LEWIS AND CLARK’S EXPEDITION.
With George and Victor Shelton seated
on the fallen tree on one side of the camp fire, and
Captains Lewis and Clark on the other, these two famous
explorers told the story of their expedition, which
must always retain an historical interest for all
of us.
As early as 1785, while Jefferson
was in Paris, he became impressed with the value of
the Northwest. This interest increased after his
return home, and when he became President he secured
an appropriation of twenty-five hundred dollars from
Congress for the purpose of defraying the expense
of an exploration of the vast region to the northwest
of the Mississippi. This appropriation was made
in February, 1803.
The area of Louisiana was more than
a million square miles, and greater than that of the
whole United States as it then existed. It was
purchased from France for the sum of fifteen million
dollars, the treaty to that effect between the two
governments being ratified in the summer of the year
named. By this single transaction the dominion
of the United States was extended across the whole
continent of North America, from the Atlantic to the
Pacific.
The exploring party that entered this
enormous region was under the command of Captains
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark. It will be
noted that both of these officers held the same rank.
Military law does not permit the anomaly of equal
authority, and Clark was really the junior, but in
point of fact the rights of the two were the same.
They were so considerate toward each other that no
difference ever arose, and “the actual command
and conduct of the expedition devolved upon each in
exactly equal degree.”
Lewis belonged to an old Virginia
family and early displayed enterprise, boldness and
discretion. He won the promotion to a captaincy
at the age of twenty-two, and was barely thirty years
of age when called to take part in this memorable
exploration. Clark was also a native of Virginia,
but his childhood had been spent in Kentucky, whither
his parents removed. He was a younger brother
of the more famous General George Rogers Clark, but
for whom the Allegheny Mountains instead of the Mississippi
would have been our western boundary after the close
of the Revolution. He was about thirty-three
years old when he joined Lewis. He possessed excellent
qualities, and it may be said that no two persons
could have been selected who were better fitted to
lead the score and a half of men across the continent.
On July 5, 1803, Captain Lewis left
Washington, hoping to gather his men and materials
in time to reach La Charrette, the upper
white settlement on the Missouri, and there spend
the winter. The inevitable delays followed, and
the Spanish commandant of the province, not having
received official notice of the transfer, would not
allow the expedition to pass through the territory.
The explorers, therefore, went into camp for the winter
at the mouth of the Du Bois River, a little north
of St. Louis, on the eastern bank of the Mississippi.
This point was left on May 14, 1804. Entering
the Indian country the leaders held a council with
the Ottoes and Missouris, and by the distribution
of gewgaws and presents won the good will of the red
men. Lewis and Clark named the place of meeting
Council Bluff, which is retained to this day, although
the site of the modern city is below the meeting place
and on the opposite, side of the river.
For a time the expedition acted the
part of peacemaker among the Indians. The officers
patched up peace agreements between the tribes that
were on the verge of warfare, and made treaties with
the Yankton branch of the Sioux and the Ricaras.
All these natives were familiar with white men, having
known both French traders and the employees of the
British Fur Company. The Indians showed a friendly
disposition toward the explorers, but their wonder
was unbounded at sight of the African servant, he
being the first of his race they had ever seen.
With the waggery of his nature this negro gravely informed
them that he was really a wild animal that had been
caught and tamed. The simple folk believed his
fantastic yarns, which were emphasized by numerous
feats of strength on his part.
Progress up the river was slow, because
of the many sand bars and numerous curves of the stream.
The hunters, who kept in advance, secured large quantities
of fresh meat, and dried a good deal for the winter
supply. The region of the Mandans was reached
in the latter part of October. There a fort was
built and occupied during the winter. This was
in what is now McLean County, North Dakota. The
winter was very severe, and many of the men had their
hands and feet frostbitten, while the continual glare
of the snow caused a temporary blindness.
At this fort another interpreter was
engaged. He was a Canadian, whose wife was a
member of the Snake tribe of Indians of the Rocky Mountains.
She was stolen when a child and brought east, where
she was bought by the Canadian, who made her his wife.
She was a remarkable woman, and the only one of her
sex who accompanied the party. When she set out
she carried an infant barely two months old.
She not only stood the journey as well as any of the
men, but displayed a rare degree of intelligence.
She remembered much of the wild region through which
the party had to pass, and smoothed the way among
her own race for the white invaders. She became
very popular with all the members, and deserved the
praise which the leaders gave her.
Six canoes were soon completed.
The company made their start April 7, 1805, sixteen
going down stream with a barge laden with curiosities
of the region for President Jefferson, while thirty-two
formed the permanent party, which pressed into the
great unknown region spreading out before them.
The names of all these explorers are preserved in the
archives of the War Department under the title of “A
roll of the men who accompanied Captains Lewis and
Clark on their late tour to the Pacific Ocean through
the interior of the continent of North America, showing
their rank, with some remarks on their respective merits
and services.”
Early as was the season, the men suffered
much from mosquitoes. Spring kept company with
the expedition. Herds of deer, elk, buffaloes
and antelopes were seen grazing on the rich grass,
and there seemed no end to swans and geese. Passing
the alkali regions, the party reached, in the latter
part of April, the mouth of a large river, to which
they gave the name of Yellowstone. Joseph Fields,
of Kentucky, ascended it for eight miles, and was
the first white man to do so. Rains, high winds
and cold weather welcomed them into the hills of Montana,
and often the boats had to be dragged along the banks
by means of elk-skin cords. They were thus laboriously
making their way when, as has been shown, they were
met by Deerfoot and the Shelton brothers at the mouth
of the Musselshell River.
