Captain Clark continued his observations
up the long series of rapids and falls until he came
to a group of three small islands to which he gave
the name of White Bear Islands, from his having seen
numerous white, or grizzly, bears on them. On
the nineteenth of June, Captain Clark, after a careful
survey of the country on both sides of the stream,
decided that the best place for a portage was on the
south, or lower, side of the river, the length of
the portage being estimated to be about eighteen miles,
over which the canoes and supplies must be carried.
Next day he proceeded to mark out the exact route of
the portage, or carry, by driving stakes along its
lines and angles. From the survey and drawing
which he made, the party now had a clear and accurate
view of the falls, cascades, and rapids of the Missouri;
and, it may be added, this draught, which is reproduced
on another page of this book, is still so correct
in all its measurements that when a Montana manufacturing
company undertook to build a dam at Black Eagle Falls,
nearly one hundred years afterwards, they discovered
that their surveys and those of Captain Clark were
precisely alike. The total fall of the river,
from the White Bear Islands, as Lewis and Clark called
them, to the foot of the Great Falls, is four hundred
twelve and five-tenths feet; the sheer drop of the
Great Fall is seventy-five and five-tenths feet.
The wild, trackless prairie of Lewis and Clark’s
time is now the site of the thriving town of Great
Falls, which has a population of ten thousand.
Here is a lucid and connected account
of the falls and rapids, discovered and described
by Lewis and Clark:
“This river is three hundred
yards wide at the point where it receives the waters
of Medicine (Sun) River, which is one hundred and
thirty-seven yards in width. The united current
continues three hundred and twenty-eight poles to
a small rapid on the north side, from which it gradually
widens to fourteen hundred yards, and at the distance
of five hundred and forty-eight poles reaches the
head of the rapids, narrowing as it approaches them.
Here the hills on the north, which had withdrawn from
the bank, closely border the river, which, for the
space of three hundred and twenty poles, makes its
way over the rocks, with a descent of thirty feet.
In this course the current is contracted to five hundred
and eighty yards, and after throwing itself over a
small pitch of five feet, forms a beautiful cascade
of twenty-six feet five inches; this does not, however,
fall immediately or perpendicularly, being stopped
by a part of the rock, which projects at about one-third
of the distance. After descending this fall,
and passing the cottonwood island on which the eagle
has fixed her nest, the river goes on for five hundred
and thirty-two poles over rapids and little falls,
the estimated descent of which is thirteen and one-half
feet, till it is joined by a large fountain boiling
up underneath the rocks near the edge of the river,
into which it falls with a cascade of eight feet.
The water of this fountain is of the most perfect
clearness, and of rather a bluish cast; and, even
after falling into the Missouri, it preserves its color
for half a mile. From the fountain the river descends
with increased rapidity for the distance of two hundred
and fourteen poles, during which the estimated descent
is five feet; and from this, for a distance of one
hundred and thirty-five poles, it descends fourteen
feet seven inches, including a perpendicular fall
of six feet seven inches. The Missouri has now
become pressed into a space of four hundred and seventy-three
yards, and here forms a grand cataract, by falling
over a plain rock the whole distance across the river,
to the depth of forty-seven feet eight inches.
After recovering itself, it then proceeds with an
estimated descent of three feet, till, at the distance
of one hundred and two poles, it is precipitated down
the Crooked Falls nineteen feet perpendicular.
Below this, at the mouth of a deep ravine, is a fall
of five feet; after which, for the distance of nine
hundred and seventy poles, the descent is much more
gradual, not being more than ten feet, and then succeeds
a handsome level plain for the space of one hundred
and seventy-eight poles, with a computed descent of
three feet, the river making a bend towards the north.
Thence it descends, for four hundred and eighty poles,
about eighteen and one-half feet, when it makes a
perpendicular fall of two feet, which is ninety poles
beyond the great cataract; in approaching which, it
descends thirteen feet within two hundred yards, and,
gathering strength from its confined channel, which
is only two hundred and eighty yards wide, rushes over
the fall to the depth of eighty-seven feet.
