Research

Alexander Willard

Alexander Hamilton Willard (1778-1865) was a blacksmith and gunsmith who served as one of the expedition’s most versatile craftsmen. He was one of the “Nine Young Men from Kentucky” who formed the core of the permanent party.

Willard is notable for being court-martialed for falling asleep while on sentinel duty on July 12, 1804 — a serious offense that technically carried a death sentence. He was found guilty and sentenced to 100 lashes on his bare back, administered at 25 lashes per day over four days. Despite this harsh punishment, Willard continued to serve capably throughout the journey.

His blacksmithing skills proved particularly valuable at Fort Mandan, where the expedition traded metalwork to the Mandan and Hidatsa in exchange for food — a crucial arrangement that helped them survive the brutal winter of 1804-1805.

After the expedition, Willard lived the longest of any Corps member, dying in 1865 at the remarkable age of 87 in Sacramento, California. He lived to see the Civil War and the completion of the transcontinental railroad — a transformed America that the expedition had helped make possible.

Related Journal Entries

View all 41 related entries

Entities mentioned in this document

People:
Alexander Hamilton Willard Nine Young Men from Kentucky
Tribes & Nations:
Mandan Hidatsa
Places:
Fort Mandan Kentucky Sacramento, California
Foods:
food
Tools:
metalwork
Weather:
brutal winter of 1804-1805
Medical:
100 lashes on his bare back
Cultural:
court-martial sentinel duty transcontinental railroad Civil War
Trade Goods:
metalwork

Auto-extracted from this document by AI. Click any entity to see all entries that mention it.

Our Partners