The story of the Lewis and Clark expedition,
therefore, ended for George and Victor Shelton at
the point named. It will not be uninteresting,
however, to sum up the history of one of the most
memorable enterprises connected with the development
of the West. Captains Lewis and Clark gained
a great deal of valuable knowledge from the boys,
who had traversed a large part of the region which
they intended to explore. The excellent memories
and the marked intelligence of the youths were admired
by the officers.
A few days after the meeting between
the two parties Lewis climbed to the top of the highest
elevation north of the river and gained his first
view of the Rocky Mountains, known at that time as
the Stony Mountains. All the numerous streams
were described and named. It has been charged
against the explorers that they were lacking in sentiment
and imagination, for most of the names thus given by
them have been supplanted by others, but it cannot
be said that these changes have always been an improvement.
On the second day of summer the explorers
had to face a puzzling problem. A large branch
flowing from the north was so similar to the Missouri
that it seemed it must be that river, while the one
hitherto accepted as such bore to the south.
Which was the branch that, according to the reports
of the Indians, had its rise in the Rocky Mountains,
near the source of the Columbia? To settle the
question the party divided, one ascending either branch.
Upon reuniting it was agreed that the south branch
was the real Missouri. The northern stream was
named the Maria. This was another of the few instances
in which the title given by the explorers stuck.
The rapids five miles below the Falls
of the Missouri were reached on June 15. These
had to be passed by a portage. An idea can be
formed of the great difficulties encountered when
it is stated that, although the portage was hardly
eighteen miles long, it took eleven days to make it.
The men, however, were in high spirits, and at night
Peter Cruzatte added to the “gayety of nations”
by playing on his violin.
About the middle of August horses
were obtained from the tribe from which the Indian
wife of the interpreter had been stolen. The passage
through the mountains or over the Divide caused the
greatest suffering of the expedition. The men
had to cut their way in many places through the brush,
clamber over jagged stones and climb such precipitous
walls that several of their horses were crippled.
Then snow began falling and the nights became very
cold. Game seemed to have deserted the country,
and the sufferers had to eat all their supply of flour
and parched corn. Beginning with September 14,
they were obliged to kill and eat some of their horses,
and even at that had to be very sparing or the supply
would have been exhausted.
Descending the western side of the
mountains, however, they found abundant edible roots,
dried salmon and dried berries at the Indian villages.
The famishing men feasted so ravenously that most of
them became ill. New canoes were constructed,
and leaving their horses with a chief they started
down the Clearwater and reached the Columbia on October
16. Ten days were occupied in making the portage
of the falls and rapids, and on the morning of November
7, when the fog lifted, they saw in the distance the
Pacific Ocean.
A month later the party went into
winter quarters. It rained eternally, the weather
was chilly and their condition for a long time was
miserable in the extreme. The shelter built for
themselves was called Fort Clatsop. There they
remained until March 23, 1806, when the explorers
set out on their return journey. They had to face
difficulties, hardships and sufferings again, but they
had learned from experience and were better prepared
to do so. They embarked on the Yellowstone July
24, and ten days later reached its junction with the
Missouri. At this point the men were driven almost
frantic by the mosquitoes. At midday, September
23, 1806, they arrived at St. Louis, where the whole
town turned out to welcome them. There the party
was disbanded, and, passing to their various destinations,
the Lewis and Clark expedition took its place in history.
During the latter part of the chat
between Lewis and Clark, Deerfoot came quietly forward
and sat down beside the Shelton boys. He listened
closely to all that was said. When the officers
asked questions, the Shawanoe left the answers to
the brothers. But more than once they were in
doubt, and turned to him for aid. His prompt response
in every instance was noticed by the officers, who,
after a time, addressed their questions almost wholly
to him.
Finally, at a late hour, the visitors
wrapped themselves in their blankets and stretched
out on the ground, with their feet turned toward the
blaze. The explorers always maintained a watch,
for though they felt no fear of the Indians they were
subject to unpleasant visits, as in the case when
a bison swam a river and went plunging like a steam
engine through the camp. Moreover, the men had
seen enough of the grizzly bear to hold him in respectful
awe, and they did not intend to have any of the brutes
steal a march upon them.
The morning was clear and pleasant,
and the explorers were astir at an early hour.
A breakfast was made from catfish and goose, and a
cordial farewell took place. The boys wished
Captains Lewis and Clark the best of fortune, and
Lewis complimented them, and especially Deerfoot, for
the information they had given him of the region through
which they expected to force their way. In return,
Lewis advised his guests to bear directly to the south
and not to follow the course of the Missouri, as he
and his company had done. In fact, it would have
been absurd for the three to adopt any other plan.
They could make no use of the current because they
had no boats, and if they procured them from the Indians
they could not be made to carry the horses. The
distance was much greater by the Lewis and Clark route,
which held no attractions to our friends. When,
therefore, Victor Shelton told Captain Lewis that
his advice would be followed, he said that which had
been determined upon before the meeting of the two
parties.