“After raging among the rocks,
and losing itself in foam, it is compressed immediately
into a bed of ninety-three yards in width: it
continues for three hundred and forty poles to the
entrance of a run or deep ravine, where there is a
fall of three feet, which, added to the decline during
that distance, makes the descent six feet. As
it goes on, the descent within the next two hundred
and forty poles is only four feet; from this, passing
a run or deep ravine, the descent in four hundred
poles is thirteen feet; within two hundred and forty
poles, another descent of eighteen feet; thence, in
one hundred and sixty poles, a descent of six feet;
after which, to the mouth of Portage Creek, a distance
of two hundred and eighty poles, the descent is ten
feet. From this survey and estimate, it results
that the river experiences a descent of three hundred
and fifty-two feet in the distance of two and three
quarter miles, from the commencement of the rapids
to the mouth of Portage Creek, exclusive of the almost
impassable rapids which extend for a mile below its
entrance.”
On the twenty-first of the month, all the needed preparations
having been finished, the arduous work of making the portage, or carry, was
begun. All the members of the expedition were now together, and the two
captains divided with their men the labor of hunting, carrying luggage,
boat-building, exploring, and so on. They made three camps, the lower one
on Portage Creek, the next at Willow Run (see map), and a third at a point
opposite White Bear Islands. The portage was not completed until July
second. They were often delayed by the breaking down of their rude
carriages, and during the last stage of their journey much of their luggage was
carried on the backs of the men. They were also very much annoyed with the
spines of the prickly pear, a species of cactus, which, growing low on the
ground, is certain to be trampled upon by the wayfarer. The spines ran
through the moccasins of the men and sorely wounded their feet. Thus,
under date of June twenty-fourth, the journal says (It should be understood that
the portage was worked from above and below the rapids): -
“On going down yesterday Captain
Clark cut off several angles of the former route,
so as to shorten the portage considerably, and marked
it with stakes. He arrived there in time to have
two of the canoes carried up in the high plain, about
a mile in advance. Here they all repaired their
moccasins, and put on double soles to protect them
from the prickly pear, and from the sharp points of
earth which have been formed by the trampling of the
buffalo during the late rains. This of itself
is sufficient to render the portage disagreeable to
one who has no burden; but as the men are loaded as
heavily as their strength will permit, the crossing
is really painful. Some are limping with the soreness
of their feet; others are scarcely able to stand for
more than a few minutes, from the heat and fatigue.
They are all obliged to halt and rest frequently;
at almost every stopping-place they fall, and many
of them are asleep in an instant; yet no one complains,
and they go on with great cheerfulness. At the
camp, midway in the portage, Drewyer and Fields joined
them; for, while Captain Lewis was looking for them
at Medicine River, they returned to report the absence
of Shannon, about whom they had been very uneasy.
They had killed several buffalo at the bend of the
Missouri above the falls, dried about eight hundred
pounds of meat, and got one hundred pounds of tallow;
they had also killed some deer, but had seen no elk.”
Under this date, too, Captain Lewis,
who was with another branch of the expedition, makes
this note: “Such as were able to shake a
foot amused themselves in dancing on the green to
the music of the violin which Cruzatte plays extremely
well.”
The journal continues: -
“We were now occupied (at White
Bear camp) in fitting up a boat of skins, the frame
of which had been prepared for the purpose at Harper’s
Ferry in Virginia. It was made of iron, thirty-six
feet long, four and one-half feet in the beam, and
twenty-six inches wide in the bottom. Two men
had been sent this morning for timber to complete it,
but they could find scarcely any even tolerably straight
sticks four and one-half feet long; and as the cottonwood
is too soft and brittle, we were obliged to use willow
and box-elder.”
On the twenty-seventh, the main party, which was working on
the upper part of the portage, joined that of Captain Clark at the lower camp,
where a second cache, or place of deposit, had been formed, and where the
boat-swivel was now hidden under the rocks. The journal says: -
“The party were employed in
preparing timber for the boat, except two who were
sent to hunt. About one in the afternoon a cloud
arose from the southwest, and brought with it violent
thunder, lightning, and hail. Soon after it passed,
the hunters came in, from about four miles above us.
They had killed nine elk and three bears. As they
were hunting on the river they saw a low ground covered
with thick brushwood, where from the tracks along
shore they thought a bear had probably taken refuge.
They therefore landed, without making a noise, and
climbed a tree about twenty feet above the ground.
Having fixed themselves securely, they raised a loud
shout, and a bear instantly rushed toward them.
