to beat me until I could not see and after I healed up I tried not speaking let somebody tell me it&#8217;s my time but I couldn&#8217;t hold my tongue so Master Clock had me locked in the jail house 30 days that beat I took ain&#8217;t nothing compared to how they break you in the jail house I guess somewhere in all that M CL figure whatever broke in me wasn&#8217;t getting fixed fast enough so he decided to go on and send me home to L now I don&#8217;t know what the letter read he sent on to his brother I can&#8217;t read but I can guess figure that letter says that it&#8217;s time for y&#8217;all to know what it is to have a severe Master know how good his life have been till now what it is to be a real slave I think that&#8217;s what the letter says cuz that&#8217;s the lesson his brother said to teaching me they sold me out to man dressed me in rags threw me in the field and he St the big old bull plot across my back and for 2 years that old man tried to grind my bones into the dirt and for 2 years I ain&#8217;t heard one word from Master Clark and finally news come through his nephew he decided to go and give me my freedom only been 10 or 11 years now since we we come back on this Mission and most dayses don&#8217;t ever see Freedom especially in my age but everything I&#8217;m fighting to be a free man for is out of my hands my wife my whole family is gone and how I&#8217;m free and I&#8217;m all by myself in the world so Master PA give me a wagon some horses set me the drives business running Freight from Richmond Kentucky to Nashville Tennessee folk ask all the time what sense it make a free man ride headlong to the slave South trying to do business well I had my reasons F somewhere along them roads somebody seen or heard tell that family that&#8217;s holding my wife if this business of M was worth anything a man might have enough gold in his pocket one day to buy his hard back but there things they don&#8217;t tell you about the slave South how they got these laws that say a free man ain&#8217;t got the right associate with slaves kind he might be telling that slave what it&#8217;s like to be free they might get a mind they want some of the same business wasn&#8217;t too good I guess it didn&#8217;t make sense white man hire somebody like me it didn&#8217;t look good for the slaves to see that kind of thing going on those that did hire didn&#8217;t always pay cuz the law say negro man ain&#8217;t got the right and the Constitution or God to go into court and swear out against the white man even if his life depend on it my hores started dying I think they was being poison got so bad I had to hire myself in a hard nebor a whole year but I&#8217;m done with it now and I ain&#8217;t never going back see I know some things now I know now that I ain&#8217;t never going to see my life again except every night when I Clos my eyes she right there telling me long as you know somebody love you y&#8217;all but the M got to be better than the day but I not ready to die yet and I know now that a man can&#8217;t live like this so I come up with another plan I figure if I can make it up to the Missouri and out to Indian country things would be different somewhere out there maybe a man could walk down the road people ask him to stop a while but children ask you to throw him into the air and catch him with the strong hands cuz it means they have been touched by God maybe somewhere out there a man could live a man could die like a man and I a to find that place or I expect to perish in the attempt now before I go I was hoping maybe y&#8217;all could do me a favor if you was of the Mind way I see it one day somebody might ask you what you know of Captain Lewis and Captain Clark of the president&#8217;s Brave mission of Discovery and you could tell them you could tell them that you know a man with skin as dark as night that you know a black man who walked stride for stride who suffered pain for pain with the greatest heroes this nation might ever know you tell them that my name is your just your it is the name that my daddy came marri before me and although I was born into change you tell them that I am not now tell them that I have never been the property of another man and I ask you this so that when I am gone from here my voice this story does not die here with me but that is the way of the people sad truth is these two words they are the only things of value that I have left to give son has set my friends and now my journey must begin God&#8217;s me the S Davis ladies and gentlemen he will be speaking again tomorrow at 1:00 if you have friends or family that think e e e</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-11190503tmb/">York&#8217;s Account of the Lewis and Clark Expedition</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Commemoration at Monticello</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-01180301fjh/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2026 00:35:51 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-01180301fjh/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>A recording from the Tent of Many Voices collection.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-01180301fjh/">Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Commemoration at Monticello</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>oh e ladies and gentlemen will you please clear the performance area good morning ladies and gentlemen the United States Army Military District of Washington is proud to present the Old Guard five and drum corp the first mention of an American army music IAL organization is contained in a reference to the Celebration held after Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys captured Fort taond deroga in May of 1775 the organization that performed at this celebration was a f and drum corp the third United States infantry the Old Guard the Army&#8217;s official escort to the president of the United States organized the Old Guard F and drum corp in 1960 for its official ceremonial functions and to revive our country musical Heritage the Corp performs for visiting dignitaries and heads of state at the White House and throughout the nation&#8217;s capital in addition the core travels extensively averaging nearly 2,000 performances annually while serving as a Goodwill Ambassador for the Army Across the Nation and abroad to be sure musicians have played inal part in our country&#8217;s military history during the Revolutionary War they were used as the voice of the commander issuing and relaying commands in the camp and on the battlefield Fon drums were the cow military instrument of the period however there was Ed of trumpets by mounted units and the gole game prominance later in the 19th century especially when grps of musicians gathered together the most proficient drummer was chosen to lead the unit against the title drum major the drum major of the core we light infantry camp and issu Silent command to the espon 2 an 18th Century weapon listen now as the core features the vers we d W he there we are four the same yeah the out uh good morning I&#8217;m Dan Jordan president of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation the private nonprofit corporation that&#8217;s owned and operated Montello since 1923 sure it&#8217;s cold who cares and don&#8217;t forget that it was a lot colder for day Zone in along the trail of The Voyage of Discovery whose memory we honor by being here today they proceeded on and so shall we it&#8217;s my pleasure to welcome you uh to Montello uh where the journey began and to the official commencement of the national Lewis and Clark Bicentennial commemoration I welcome you on behalf of my wife blue on behalf of the trustees of the foundation on behalf of my uh colleagues since 1998 the foundation has been planning for the bicentennial our goal was to have an all American program an allamerican program with many voices many voices telling multiple stories each compelling and instructive we also wanted a program that would recognize the centrality of Thomas Jefferson in the Lewis and Clark Story this morning&#8217;s event comes after a 4day Exposition featuring Scholars and authors uh performers uh Native American tribes and Nations and Craftsmen Lewis and Clark groups from Across the Nation representatives of State local and federal agencies and a distinguished of film makers we believe this is the largest Lewis and Clark Gathering since uh Lewis and Clark Park wined uh with the m Dan over a thousand of you registered for the exposition uh program uh which was 5 days of Around the Clock uh programming those of you who registered you thousand plus uh hail from 41 different states the District of Columbia Canada and Germany I&#8217;d like to ask all of the individuals who participated in the exposition program this week uh to stand those those a thousand plus of you who were here for that it&#8217;s great to have all of you uh from across the land please be seated now I would like to ask the 75% of you plus others who are here today from a state that is west west of the Mississippi River so would all of those good folks stand and look at look at the hundreds of people here from across this great country with us today are representatives of scores of partner groups in the community and Coast to Coast partner groups uh with which the foundation has been honored to work these past 5 years and we&#8217;ll have more to say about our partners later also in the audience and we are truly honored are some 200 uh Native Americans uh from across the land we especially salute their tribal elders and Chiefs they are representing uh 45 to 50 tribes and Nations and I would like to ask our Native American friends to please stand and be recognized so here&#8217;s to you we at monachello I think uh that teachers are the most important people in America uh we think school kids are the future and we&#8217;re especially pleased that we have close to 500 uh school kids and teachers in seats of Honor on the very front rows and we&#8217;d like to ask them please to stand it&#8217;s great to have all of you with us thank you I&#8217;d be remiss if I failed to acknowledge the presence of some lindas to our exhibit Consultants to the exhibit the Native American Artisans who did the extraordinary objects that are now display permanently at monachello who contributed so significantly to our Landmark exhibit framing the West at monachello so I&#8217;d like to ask our lenders our donors the Native American Artisans to please stand and let&#8217;s recognize your contributions too great thank you very much uh we&#8217;re pleased to have our friends from C-SPAN with us they are already standing but they are filming and uh stay tuned consult your local listings uh because this will be repeated uh on a number of times and we hope that you&#8217;ll be able to see it when you get back home finally I&#8217;d like to ask is there anyone here is there anyone here who has not yet stood up if so please stand up stretch a minute great to have everybody uh the first half of our program this morning is a salute to the Expedition and we are honored to have as our Master of Ceremonies for it a person long time associated with the Lewis and Clark Story now a resident of Walpole New Hampshire he is one of the nation&#8217;s Premier experts on the core of discovery the author of seven books soon to be eight books he is an acclaimed lecturer and has served as writer and co-producer with Ken Burns who&#8217;s also here the award-winning public broadcasting uh documentary 4our spectacular interpretation of Lewis and Clark he&#8217;s also an individual who has personally experienced every foot along the trail ladies and gentlemen our Master of Ceremonies Dayton Duncan thank you Dan and I I think I speak for all the well the first group of you who stood up uh who&#8217;ve been attending the uh different seminars and programs over the last week to say uh that Dan Jordan and uh cat imhoff and the entire staff here at Montello have done just an extraordinary job of getting the commemoration of the Lewis and Clark and core of Discovery uh Expedition off to I think one of the greatest starts that we could ever have hoped for let&#8217;s have a round of applause for them Dan didn&#8217;t tell you there&#8217;s a lot of people who are as infected with Lewis and Clark itis out here as I am although I don&#8217;t I I don&#8217;t think anyone&#8217;s got it worse than I do uh he wanted to keep me in sight the whole time because I&#8217;ve threatened threatened to go down to the gravite of Mr Jefferson who as many of you know wanted three things written on his Tombstone that he was the author of the Declaration of Independence that he was the author of The Articles of religious freedom in the uh Virginia Constitution and that he founded the University of Virginia now all those are okay I guess but I think he forgot something that was equally important that had us founder consequences on uh the nation that he helped get started with the Declaration of Independence and that was both the Louisiana Purchase and sending and at roughly the same time sending Lewis and Clark and the core of Discovery from here to the Pacific coast with what he hoped would become an Empire of Liberty and so I&#8217;ve threatened occasionally at night to sneak down and etch into that Tombstone uh some additions to us and if there&#8217;s any volunteers for it see me after the event and we&#8217;ll see if we can work it out this is where it all started at Montello in the mind of Thomas Jefferson um I&#8217;ve compared it often to the first space uh to the race for space um the core of Discovery like the astronauts were military men uh the big keelboat going up the Missouri River was the Saturn booster rocket they even took along the 19th century equivalent of Tang a thing horrible concoction they called portable soup but all of those things this was mission control behind me monachello and instead of all the computers and everything else of NASA was the mind of Thomas Jefferson so it&#8217;s very appropriate that we begin our commemoration and the start of it here at monachello we&#8217;re going to have a great program for you different attributes to different people we have a lot of music throughout the day both from some mil military uh uh organizations and from some uh tribal groups as well I want to make make clear to everyone that uh in all all this uh the different music that we&#8217;re having it&#8217;s not celebrating military victories or anything like that this is an honor to uh our shared history that uh we hope uh will be remembered uh throughout the next three years during the commemoration our first group is the Lewis and Clark F and drum corp from St Charles Missouri and it&#8217;s one of America&#8217;s few all youth fif and drum cores members range in age from 10 years old to 18 the group was organized 11 years ago and they&#8217;ve spent the last year hosting dinners and staging silent auctions to raise enough money to travel here to Charlottesville for this historic event the musicians play replicas of the six and nine-hole wooden fives and rope tension drums used during the 18th and 19th centuries their uniforms are red wool coats and bare skin crusted round hats patterned after those of the US Army Field musicians from 1804 to 1810 the flag bearers are dressed identically but with opposite colors since they were considered part of the Infantry the CH signature tune is explore the purchase in honor of the Lewis and Clark expedition please welcome the Lewis and Clark fif and drum core from St Charles Missouri woo Co facing to the right face back rank one step to the right March back rank two steps forward March York us a Lea drums roll h a Tri behind me drums roll off Grandfather&#8217;s Clock drums roll all hello la is hunting P drums roll 181 12 drums are n get just got left step aim was beaing St pipes pipes down Co facing to the left face Co recover roll La step bar we G he doodle counter marage drums roll I think there are a lot of proud parents from St Charles Missouri here tonight today I don&#8217;t know if any of you played in a high school band but I did on in Indianola Iowa playing a tenor saxophone when it was this cold and your lips freeze and it&#8217;s marvelous how well they could play those delicate instruments in cold weather like this let&#8217;s have another round of applause for the kids from St Charles poetry often has the ability to capture our emotions when nothing else can our next speaker Karen Wood is a poet as well as an En enrolled member of the mon nation of Virginia Karen works as a researcher at the national museum of the American Indian part of the Smithsonian institution in Washington DC and is an activist for the rights of women American Indians and environmental issues she also has a gubernatorial appointment to the Virginia Council on Indians her award-winning poetry has been published in numerous magazines and journals please join me in welcoming Karen Wood who composed her poem Homeland for this occasion good morning it is my great honor as a member of the monin Indian tribal council to welcome all of you to our homeland today I would like to acknowledge my native relatives who traveled great distances to be with us today members of the monik and Indian Nation especially our elders and our youth who are our future and I would like to share with you this poem that I did write for this occasion Blue Mountains encircle a prayer to the breath of the Dead everywhere seeds are lying dormant in the ground this is a country remembered dogwoods and Red Buds dear at a Field&#8217;s Edge the river roiled into its Embrace of red Earth we are powerless here in the face of our love for Legends of granite and shapes that gather at night we are powerless when Mountain Laurel spread Stars through forests when Cedars dance with the yellow leaves falling when Hawks are crying over us Shadows move west and then East a circle of 200 years on the banks of the Missouri a man with braided hair tells himself stories and looks at the stars he guards sacred places a 100 miles of Shoreline and he is alone when he faces the ones who would steal from those Graves they are not white men this time but relatives robbing the spirits he is the dust of their bones a pale Montana woman wrestles barbed wire and drought checking the skyline for rain her grandfather plowed this same ground so she goes into it freckled and burned by the beauty of pastures where calves graze lavender mountains rising to the West The Vanishing outlines of wolves at Twilight and in lape the nesper leader holds his hand out to the Future where for forgiveness lies within himself he remembers years of winter and the Chiefs who would not leave his prayer heals a generation a red flower&#8217;s fingers uncurling nothing was discovered everything was already loved we who embrace our father&#8217;s Homeland and indenture ourselves to its Seasons its rhythms of larks spur and Coline cus and T amarak Cottonwood Cedar hand this love to you whose faces rise out of the ground looking West all the love there is that you may hear grasses sing and become many voices of those who came marking a trail in our tongues we welcome the people who follow us here thank you very much thank you Karen that&#8217;s a wonderful poem to start this uh Bicentennial Dan mentioned how how cold it is uh it was 45 degrees below zero outside Fort Mandan in January of 1805 so this is kind of nothing compared to that crossing the bitteroot mountains in September of uh of 1805 William Clark wrote I have been cold and hungry and wet as I ever have in my whole life to account to uh to account for the occurrences of today would be a repetition of yesterday except for the snow which made it much worse so let&#8217;s uh be thankful for the Sun at least let me point out to you that there is a Hospitality tent located in the rear it&#8217;s back there you may want to warm up a little bit inside as well as buy some hot chocolate or coffee after you&#8217;ve had your third cup of coffee you may may want to know that restrooms are also located at the hospitality tent as well as to my left under the South Terrace and to my right behind the North Terrace in the summer of 2002 six middle schoolers two teachers and a filmmaker from Santa Barbara California rode their bicycles nearly 5,000 miles across the country retracing the core of discovery&#8217;s historic Expedition they started their track right here at monachello and completed it at Fort classup on the coast of Oregon along the way just like Lewis and Clark they made their own discoveries about themselves and about this vast country as one of the bicyclists observed about Midway across the country gez we just happen to ride down the road and something good happens please welcome John and Jacob seagull baitner father and son who made this remarkable Journey I&#8217;m one of those teachers and uh when uh my students are kind of dozing off in class while we&#8217;re studying Lewis and Clark and the core Discovery my favorite quote about the cold happened at Fort Mand I teach middle school and I&#8217;m not going to repeat it because I may get removed from the stage but it&#8217;s the it&#8217;s a description about when they had to go use the courtesy tent um the quickness with which they had to relieve themselves look that up sometimes uh you guys and uh I think you&#8217;ll understand um just over a year ago in a small Auditorium 30 families sat silently as I played the opening scene from The Journey of the core of Discovery I smiled as Ken Burns played the same scene the other night to introduce his film to another Auditorium full of families my first words when the lights went up at my presentation were enough for the romance let&#8217;s get on with reality I went on and on for over an hour describing the Endeavor we would call the Journey of the core of rediscovery finishing my meeting with the words it will surely be the greatest adventure of Our Lives you could have heard a feather drop six months ago today that core of rediscovery Hannah aged 14 Roxy 12 Lincoln 13 Cameron 13 Brett 20 going on 13 my wife and at least co-a Lynn our sons Jacob 14 and Isaac 12 and I pedal up this mountain same road you came up in the bus and we got to ride our bikes right across this lawn Thomas Jefferson&#8217;s lawn we rode our bikes across Thomas Jefferson&#8217;s lawn on unbelievable never in my wildest dreams I&#8217;ve gotten kicked off way lesser Lawns than this across this lawn to receive a satchel full of dozens of Peace medals Dan Jordan asked us to present them to kind strangers who we hoped were out there along the river to help us along our way just like Lewis and Clark in the original core of Discovery Dan said two months ago today day that core of rediscovery having pedal 5,000 Mi Road home to the Sea having long long since run out of metals one week ago today Hannah and Roxy were sitting on our couch fact checking an article being written about our journey by a man who had fallen in love with us in Montana what&#8217;s with this Lewis and Clark this this Lewis and Clark that stuff Hannah said throwing the pages on table doesn&#8217;t he know it&#8217;s not just Lewis and Clark Hannah proceeded to mark up the story changing all those Lewis and clarks&#8217;s to core of discoveries just days ago our son Isaac asked me to come and edit an autobiographical poem he had written for his middle school English class here it is if you have any changes raise your hand please it&#8217;s called my life on a bike I must explain that both Jacob and his and his brother Isaac came home from the hospital behind my bike being pulled in a trailer a yellow bike trailer carrying a fragile newborn boy an innocent toddler on top of a shiny Red Bicycle a boy with a wide grin riding down the sidewalk focusing only on balancing on his new two- wheeler without falling a young lad in a simple World slowly learning the ways of the world growing into a teen full of hopes dreams and expectations he takes a trip that changes his life forever he comes back wiser and emotionally stronger ready for the twists and turns of the ride called life I couldn&#8217;t touch it all I could do was apologize for getting his keyboard wet in these past two days here Jacob he doesn&#8217;t want to say a thing today he&#8217;s so scared this is way worse than ring your bike 5,000 miles Jacob representing his core and all his new friends out along the river time and time again would lean over to me or tug my arm hey Dad he&#8217;d whisper I know the smell of sweet grass burning Hey Dad I remember when we went through that Big Sandy Place Ken Burns is talking about Hey Dad I know how to pronounce how&#8217;s it Jacob Cami Cami been there beautiful place I&#8217;m coming to that bed and breakfast next time you talked about Hey Dad I bet that man making the movie about York would like to meet the York Doll Roxy carried across the country hey Dad remember when we all got a chance to vote at the mouth of the Columbia hey Dad you mean people didn&#8217;t always give credit to everyone who made the journey possible duh Mr Jefferson said the work we are now doing is I trust done for posterity in such a way that they need not repeat it we shall delineate with correctness the great arteries of this great country those who come after us will fill up the canvas We Begin Mr Jefferson pardon me but I must disagree I learned from the Umatilla along the Colombia that they have no word for art one doesn&#8217;t just fill up a canvas the canvas the hide the gourd the sand become beads the Earth become theu aren&#8217;t just materials or colors but Spirits deserving respect despite 200 years of filling this great canvas we still still haven&#8217;t learned that Mr Jefferson 6 months ago today six Young Explorers rode their bicycles off this lawn in hopes of repeating and rediscovering a great land the lessons they learned the new way they walk this Earth well you heard Isaac&#8217;s Palm Mr Jefferson I would hope that all of us here today all all of us will leave your lawn with that same spirit this nation needs to travel the river again and again and again and again we need to travel on foot on wheels on Keels on pages on screens around fires may we leave here as the teachers and parents your original core would have us be fueling the dreams of our children with this great story this so important story wouldn&#8217;t it be wonderful if 100 years from today on this very on nimu real people from many rivers gather here to read poems like Isaac&#8217;s to make Corrections like Hannah&#8217;s to share kinships like Jacobs to tell stories of an America who came of age by rediscovering its greatest Adventure in America whose course was delineated not by its quest for Medals of gold but by its desire to share Medals Peace an America who didn&#8217;t just fill canvas but embrac the canvas with the love and respect it deserves thank you very much thank you very much thank you John Jacob I&#8217;ve traveled a Lou and Clark Trail from St Louis to Oregon four times in a battered old soab and a volswagen camper I convinced my sister she could loan me with uh certainty and a couple of other vehicles and I&#8217;ve canoed and uh Gone by horseback and hiked and several people have asked me about biking and I thought about it for maybe 30 seconds and said no somebody else can do it and I&#8217;m glad they did the core of Discovery included men from every part of the Young Nation Carpenters and blacksmiths and tailor soldiers and woodsmen from New Hampshire Pennsylvania Kentucky and Virginia men born in Germany and Frenchmen from Canada three members were the sons of French fathers and Indian mothers also on the journey was William Clark&#8217;s African-American slave a man known by the name of York next on the program are two gentlemen who know the most about him Ron Craig and James Holberg Ron Craig is a filmmaker and author author who lives in Portland Oregon he has produced a 1-hour documentary about York and has recently finished a children&#8217;s book about him as well both designed to shed light on York&#8217;s rightful place in history Jim Holberg is the curator of special collections at the philson Historical Society in Louisville Kentucky the state&#8217;s oldest privately supported Historical Society Jim specializes in the history of Lewis and Clark and writes and lectures extensively on the subject he is the editor of the book dear brother letters of William Clark to Jonathan Clark please welcome Ron Craig and Jim Holberg it&#8217;s not really cold out there is it turn up the heat uh first I&#8217;m going to get a little sort of a personal note on my whole experience out here uh when I was first Contact to to present a portion of who was York I was just totally really honored uh CU York&#8217;s experience is an experience that we all have probably gone through at some point in our life and being here I had the opportunity to speak at a number of the elementary schools and the thing that I&#8217;d really like to impress upon the young children as far as knowing their History New York&#8217;s story is about the human spirit and survival the adversities that we all go through in life I ran into a young African-American not physically running into him but in the hall in one of the schools and he&#8217;d asked me he says what did York look like and I said well we really don&#8217;t have any images of York and he young child he says well didn&#8217;t they take any a photograph and I gave him a little story about Matthew Brady real quick and he understood that there weren&#8217;t any Polaroids or nikons in that time period so I said we really don&#8217;t know and he was just had this sort of confused look on his face so I walked him over the the hall a few feet and I placed him in front of a mirror and I said that&#8217;s what York looked like he was an African-American slave and this small child African-American child his eyes just lit up because it was so empowering for him to be able to have that tie to his history and not necessarily that he was denied that history it&#8217;s just the fact that he was just uninformed formed at that point in his life so I want to believe believe that that was a very empowering experience for him so with that I&#8217;m going to share just a little thumbnail sketches for us what we have looked to find as far as what York was about he was born in Carolina count Carolina County Virginia he was born to John Clark who owned his father who was Al so called York and he was old York and then there was a younger York we&#8217;ve in the film industry have called New York so we wouldn&#8217;t be confused about that he was a playmate of William Clark so he had a long relationship this is not something that all one day decid to go on this Expedition so you would look at the idea it was only two years age difference so when the mar the Lewis contacted Clark as far as going on the Expedition the first members of the expedition was York and once again the question is why would he ask his slave to go along this Expedition well to go back a little bit we can look at their youth as far as Clark and York they both had developed The Woodsman skills that were going to allow them to survive on an expedition of caliber so it was just not an accident that he said I&#8217;m going to take my servant along to set fires for me or put out my clothes in the evening because yor was a full working member of Expedition his role on the expedition was very valuable especially when it came to dealing with some of the Indian tribes because it was a very unique stature for an African-American of that size we have accounts that some of the native tribes actually thought that York was the leader and encouraged him to throw off the bonds of slavery and hang with us hang around with us for a while it&#8217;s you know it&#8217;s okay along the trail there were a number of encounters where York&#8217;s presence along with Saga we&#8217;s presence they were able to make inroads into certain areas that they had never ventured before so we have once again York&#8217;s importance on the Expedition there are also a number of two geographical sites that are actually named for York once again we&#8217;re talking about 1805 York is property no respect was far as within the slave master order now we look at that and ask ourselves why would William Clark name different geographical locations for a slave well they were a bit more than just slave and master as I said earlier they had grown up together one of the other significant portions of the expedition was in 18 1805 November on the North Shore of the Columbia River there was a military poll which translates to a vote in the civilian dialogue and the inquiry was made are we going to have an encampment here on the NorthShore are we going to go over on the Southshore where we may find better game and the weather would have been better so in making that inquiry with the poll or the vote in 1805 York became the first African-American slave of record to vote another 60 years prior to emancipation along with that vote Saga whe was in quired as far as what her preference was so here we have an African-American an Indian woman female years before suffrage as I tell my students that&#8217;s a different documentary story we&#8217;ll have to deal with later on those are very significant points in history but as has as our history has been chronicled some of those things have been neglected or omitted as a documentary filmmaker it has been my honor to be able to bring these to the Forefront and they have this forum I look out once again as the children ask me what did the core of Discovery look like you are all the core of Discovery you are a portion of it the core of Discovery was a microcosm of every face that we see in this audience and in closing I&#8217;d like to read one portion from the children&#8217;s book that I think really sums it all up York was an important contributor to American history his presence on the Lewis and Clark Expedition was important to its success his accomplishments personal triumphs and tragedies influenced the destiny of this land his life is a story of the human Spirit he experienced the Heights in depths of the world in which he lived from the excitement of the expedition to the Heartbreak of slavery he knew how it felt to be treated as property as an equal and as a superior human being by different groups of people York&#8217;s strength and character serves as an inspiration to all people in today&#8217;s world he deserves to be remembered as a hero and his place in history should not be forgotten thank you well as you&#8217;ve heard in Ron&#8217;s remark the history of America&#8217;s repl with examples of the important contributions that African-Americans have made from the famous to the Forgotten black Americans have been a part of our history and helped make us the great nation that we are it is particularly fitting that we honor that African-American York here today as we officially begin the bicentennial of the Lewis and Clark expedition a slave from birth his mission during and after the expedition was to be the faithful servant of William Clark but York of course was much more than that he had grown up on that Kentucky Frontier he had learned to hunt and to track he was an experienced traveler by both horse and boat even before the Expedition when William Clark accepted Merryweather Lewis&#8217;s invitation to join him on the journey to the Pacific he undoubtedly gave little thought to York going along of course he would he had the same skills and abilities as many of the other men who were selected for the Expedition the shared dangers and hardships of the journey earned York a level of equality with his white companions that he had never experienced before to this must be added how he was perceived by many of the American Indians that the core of Discovery encountered to them York was indeed unique an awesome being because of his black skin the very thing that marked him as inferior and and a slave in White Society he was believed to have immense spiritual power he was christened Big Medicine by them York was seen as Superior even to his white companions what a revelation that must have been someone who had had ingrained in him since birth that he was inferior to the whites he was destined to serve now being extolled as Superior to them Lewis and Clark used this awe to successfully advance the Expedition when the core of Discovery reached the Pacific York became the first African-American to cross the United States from coast to coast but this taste of equality superiority and even Freedom the York experienced over the course of his journey through this new world this American West ended upon the core&#8217;s return York was brought crashing back down to his old world a world of inferiority and subservience a world where he was ordered to perform his duty as a slave denied the freedom that he told Clark he believed he had earned York&#8217;s post Expedition life became one of unhappiness mistreatment and frustration York&#8217;s ultimate fate is not definitely known the happy ending of a return to the west and life among the Indians lacks the documentary evidence of the sad ending an unhappy freedom and death as a broken man trying to return to his former Master but whether he died happy among those who honored him for the color of his skin or died miserable among those who enslaved him because of it York made an important contribution to our nation&#8217;s history as we begin the bicentennial of this American epic that is the Lewis and Clark expedition let us remember and honor York and learn from the tragedy as well as the Triumph of his life thank you thank you Jim and Ron there are many historians who had argue that at times Lewis and Clark&#8217;s success or possible failure rested on the shoulders of a young American Indian woman zaga our next speaker Amy mosset has spent 15 years researching the oral and written histories of sagoya she is a co-chair of the circle of tribal advisers the group that is working so diligently to tell the story of Lewis and Clark and their expedition from the American Indian perspective Amy is also director of Tourism of the three affiliated tribes the Mandan Hada and arika of fort berold in North Dakota I&#8217;ve had the great pleasure at a number of Lewis and Clark events uh to meet Amy during the last few years and including one time I remember when the final design of the sagia golden dollar coin was presented to representatives of the three affiliated tribes at the Reconstruction of their people&#8217;s Earth lodges near bismar as she talked that day a magnificent bald eagle began circling in the sky over the Missouri River as if it too wanted to listen to what she had to say please welcome Amy mosset thank you Dayton I am the a descendant of the Mandan and hiza the people who welcomed Lewis and Clark into our homelands in the fall of 1804 and taught them some important lessons before they began that Journey to the West the the West that was unknown to them I have lived my entire life on the Northern Plains in North Dakota and today as I stand here before all of you I&#8217;m not sure how you feel but I am so cold but I&#8217;m hon I&#8217;m so honored to be here to pay tribute to Saga WEA she has she&#8217;s an incredible woman and she has become such an important part of my life Saga we not so much a guide but more an interpreter and a symbol of peace I think of her so often as this nation&#8217;s first Ambassador first woman Ambassador for the Northwest core of Discovery this young woman this young American Indian woman has become the most celebrated woman in American history when you travel across this country you will find there are more landmarks Mar s statues mountains rivers streams Parks schools women&#8217;s organizations businesses named for this woman than for any other woman in American history the dollar coin Bears this young woman&#8217;s image an image of her holding her young child that she carried with her on that incredible journey traveling thousands of miles with a child who was 55 5 days old when she left what is now North Dakota and 19 months old when they returned her story with the Lewis and Clark expedition has emerged as one of the most intriguing and romantic and I like to think of her as this story&#8217;s Leading Lady saga&#8217;s role and her contributions to the success of the Lewis and Clark Expedition have created a legend to some she is still a mysterious almost mythical figure a symbol of peace and friendship one of Courage compassion and determination but for the hiza and the shishoni people she is not just a romantic symbol or a mysterious Legend she is our ancestor she is our relative she lived Among Us she walked Among Us she loved laughed and learned Among Us her spirit remains with us and when we speak of her always we do so with respect and with reverence today we are honored and so pleased that as this Bicentennial commemoration commences here in Charlottesville at the home of Thomas Jefferson once again the contributions and the role of sagaia are being knowledged and recognized sagaa continues to take many of us on an on a journey on an incredible journey and when we travel across this country on the Lewis and Clark on the Lewis and Clark Trail when we&#8217;re standing out there near Great Falls Montana near that Sulfur Spring where she nearly died or when we&#8217;re walking along the ocean on those sandy beaches on the Oregon coast or standing out there in Washington watching the waves crashing against the shore and when we&#8217;re walking at what&#8217;s left of her hiza Village her hiza home near the banks of the Knife River in North Dakota in that hiza Village called a when we walk through those Earth Lodge Impressions on the ground or as we cross the bitter range of the Rocky Mountains we know that her spirit is still there sagaia has taken me to many places introduced me to so many people who are now some of my best friends she has brought me here today to the home of Thomas Jefferson and I&#8217;m honored to pay tribute to this young woman on behalf of her relatives her descendants among the shason the hiza the kamanche and the crow and on behalf of all of the descendants of the people that she met when she traveled across this country on that incredible journey between 1805 returning in 1806 on that incredible journey with Lewis and Clark and the Northwest core of Discovery later this year the state of North Dakota and the Mandan hiad nikara nation of North Dakota are going to gather in National Statuary Hall in Washington DC and once again we will honor and commemorate Saga WEA for her contributions to the Lewis and Clark expedition and as we start off on this journey once again for the next three years and Beyond we hope that you will continue to remember this woman the way we do with much respect and reverence and thank you Cat imhof and the circle of tribal advisers Dan Jordan everyone who has invited all of my tribal relatives all of our tribal Elders all of us to be here to be part of this commencement it&#8217;s an honor for us to be here thank you thank you Amy Sago was obviously the most famous uh American Indian uh that uh we think of with the Lewis and Clark expedition but there were so many others and I think the bicentennial will help remind people of that great misconception that this was not an unpeopled Wilderness that they traveled but the home of more than 50 native peoples who at the most important moments of the Expedition survival generously offered them their help and they had names too that can be found in the journals people like Shah of the mandans who said if we eat you shall eat or Twisted hair or wat kois of the Nez purse black Buffalo and many many many others who had names uh and should be remembered as well I think the great one of the great things about the the commemoration that is beginning is that there&#8217;s a the the federal government it&#8217;s official uh reenactment not reenactment but retracing of the trail for education and memory that will follow the trail uh is led by my friend Gerard Baker who was a not only a National Park Service employee but uh a man Dan Hada who I would ask to rise and uh he is the mar he is the Merryweather Lewis and Lewis Clark and William Clark of 2003 you may have have noticed uh some of these shaggy dogs circulating among you today they&#8217;re new finlands the same breed of dog that belonged to Captain Merryweather Lewis and accompanied him to the Pacific Ocean and back Lewis bought his dog named Seaman for $20 at the beginning of the journey and described him in the journals as very active strong and docel the Indians Lewis noted later when impressed by what he called the sagacity of his big nof a very smart dog Seaman&#8217;s Adventures are chronicled numerous times in the journals encounters with an Angry Beaver catching an antalope barking at grizzly bears prowling nearby at night and scaring off a buffalo bowl that stampeded uh into the camp and nearly trampled some of the men of course like everyone else Seaman suffered on the journey his paws were punctured by prickly per Cactus and his eyes and ears were the frequent targets of swarms of mosquitoes leis even named a stream in Central Montana Sean Creek in his honor as some of you know down as they went down to Columbia the men of the Expedition wanted meat instead of the salmon that was teeming all around them in the river but there was little game to be found so the captains purchased dogs from the local tribes and by my count the men consumed at least 250 of them on their Journey big as he was Seaman however was apparently never considered a candidate for dinner the last specific mention of seaman in the journals is at the Great Falls of Montana on the return trip being plagued Again by mosquitoes my dog even howls with the torture he experiences Lewis said because Seaman isn&#8217;t mentioned again we can&#8217;t say with absolute certainty what happened to this active strong docile and very loyal member of the core of Discovery but many people myself included believe he was standing on the deck of the white perogue barking with joy his big tail wagging when the Expedition made its triumphant return to St Louis in 1806 I want to thank Deborah Thornton and the Colonial New Finland Society for joining us here this morning with this wonderful collection of Sean&#8217;s descendants I&#8217;ve mentioned that the hospitality tent at the end of the west lawn there&#8217;s a second warming tent on my right behind the North Terrace if you need to warm up a bit uh feel free to walk around be sure to find a Junior Girl Scout from Troop 3643 to get a Jefferson&#8217;s West lapel pin just like this everyone not should not leave without one of those uh back in the hospitality tent there&#8217;s uh number of other things including a satellite of the gift shop where here I&#8217;m the walking advertisement for these you can find if you&#8217;re still cold a Jefferson&#8217;s West fleece a tie that has parts of the Lewis and Clark journals on them and of course some warm food and and other things the Old Guard F and drum core of the US Army is the only unit of its kind in the armed services as you will see this 69 member Corps parades in uniform similar to those worn by continental army musicians back in the days of the American Revolution musicians are using 11 hole wooden fives handmade rope tension drums and solid brass bugles all replicas of the instruments played during the late 1700s the Old Guard performs at all White House arrival ceremonies and presidential inaugurals as well as hundreds of other state and Military C ceremonies yearly the old F and gum drum sorry the Old Guard F and drum core was created in 1960 and is assigned to the third us Infantry Fort Meer Virginia it&#8217;s my pleasure to present the Old Guard fif and drum core for let&#8217;s have another round of applause appla for the Old Guard F and drum core the United States Mint produced its first commemorative coin in 1892 and in 2004 the mint is scheduled to unveil a brand new commemorative coin a silver dollar featuring two notable explorers and packaged in the most appropriate way I&#8217;m going to introduce two women who will tell you the story of this unique partnership project Gloria Eskridge is the acting director of sales and marketing for the United States met Henrietta Holzman for the the director who is on your program unfortunately was ill today and cannot be here with her will be dark rain Tom who is a clan mother of the unit United Remnant Band Of The shaune Nation she has been involved with planning National Lewis and Clark Bicentennial events for nearly a decade she has made it her personal mission to raise public awareness of the contributions made by the tribes as they assisted Lewis and Clark in their historic Jour Journey 200 years ago dark rain lives in a log cabin near Bloomington Indiana with her husband author James Alexander Tom please join me in a warm welcome for Gloria Eskridge and dark rain Tom yes it is my pleasure and honor to represent the United States men during this historic commemoration after all the United States men went along with Louis and Clark on their expedition in the form of Peace medals bearing the images of President Jefferson and the handshake of Peace the medals were Meed by the then Bureau of the mint during evening and other off-duty hours so as not to interrupt the production of coins for our new nation&#8217;s Commerce the medals were intended as gifts for Indian chiefs to cultivate good relations even today they remain valued reminders that the core of Discovery was as much about exploring peace as it was about exploring the new frontier in honor of the Lewis and Clark expedition the United States Mint will produce up to 500,000 commemorative silver dollars for issue in 2004 it gives me great pleasure to unveil this beautiful new design I ask National Park Service director Fran manella and Dr Robert archal president of the National Council of Lewis and Clark by Centennial to help me unveil the distinctive artwork that will be featured on this commemorative coin you&#8217;ll be hearing more about that later the obverse that&#8217;s numismatic jargon for the head side of a coin Bears the likeness of Maryweather Lewis on the left with a rifle in his right hand and his journal in his left William Clark is on the right gesturing expansively toward the Horizon the reverse of the Bears two feathers symbolizing the important contributions of the many Native American tribes they encountered along the way contributions critical to the success of the mission the 17 Stars symbolize the states in the Union at the time of the Expedition the small replica of the reverse of the peace medal reminds us of the Journey&#8217;s purpose of Discovery through friendship a portion of the proceeds will go to the National Council of the lewison Clark Bicentennial and to the National Park Service to support the commemoration in addition the United States Min is very pleased to have entered a unique partnership with the circle of tribal advisors to produce parle rawh hide or brain tanned beaded leather pouches for 500,000 of the coin the Artistry is passed down from generation to generation and is as unique as the tribes themselves we are fortunate to have two of the artists here with us today let me invite manuk om hilderbrand of the shauny Nations United Remnant brand of Ohio and aeral Medicine of the Standing Rock Sue tribe of South Dakota to unveil these historic pouches so I ask them to join us would you like for me to go ahead and say thank you Father yeah if you want to well they&#8217;re coming I just wanted to say a a great thank you especially to the US men who included the tribes in their design in their thought concept and also in being beneficiaries of the proceeds we appreciate their respect and recognition of The Sovereign Nations along the trails contributions of the richness of their cultures and the richness of our diversity as has been pointed out in several presentations the this week we don&#8217;t do artwork everything that we do is for a specific purpose there is nothing that is made that to our way of thinking does not take part of a life and take with it Spirit we are obligated spiritually that everything we do must be our very best to make the best use of the little life and the spirit that we have taken in the raw materials I think as you see these items these pouches and the par flesh Miniatures that are made you will agree that beauty and the diversity of the tribes is an absolute Delight we are so pleased especially that the proceeds or a portion of the proceeds will be going to the language preservation uh project they are developing a program which will enable the tribes along the trail to help preserve their language and to teach it on all levels this is a fantastic thing because the language is what identifies us it holds the key to our history to our culture to our traditions this is how we pass on who we are and help us to remain who we are and we thank all of you for all your contributions for making this happen and wa till you get a peek at these buy two don&#8217;t just buy one buy one for you and one for your friends because these are beautiful items and we truly thank you all and especially the men thank youate thank you to everyone there are other tribes participating in the project and they are the confederated Salish Kuni t t tunik and the pon of Montana the confederated tribes of yuman and the Indian Reservation of Oregon and the confederated tribes of the grand Ron in Oregon certainly the artists in their pouches represent the rich cultural and his Geographic diversity of the First Nations Lewis and Clark encountered along their journey to better explain the significance of this project and you&#8217;ve already heard from dark rain Tom who once again is a noted author Council of tribal advisers co-chair for the Eastern region Ohio River tribes the water Panther Clan mother of the Shaunie Nation United Remnant BR band and I do want to thank them it is a beautiful project and we are very excited at the United States me to be able to help in this way so I thank everyone good work the story of Lewis and Clark is also a story of one of the great friendships in American History Two centuries later the story still continues to create friendships 20 years ago I was canoeing in the White Cliffs of the Missouri and totally by halfen Stant me met a professor from New Orleans who I was told was a specialist in World War II history but after only a few hours of paddling the Missouri with Steven Ambrose I realized that his secret passion was really Lewis and Clark he had even read aloud from the journals at the wedding of his beloved daughter St 15 years later with the publication of his best-selling book unded courage Steve&#8217;s passion was a secret no longer and helped reignite National interest in the Lewis and Clark Story Steve very much had plans to be here uh today but as many of you know he died Too Young in October after a brief and heroic battle with cancer here to offer a tribute to Steven Ambrose is another good friend of his a Storyteller who has had a similar impact on Americans renewed interest in their nation&#8217;s history for 20 years Ken Burns&#8217;s documentary films for PBS have inspired Millions upon millions of viewers and have received Oscar nominations Emmy Awards and many other honors his multiart series on the Civil War baseball and Jazz became television landmarks and among the many other American stories he has brought to life on the screen our documentaries on Thomas Jefferson and of course Lewis and Clark as Steve Ambrose himself said in his own inimitable way more Americans get their history from Ken Burns than from any other source please welcome my friend and co- Captain Ken Burns thank you very much I am tremendously honored and grateful to be a part of this historic moment to be with all of you here this morning as we gathered to commemorate and celebrate the bicentennial of the epic journey of Lewis and Clark and the core of Discovery it is of course entirely appropriate that we do so here at Mr Jefferson&#8217;s doorstep for it was his soaring preent genius that turned the attention of of his young country Westward changing us forever helping to create the Continental Nation many felt was our destiny leaving us this wonderful story of the two utterly different endlessly interesting explorers and their Brave crew that Now commands our attention this morning for many of us this is a day of great happiness and Thanksgiving we are grateful for this opportunity to remind ourselves again why we agree to cohere as a people to rededicate ourselves to the best aspects of the Lewis and Clark Story the best aspects therefore of ourselves we rejoice in the new possibilities of reconciliation with the many Native cultures that were forever changed by this at times Bittersweet Expedition and we are excited by the thought that this celebration might Galvanize a new respect for the land Lewis and Clark first claim for the United States a once pristine landscape now severely tested by the progress Lewis and Clark helped to usher in most of all we are thankful for the stories the wonderful Stories the stories of us and for the incandescent ideas those stories Foster and nurture in the breast of each of us here making us better stewards of the land insisting that we strive to repair the Damage Done to others as we inaugurate this new core of Discovery and the three and a half years of celebrations and commemorations we all look forward to let us take a moment to remember one who will not be making this journey with us this time my our good friend mentor and fellow traveler in the business of history and America Steven Ambrose this great and generous man has passed away leaving a gulf in the historical world that will not soon be filled we will no longer have the machine gun staccato of his rough voice bringing to life his unique Vision dramatic storytelling talent and passionate enthusiasm for this remarkable Republic Steve&#8217;s greatest love was of course the story of the Lewis and Clark expedition I have had the Supreme privilege as many of you have also had of spending nights with him out along the trail as he regaled us with those wonderful wonderful stories read from those mesmerizing journals and inculcated all of those within earshot with a passion and enthusiasm for this story among the many many amazing accomplishments of the core of discovery that Steve liked to extol was that across the whole treacherous Journey the core managed to lose only one man how strange then it is to have to set off and finish this new Journey minus the man who seemed to get the story best whose magical devotion and love for Lewis and Clark thankfully at least survive in his Immortal book and in the memories and best intentions of those who knew him well and loved him for Stephanie for Hugh for Andy three of his children who join us here this morning we extend our deepest sympathies and best wishes it will be difficult on the trail for you and us</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-01180301fjh/">Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Commemoration at Monticello</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Clark: September 3, 1806</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-september-3-1806/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 20:37:57 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/journal/clark-september-3-1806/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Wednesday 3rd of September 1806 Wind Continued to blow very hard this morning. it Shifted last night to the S. W. and blew the Sand over us in Such a&#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-september-3-1806/">Clark: September 3, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wednesday 3rd of September 1806 Wind Continued to blow very hard this<br />
 morning. it Shifted last night to the S. W. and blew the Sand over us in<br />
 Such a manner as to render the after part of the night very disagreeable.<br />
 the wind luled a little and we Set out and proceeded on with the wind a<br />
 head passed the enterance of redstone River on the N E. Side at 11 A M.<br />
 and at half past 4 P. M we Spied two boats &#038; Several men, our party<br />
 peyed their Ores and we Soon landed on the Side of the Boats the men of<br />
 these boats Saluted us with their Small arms I landed &#038; was met by a<br />
 Mr. James Airs from Mackanaw by way of Prarie Dechien and St. Louis. this<br />
 Gentleman is of the house of Dickson &#038; Co. of Prarie de Chian who has<br />
 a Licence to trade for one year with the Sieoux he has 2 Batteaux loaded<br />
 with Merchendize for that purpose. This Gentleman receved both Capt. Lewis<br />
 and my Self with every mark of friendship he was himself at the time with<br />
 a chill of the agu on him which he has had for Several days. our first<br />
 enquirey was after the President of our country and then our friends and<br />
 the State of the politicks of our country &#038;c. and the State Indian<br />
 affairs to all of which enquireys Mr. Aires gave us as Satisfactory<br />
 information as he had it in his power to have Collected in the Illinois<br />
 which was not a great deel. soon after we Landed a violent Storm of<br />
 Thunder Lightning and rain from the N W. which was violent with hard Claps<br />
 of thunder and Sharp Lightning which continued untill 10 P M after which<br />
 the wind blew hard. I set up late and partook of the tent of Mr. Aires<br />
 which was dry. Mr. Aires unfortunately had his boat Sunk on the 25 of July<br />
 last by a violent Storm of Wind and hail by which accident he lost the<br />
 most of his usefull articles as he informd. us. this Gentleman informed us<br />
 of maney Changes &#038; misfortunes which had taken place in the Illinois<br />
 amongst others the loss of Mr. Cady Choteaus house and furniture by fire.<br />
 for this misfortune of our friend Choteaus I feel my Self very much<br />
 Concernd &#038;c. he also informed us that Genl. Wilkinson was the governor<br />
 of the Louisiana and at St. Louis. 300 of the american Troops had been<br />
 Contuned on the Missouri a fiew miles above it&#8217;s mouth, Some disturbance<br />
 with the Spaniards in the Nackatosh Country is the Cause of their being<br />
 Called down to that Country, the Spaniards had taken one of the U, States<br />
 frigates in the Mediteranean, Two British Ships of the line had fired on<br />
 an American Ship in the port of New York, and killed the Capts. brother. 2<br />
 Indians had been hung in St. Louis for murder and several others in jale.<br />
 and that Mr. Burr &#038; Genl. Hambleton fought a Duel, the latter was<br />
 killed &#038;c. &#038;c. I am happy to find that my worthy friend Capt L&#8217;s<br />
 is so well as to walk about with ease to himself &#038;c., we made 60 Miles<br />
 to day the river much crowded with Sand bars, which are very differently<br />
 Situated from what they were when we went up.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-september-3-1806/">Clark: September 3, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Clark: August 3, 1806</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-august-3-1806/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 20:37:50 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/journal/clark-august-3-1806/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Tueday August 3rd,1806. last night the Musquetors was so troublesom that no one of the party Slept half the night. for my part I did not Sleep one hour. those&#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-august-3-1806/">Clark: August 3, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tueday August 3rd,1806. last night the Musquetors was so troublesom that<br />
 no one of the party Slept half the night. for my part I did not Sleep one<br />
 hour. those tormenting insects found their way into My beare and tormented<br />
 me the whole night. they are not less noumerous or troublesom this<br />
 morn-ing. at 2 miles passed the enterance of Jo. Field&#8217;s Creek 35 yds wide<br />
 imediately above a high bluff which is falling into the river very fast.<br />
 on the Side of this bluff I saw Some of the Mountain Bighorn animals. I<br />
 assended the hill below the Bluff. the Musquetors were So noumerous that I<br />
 could not Shute with any Certainty and therefore Soon returned to the<br />
 Canoes. I had not proceeded far before I saw a large gangue of ewes &#038;<br />
 yearlins &#038; fawns or lambs of the bighorn, and at a distance alone I<br />
 saw a ram. landed and Sent Labeech to kill the ram, which he did kill and<br />
 brought him on board. this ram is not near as large as maney I have Seen.<br />
 however he is Sufficiently large for a Sample I directed Bratten to Skin<br />
 him with his head horns &#038; feet to the Skin and Save all the bone. I<br />
 have now the Skin &#038; bone of a Ram a Ewe &#038; a yearlin ram of those<br />
 big Horn animals. at 8. A.M. I arived at the junction of the Rochejhone<br />
 with the Missouri, and formed my Camp imediately in the point between the<br />
 two river at which place the party had all encamped the 26th of<br />
 April-1805. at landing I observed Several Elk feeding on the young willows<br />
 in the point among which was a large Buck Elk which I shot &#038; had his<br />
 flesh dryed in the Sun for a Store down the river. had the Canoes unloaded<br />
 and every article exposed to dry &#038; Sun. Maney of our things were wet,<br />
 and nearly all the Store of meat which had been killed above Spoiled. I<br />
 ordered it to be thrown into the river. Several Skins are also Spoiled<br />
 which is a loss, as they are our principal dependance for Clothes to last<br />
 us to our homes &#038;c.</p>
<p>The distance from the Rocky Mountains at which place I struck the River<br />
 Rochejhone to its enterance into the Missouri 837 Miles 636 Miles of this<br />
 distance I decended in 2 Small Canoes lashed together in which I had the<br />
 following Persons. John Shields, George Gibson, William Bratten, W.<br />
 Labeech, Toust. Shabono his wife &#038; child &#038; my man York. The<br />
 Rochejhone or Yellow Stone river is large and navagable with but fiew<br />
 obstructions quite into the rocky mountains. and probably near it&#8217;s<br />
 source. The Country through which it passes from those Mounts. to its<br />
 junction is Generaly fertile rich open plains the upper portion of which<br />
 is roleing and the high hills and hill Sides are partially covered with<br />
 pine and Stoney. The middle portion or from the enterance of Clarks Fork<br />
 as low as the Buffalow Shoals the high lands Contain Some Scattering pine<br />
 on the Lard. Side. on the Stard. or S. E. Side is Some hills thickly<br />
 Supplied with pine. The lower portion of the river but fiew pines are to<br />
 be Seen the Country opens into extencive plains river widens and Contains<br />
 more islands and bars; of corse gravel sand and Mud. The Current of this<br />
 river may be estimated at 4 Miles and 1/2 pr. hour from the Rocky Mts. as<br />
 low as Clarks Fork, at 31/2 Miles pr. hour from thence as low as the<br />
 Bighorn, at 3Miles pr. hour from thence as low as the Tongue river,<br />
 at 23/4 Miles pr. hour from thence as low as Wolf rapid and at 21/2 miles<br />
 pr. hour from thence to its enterance into the Missouri</p>
<p>The Colour of the Water differs from that of the Missouri it being of a<br />
 yellowish brown, whilst that of the Missouri is of a deep drab Colour<br />
 containing a greater portion of mud than the Rochejhone. This delighfull<br />
 river from indian information has it&#8217;s extreem sources with the North<br />
 river in the Rocky mountains on the confines of New Mexico. it also most<br />
 probably has it&#8217;s westerly sources connected with the Multnomah and those<br />
 the main Southerly branch of Lewis&#8217;s river while it&#8217;s Easterly branches<br />
 head with those of Clark&#8217;s R. the bighorn and River Platte and may be said<br />
 to water the middle portion of the Rocky Mountains from N W to S. E. for<br />
 several hundred miles. the indians inform us, that a good road passes up<br />
 this river to it&#8217;s extreem source from whence it is buta short distance to<br />
 the Spanish settlements. there is also a considerable fall on this river<br />
 within the mountains but at what distance from it&#8217;s source we never could<br />
 learn like all other branches of the Missouri which penetrate the Rocky<br />
 Mountains all that portion of it lying within those mountains abound in<br />
 fine beaver and Otter, it&#8217;s streams also which issuing from the rocky<br />
 mountain and discharging themselves above Clark&#8217;s fork inclusive also<br />
 furnish an abundance of beaver and Otter and possess considerable portions<br />
 of small timber in their values. to an establishment on this river at<br />
 clarks Fork the Shoshones both within and West of the Rocky Mountains<br />
 would willingly resort for the purposes of trade as they would in a great<br />
 measure be relived from the fear of being attacked by their enimies the<br />
 blackfoot Indians and Minnetares of fort de Prarie, which would most<br />
 probably happen were they to visit any establishment which could be<br />
 conveniently formed on the Missouri. I have no doubt but the same regard<br />
 to personal safety would also induce many numerous nations inhabiting the<br />
 Columbia and Lewis&#8217;s river West of the mountains to visit this<br />
 establishment in preference to that at the entrance of Maria&#8217;s river,<br />
 particularly during the first years of those Western establishments. the<br />
 Crow Indians, Paunch Indians Castahanah&#8217;s and others East of the mountains<br />
 and south of this place would also visit this establishment; it may<br />
 therefore be looked to as one of the most important establishments of the<br />
 western fur trade. at the entrance of Clark&#8217;s fork there is a sufficiency<br />
 of timber to support an establishment, an advantage that no position<br />
 possesses from thence to the Rocky Mountains. The banks of the yellowstone<br />
 river a bold not very high yet are not subject to be overflown, except for<br />
 a few miles immediately below where the river issues from the mountain.<br />
 the bed of this river is almost entirely composed of loose pebble, nor is<br />
 it&#8217;s bed interrupted by chains of rock except in one place and that even<br />
 furnishes no considerable obstruction to it&#8217;s navigation. as you decend<br />
 with the river from the mountain the pebble becomes smaller and the<br />
 quantity of mud increased untill you reah Tongue river where the pebble<br />
 ceases and the sand then increases and predominates near it&#8217;s mouth. This<br />
 river can be navigated to greater advantage in perogues than any other<br />
 craft yet it possesses suficient debth of water for battauxs even to the<br />
 mountains; nor is there any of those moving sand bars so formidable to the<br />
 navigation of many parts of the Missouri. The Bighorn R and Clark&#8217;s fork<br />
 may be navigated a considerable distance in perogues and canoes. Tongue<br />
 river is also navigable for canoes a considerable distance.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-august-3-1806/">Clark: August 3, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Clark: July 30, 1806</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-30-1806/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 20:37:48 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/journal/clark-july-30-1806/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Friday 30th July 1806 Set out early this morning at 12 miles arived at the Commencement of Shoals the Chanel on the Stard Side near a high bluff. passed a&#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-30-1806/">Clark: July 30, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Friday 30th July 1806 Set out early this morning at 12 miles arived at the<br />
 Commencement of Shoals the Chanel on the Stard Side near a high bluff.<br />
 passed a Succession of those Shoals for 6 miles the lower of which was<br />
 quit across the river and appeared to have a decent of about 3 feet. here<br />
 we were Compeled to let the Canoes down by hand for fear of their<br />
 Strikeing a rock under water and Splitting. This is by far the wost place<br />
 which I have Seen on this river from the Rocky mountains to this place a<br />
 distance of 694 miles by water. a Perogu or large Canoe would with Safty<br />
 pass through the worst of those Shoals, which I call the Buffalow Sholes<br />
 from the Circumstance of one of those animals being in them. the rock<br />
 which passes the river at those Sholes appear hard and gritty of a dark<br />
 brown Colour. the Clifts on the Stard. Side is about 100 feet in hight, on<br />
 the Lard Side the Country is low and the bottom rises gradually back. here<br />
 is the first appearance of Birnt hills which I have Seen on this river<br />
 they are at a distance from the river on the Lard Side. I landed at the<br />
 enterance of a dry Creek on the Lard side below the Shoals and took<br />
 brackfast. Those Dry Rivers, Creeks &#038;c are like those of the Missouri<br />
 which take their rise in and are the Conveyance of the water from those<br />
 plains. they have the appearanc of dischargeing emence torrents of water.<br />
 the late rains which has fallen in the plains raised Sudenly those Brooks<br />
 which receive the water of those plains on which those Suden &#038; heavy<br />
 Showers of rain must have fallen, Several of which I have Seen<br />
 dischargeing those waters, whiles those below heading or takeing their<br />
 rise in the Same neighbourhood, as I passed them appears to have latterly<br />
 been high. those Broods discharge emencely of mud also, which Contributes<br />
 much to the muddiness of the river. after Brackfast proceeded on the river<br />
 much narrower than above from 3 to 400 yards wide only and only a fiew<br />
 scattering trees to be Seen on the banks. at 20 miles below the Buffalow<br />
 Shoals passed a rapid which is by no means dangerous, it has a number of<br />
 large rocks in different parts of the river which Causes high waves a very<br />
 good Chanel on the Lard. Side. this rapid I call Bear rapid from the<br />
 Circumstance of a bears being on a rock in the Middle of this rapid when I<br />
 arived at it. a violent Storm from the N. W. obliged us to land imediately<br />
 below this rapid, draw up the Canoes and take Shelter in an old Indian<br />
 Lodge above the enterance of a river which is nearly dry it has laterly<br />
 been very high and Spread over nearly 1/4 a mile in width. its Chanel is<br />
 88 yards and in this there is not more water than could pass through an<br />
 inch auger hole. I call it Yorks dry R. after the rain and wind passed<br />
 over I proceeded on at 7 Miles passed the enterance of a river the water<br />
 of which is 100 yds wide, the bead of this river nearly 1/4 of a mile this<br />
 river is Shallow and the water very muddy and of the Colour of the banks a<br />
 darkish brown. I observe great quantities of red Stone thrown out of this<br />
 river that from the appearance of the hills at a distance on its lower<br />
 Side induced me to call this red Stone river. as the water was<br />
 disagreeably muddy I could not Camp on that Side below its mouth. however<br />
 I landed at its enteranc and Sent out and killed two fat Cows, and took as<br />
 much of the flesh as the Canoes would conveniently Carry and Crossed the<br />
 river and encamped at the enterance of a Brook on the Lard. Side under a<br />
 large Spredding Cotton tree. The river on which we passed to day is not So<br />
 wide as above containing but fiew islands with a Small quantity of Cotton<br />
 timber. no timber of any kind to be Seen on the high lands on either Side.</p>
<p>In the evening below the enterance of redstone river I observed great<br />
 numbers of Buffalow feeding on the plains, elk on the points and<br />
 antilopes. I also Saw Some of the Bighorn animals at a distance on the<br />
 hills. Gibson is now able to walk, he walked out this evening and killed<br />
 an antilope.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-30-1806/">Clark: July 30, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Clark: July 24, 1806</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-24-1806/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 20:37:47 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/journal/clark-july-24-1806/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Thursday 24th July 1806. had all our baggage put on board of the two Small Canoes which when lashed together is very Study and I am Convinced will the party&#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-24-1806/">Clark: July 24, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thursday 24th July 1806. had all our baggage put on board of the two Small<br />
 Canoes which when lashed together is very Study and I am Convinced will<br />
 the party I intend takeing down with me. at 8 A M. we Set out and<br />
 proceeded on very well to a riffle about 1 mile above the enterance of<br />
 Clarks fork or big horn river at this riffle the Small Canoes took in a<br />
 good deel of water which obliged us to land a little above the enterance<br />
 of this river which the ____ has called Clarks fork to dry our articles<br />
 and bail the Canoes. I also had Buffalow Skin tacked on So as to prevent<br />
 the waters flacking in between the Two canoes. This last River is 150<br />
 yards wide at it&#8217;s Mouth and 100 a Short destance up the water of a light<br />
 Muddy Colour and much Colder than that of the Rochejhone a Small Island is<br />
 Situated imediately in its mouth, the direction of this river is South and<br />
 East of that part of the rocky mountains which Can be seen from its<br />
 enterance and which Seem to termonate in that direction.I thought<br />
 it probable that this might be the big horn river, and as the Rochejhone<br />
 appeared to make a great bend to the N. I deturmined to Set the horses<br />
 across on S. Side. one Chanel of the river passes under a high black bluff<br />
 from one mile below the place we built the Canoes to within 3 miles of the<br />
 enterance of Clarks fork when the bottoms widen on each side those on the<br />
 Stard Side from 1/2 to a mile in width. river much divided by Islands. at<br />
 6 ms. below the fork I halted on a large Island Seperated from the Stard.<br />
 Shore by a narrow Channel, on this This being a good place to Cross the<br />
 river I deturmined to wait for Sergt. pryor and put him across the river<br />
 at this place. on this Island I observd a large lodge the Same which<br />
 Shannon informed me of a fiew days past. this Lodge a council lodge, it is<br />
 of a Conocil form 60 feet diamuter at its base built of 20 poles each pole<br />
 21/2 feet in Secumpheranc and 45 feet Long built in the form of a lodge<br />
 &#038; covered with bushes. in this Lodge I observed a Cedar bush Sticking<br />
 up on the opposit side of the lodge fronting the dore, on one side was a<br />
 Buffalow head, and on the other Several Sticks bent and Stuck in the<br />
 ground. a Stuffed Buffalow skin was Suspended from the Center with the<br />
 back down. the top of those poles were deckerated with feathers of the<br />
 Eagle &#038; Calumet Eagle also Several Curious pieces of wood bent in<br />
 Circleler form with sticks across them in form of a Griddle hung on tops<br />
 of the lodge poles others in form of a large Sturrip. This Lodge was<br />
 errected last Summer. It is Situated in the Center of a butifull Island<br />
 thinly Covered with Cotton wood under which the earth which is rich is<br />
 Covered with wild rye and a Species of grass resembling the bluegrass, and<br />
 a mixture of Sweet grass which the Indian plat and ware around their necks<br />
 for its cent which is of a Strong sent like that of the Vinella after<br />
 Dinner I proceeded on passed the enterance of a Small Creek and Some wood<br />
 on the Stard. Side where I met with Sergt. Pryor, Shannon &#038; Windser<br />
 with the horses they had but just arived at that place. Sergt. Pryor<br />
 informed me that it would be impossible for the two men with him to drive<br />
 on the horses after him without tireing all the good ones in pursute of<br />
 the more indifferent to keep them on the Course. that in passing every<br />
 gangue of buffalow Several of which he had met with, the loos horses as<br />
 Soon as they Saw the Buffalow would imediately pursue them and run around<br />
 them. All those that Speed suffient would head the buffalow and those of<br />
 less Speed would pursue on as fast as they Could. he at length found that<br />
 the only practiacable method would be for one of them to proceed on and<br />
 when ever they Saw a gang of Buffalow to Scear them off before the horses<br />
 got up. This disposition in the horses is no doubt owing to their being<br />
 frequently exercised in chasing different animals by their former owners<br />
 the Indians as it is their Custom to chase every Speces of wild animal<br />
 with horses, for which purpose they train all their horses. I had the<br />
 horses drove across the river and Set Sergt. Pryor and his party across.<br />
 H. Hall who cannot Swim expressed a Wiliness to proceed on with Sergt.<br />
 Pryor by land, and as another man was necessary to assist in driveing on<br />
 the horses, but observed he was necked, I gave him one of my two remaining<br />
 Shirts a par of Leather Legins and 3 pr. of mockersons which equipt him<br />
 Completely and Sent him on with the party by land to the Mandans. I<br />
 proceeded on the river much better than above the enterance of the Clarks<br />
 fork deep and the Current regularly rapid from 2 to 300 yards in width<br />
 where it is all together, much divided by islands maney of which are large<br />
 and well Supplyed with Cotton wood trees, Some of them large, Saw emenc<br />
 number of Deer Elk and buffalow on the banks. Some beaver. I landed on the<br />
 Lard Side walked out into the bottom and Killd the fatest Buck I every<br />
 Saw, Shields killed a deer and my man York killed a Buffalow Bull, as he<br />
 informed me for his tongue and marrow bones. for me to mention or give an<br />
 estimate of the differant Spcies of wild animals on this river<br />
 particularly Buffalow, Elk Antelopes &#038; Wolves would be increditable. I<br />
 shall therefore be silent on the Subject further. So it is we have a great<br />
 abundance of the best of meat. we made 70 ms. to day Current rapid and<br />
 much divided by islands. Campd a little below Pryers river of 35 yds. on S<br />
 E.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-24-1806/">Clark: July 24, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Clark: July 20, 1806</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-20-1806/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 20:37:46 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/journal/clark-july-20-1806/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Sunday 20th July 1806 I directed Sergt. Pryor and Shields each of them good judges of timber to proceed on down the river Six or 8 miles and examine the&#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-20-1806/">Clark: July 20, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sunday 20th July 1806 I directed Sergt. Pryor and Shields each of them<br />
 good judges of timber to proceed on down the river Six or 8 miles and<br />
 examine the bottoms if any larger trees than those near which we are<br />
 encamped can be found and return before twelve oClock. they Set out at<br />
 daylight. I also Sent Labech Shabono &#038; hall to Skin &#038; some of the<br />
 flesh of the Elk Labeech had killed last evening they returned with one<br />
 Skin the wolves haveing eaten the most of the other four Elk. I also Sent<br />
 two men in Serch of wood Soutable for ax handles. they found some choke<br />
 cherry which is the best wood which Can be precured in this Country. Saw a<br />
 Bear on an Island opposit and Several Elk. Sergt. Pryor and Shields<br />
 returned at half past 11 A M. and informed me that they had proceeded down<br />
 the timbered bottoms of the river for about 12 miles without finding a<br />
 tree better than those near my Camp. I deturmined to have two Canoes made<br />
 out of the largest of those trees and lash them together which will Cause<br />
 them to be Study and fully Sufficient to take my Small party &#038; Self<br />
 with what little baggage we have down this river. had handles put in the 3<br />
 Axes and after Sharpening them with a file fell the two trees which I<br />
 intended for the two Canoes. those trees appeared tolerably Sound and will<br />
 make Canoes of 28 feet in length and about 16 or 18 inches deep and from<br />
 16 to 24 inches wide. the men with the three axes Set in and worked untill<br />
 dark. Sergt. Pryor dressed Some Skins to make him Clothes. Gibsons wound<br />
 looks very well. I dressed it. The horses being fatigued and their feet<br />
 very Sore, I Shall let them rest a fiew days. dureing which time the party<br />
 intended for to take them by land to the Mandans will dress their Skins<br />
 and make themselves Clothes to bare, as they are nearly naked. Shields<br />
 killed a Deer &#038; Buffalow &#038; Shannon a faun and a Buffalow &#038;<br />
 York an Elk one of the buffalow was good meat. I had the best of him<br />
 brought in and cut thin and Spread out to dry.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-20-1806/">Clark: July 20, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Clark: July 13, 1806</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-13-1806/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 20:37:43 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/journal/clark-july-13-1806/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Sunday 13th July 1806 Set out early this morning and proceded on very well to the enterance of Madicines river at our old Encampment of the 27th July last at&#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-13-1806/">Clark: July 13, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sunday 13th July 1806 Set out early this morning and proceded on very well<br />
 to the enterance of Madicines river at our old Encampment of the 27th July<br />
 last at 12 where I found Sergt. Pryor and party with the horses, they had<br />
 arived at this place one hour before us. his party had killed 6 deer &#038;<br />
 a white bear I had all the horses driven across Madicine &#038; gallitines<br />
 rivers and halted to dine and let the horses feed imediately below the<br />
 enterance of Gallitine. had all the baggage of the land party taken out of<br />
 the Canoes and after dinner the 6 Canoes and the party of 10 men under the<br />
 direction of Sergt. Ordway Set out. previous to their departur I gave<br />
 instructions how they were to proceed &#038;c. I also wrote to Capt Lewis<br />
 by Sergt. Ordway-. my party now Consists of the following persons Viz:<br />
 Serjeant N. Pryor, Jo. Shields, G. Shannon William Bratton, Labiech,<br />
 Windsor, H. Hall, Gibson, Interpreter Shabono his wife &#038; Child and my<br />
 man york; with 49 horses and a colt. the horses feet are very sore and<br />
 Several of them can Scercely proceed on. at 5. P. M I Set out from the<br />
 head of Missouri at the 3 forks, and proceeded on nearly East 4 miles and<br />
 Encamped on the bank of Gallitines River which is a butifull navigable<br />
 Stream. Saw a large Gange of Elk in the plains and Deer in the river<br />
 bottoms. I also observe beaver and Several otter in galletines river as I<br />
 passed along. Gibson killed an otter the fur of which was much longer and<br />
 whiter than any which I had Seen. Willard killed 2 deer this morning. all<br />
 the meat I had put into the Canoes except a Sufficiency for Supper. The<br />
 Country in the forks between Gallitins &#038; Madisens rivers is a butifull<br />
 leavel plain Covered with low grass.on the lower or N E. Side of<br />
 Gallitins river the Country rises gradually to the foot of a mountain<br />
 which runs nearly parrelal. those plains are indefferant or the Soil of<br />
 which is not very rich they are Stoney &#038; Contain Several Stratas of<br />
 white rock. the Current of the river is rapid and near the mouth contains<br />
 Several islands, it is navigable for Canoes. I saw Several Antelope Common<br />
 Deer, wolves, beaver, Otter, Eagles, hawks, Crows, wild gees both old and<br />
 young, does &#038;c. &#038;c. I observe Several leading roads which appear<br />
 to pass to a gap of the mountain in a E. N E. direction about 18 or 20<br />
 miles distant. The indian woman who has been of great Service to me as a<br />
 pilot through this Country recommends a gap in the mountain more South<br />
 which I shall cross.-.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/clark-july-13-1806/">Clark: July 13, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Lewis: July 1, 1806</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/lewis-july-1-1806/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 20:37:38 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/journal/lewis-july-1-1806/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Tuesday July 1st 1806. This morning early we sent out all our hunters. set Sheilds at work to repair some of our guns which were out of order Capt. Clark&#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/lewis-july-1-1806/">Lewis: July 1, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tuesday July 1st 1806. This morning early we sent out all our hunters. set<br />
 Sheilds at work to repair some of our guns which were out of order Capt.<br />
 Clark &#038; my self consurted the following plan viz. from this place I<br />
 determined to go with a small party by the most direct rout to the falls<br />
 of the Missouri, there to leave Thompson McNeal and goodrich to prepare<br />
 carriages and geer for the purpose of transporting the canoes and baggage<br />
 over the portage, and myself and six volunteers to ascend Maria&#8217;s river<br />
 with a view to explore the country and ascertain whether any branch of<br />
 that river lies as far north as Latd. 50 and again return and join the<br />
 party who are to decend the Missouri, at the entrance of Maria&#8217;s river. I<br />
 now called for the volunteers to accompany me on this rout, many turned<br />
 out, from whom I scelected Drewyer the two Feildses, Werner, Frazier and<br />
 Sergt Gass accompanied me the other part of the men are to proceed with<br />
 Capt Clark to the head of Jefferson&#8217;s river where we deposited sundry<br />
 articles and left our canoes. from hence Sergt Ordway with a party of 9<br />
 men are to decend the river with the canoes; Capt C. with the remaining<br />
 ten including Charbono and York will proceed to the Yellowstone river at<br />
 it&#8217;s nearest approach to the three forks of the missouri, here he will<br />
 build a canoe and decend the Yellowstone river with Charbono the indian<br />
 woman, his servant York and five others to the missouri where should he<br />
 arrive first he will wait my arrival. Sergt Pryor with two other men are<br />
 to proceed with the horses by land to the Mandans and thence to the<br />
 British posts on the Assinniboin with a letter to Mr. Heney whom we wish<br />
 to engage to prevail on the Sioux Chefs to join us on the Missouri, and<br />
 accompany them with us to the seat of the general government. these<br />
 arrangements being made the party were informed of our design and prepared<br />
 themselves accordingly. our hunters killed 13 deer in the course of this<br />
 day of which 7 were fine bucks, deer are large and in fine order. the<br />
 indians inform us that there are a great number of white buffaloe or<br />
 mountain sheep of the snowey hights of the mountains West of this river;<br />
 they state that they inhabit the most rocky and inaccessible parts, and<br />
 run but badly, that they kill them with great ease with their arrows when<br />
 they can find them. the indian warrior who overtook us on the 26th Ult.<br />
 made me a present of an excellent horse which he said he gave for the good<br />
 council we had given himself and nation and also to assure us of his<br />
 attatchment to the white men and his desire to be at peace with the<br />
 Minnetares of Fort de Prarie. we had our venison fleeced and exposed in<br />
 the sun on pole to dry. the dove the black woodpecker, the lark<br />
 woodpecker, the logcock, the prarie lark, sandhill crain, prarie hen with<br />
 the short and pointed tail, the robin, a speceis of brown plover, a few<br />
 curloos, small black birds, ravens hawks and a variety of sparrows as well<br />
 as the bee martin and the several speceis of Corvus genus are found in<br />
 this vally.</p>
<p>Windsor birst his gun near the muzzle a few days since; this Sheilds cut<br />
 off and I then exchanged it with the Cheif for the one we had given him<br />
 for conducting us over the mountains. he was much pleased with the<br />
 exchange and shot his gun several times; he shoots very well for an<br />
 inexperienced person.</p>
<p>The little animal found in the plains of the Missouri which I have called<br />
 the barking squirrel weighs from 3 to 31/2 pounds. it&#8217;s form is that of<br />
 the squirrel. it&#8217;s colour is an uniform light brick red grey, the red<br />
 reather predominating. the under side of the neck and bely are lighter<br />
 coloured than the other parts of the body. the legs are short, and it is<br />
 wide across the breast and sholders in propotion to it&#8217;s size, appears<br />
 strongly formed in that part; the head is also bony muscular and stout,<br />
 reather more blontly terminated wider and flatter than the common<br />
 squirrel. the upper lip is split or divided to the nose. the ears are<br />
 short and lie close to the head, having the appearance of being cut off,<br />
 in this particular they resemble the guinea pig. the teeth are like those<br />
 of the squrrel rat &#038;c. they have a false jaw or pocket between the<br />
 skin and the mustle of the jaw like that of the common ground squrrel but<br />
 not so large in proportion to their size. they have large and full<br />
 whiskers on each side of the nose, a few long hairs of the same kind on<br />
 each jaw and over the eyes. the eye is small and black. they have five<br />
 toes on each foot of which the two outer toes on each foot are much shoter<br />
 than those in the center particularly the two inner toes of the fore feet,<br />
 the toes of the fore feet are remarkably long and sharp and seem well<br />
 adapted to cratching or burrowing those of the hind feet are neither as<br />
 long or sharp as the former; the nails are black. the hair of this animal<br />
 is about as long and equally as course as that of the common grey squrrel<br />
 of our country, and the hair of the tail is not longer than that of the<br />
 body except immediately at the extremity where it is somewhat longer and<br />
 frequently of a dark brown colour. the part of generation in the female is<br />
 placed on the lower region of the belly between the hinder legs so far<br />
 forward that she must lie on her back to copolate. the whole length of<br />
 this animal is one foot five inches from the extremity of the nose to that<br />
 of the tail of which the tail occupyes 4 inches. it is nearly double the<br />
 size of the whistleing squirrel of the Columbia. it is much more quick<br />
 active and fleet than it&#8217;s form would indicate. these squirrels burrow in<br />
 the ground in the open plains usually at a considerable distance from the<br />
 water yet are never seen at any distance from their burrows. six or eight<br />
 usually reside in one burrow to which there is never more than one<br />
 entrance. these burrows are of great debth. I once dug and pursued a<br />
 burrow to the debth of ten feet and did not reach it&#8217;s greatest debth.<br />
 they generally associate in large societies placing their burrows near<br />
 each other and frequently occupy in this manner several hundred acres of<br />
 land. when at rest above ground their position is generally erect on their<br />
 hinder feet and rump; thus they will generally set and bark at you as you<br />
 approach them, their note being much that of the little toy dogs, their<br />
 yelps are in quick succession and at each they a motion to their tails<br />
 upwards. they feed on the grass and weeds within the limits of their<br />
 village which they never appear to exceed on any occasion. as they are<br />
 usually numerous they keep the grass and weeds within their district very<br />
 closely graized and as clean as if it had been swept. the earth which they<br />
 throw out of their burrows is usually formed into a conic mound around the<br />
 entrance. this little animal is frequently very fat and it&#8217;s flesh is not<br />
 unpleasant. as soon as the hard frosts commence it shuts up it&#8217;s burrow<br />
 and continues within untill spring. it will eat grain or meat.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/journal/lewis-july-1-1806/">Lewis: July 1, 1806</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