These animals never climb, and therefore when he came
to the tree and stopped to look at them, Drewyer shot
him in the head. He proved to be the largest
we had yet seen; his nose appeared to be like that
of a common ox; his fore feet measured nine inches
across; the hind feet were seven inches wide and eleven
and three quarters long, exclusive of the talons.
One of these animals came within thirty yards of the
camp last night, and carried off some buffalo-meat
which we had placed on a pole.”
The party were very much annoyed here
by the grizzlies which infested their camp at
night. Their faithful dog always gave warning
of the approach of one of these monsters; but the
men were obliged to sleep with their guns by their
side, ready to repel the enemy at a moment’s
notice.
Captain Clark finally broke up the camp on Portage Creek,
June 28, having deposited in his cache whatever could be left behind without
inconvenience. On the following day, the journal says: -
“Finding it impossible to reach
the upper end of the portage with the present load,
in consequence of the state of the road after the rain,
he sent back nearly all his party to bring on the
articles which had been left yesterday. Having
lost some notes and remarks which he had made on first
ascending the river, he determined to go up to the
Whitebear Islands along its banks, in order to supply
the deficiency. He there left one man to guard
the baggage, and went on to the falls, accompanied
by his servant York, Chaboneau, and his wife with her
young child.
“On his arrival there he observed
a very dark cloud rising in the west, which threatened
rain, and looked around for some shelter; but could
find no place where the party would be secure from
being blown into the river, if the wind should prove
as violent as it sometimes does in the plains.
At length, about a quarter of a mile above the falls,
he found a deep ravine, where there were some shelving
rocks, under which he took refuge. They were
on the upper side of the ravine near the river, perfectly
safe from the rain, and therefore laid down their guns,
compass, and other articles which they carried with
them. The shower was at first moderate; it then
increased to a heavy rain, the effects of which they
did not feel; but soon after, a torrent of rain and
hail descended. The rain seemed to fall in a
solid mass, and instantly, collecting in the ravine,
came rolling down in a dreadful current, carrying
the mud, rocks, and everything that opposed it.
Captain Clark fortunately saw it a moment before it
reached them, and springing up with his gun and shot-pouch
in his left hand, with his right clambered up the
steep bluff, pushing on the Indian woman with her child
in her arms; her husband too had seized her hand and
was pulling her tip the hill, but he was so terrified
at the danger that he remained frequently motionless;
and but for Captain Clark, himself and his wife and
child would have been lost. So instantaneous
was the rise of the water that, before Captain Clark
had reached his gun and begun to ascend the bank,
the water was up to his waist, and he could scarcely
get up faster than it rose, till it reached the height
of fifteen feet, with a furious current which, had
they waited a moment longer, would have swept them
into the river just above the Great Falls, down which
they must inevitably have been precipitated.
They reached the plain in safety and found York, who
had separated from them just before the storm to hunt
some buffalo, and was now returning to find his master.
They had been obliged to escape so rapidly that Captain
Clark lost his compass (that is, circumferentor) and
umbrella, Chaboneau left his gun, with Captain Lewis’
wiping-rod, shot-pouch, and tomahawk, and the Indian
woman had just time to grasp her child, before the
net in which it lay at her feet was carried down the
current.”
Such a storm is known in the West
as a cloud-burst. Overland emigrants in the early
rush to California often suffered loss from these sudden
deluges. A party of men, with wagons and animals,
have been known to be swept away and lost in a flood
bursting in a narrow canyon in the mountains.
“Captain Clark now relinquished
his intention of going up the river, and returned
to the camp at Willow Run. Here he found that
the party sent this morning for the baggage had all
returned to camp in great confusion, leaving their
loads in the plain. On account of the heat, they
generally go nearly naked, and with no covering on
their heads. The hail was so large, and driven
so furiously against them by the high wind, that it
knocked several of them down: one of them, particularly,
was thrown on the ground three times, and most of them
were bleeding freely, and complained of being much
bruised. Willow Run had risen six feet since
the rain; and, as the plains were so wet that they
could not proceed, they passed the night at their
camp.
“At the White Bear camp, also,”
(says Lewis), “we had not been insensible to
the hailstorm, though less exposed. In the morning
there had been a heavy shower of rain, after which
it became fair. After assigning to the men their
respective employments, Captain Lewis took one of
them, and went to see the large fountain near the falls.
. . . It is, perhaps, the largest in America,
and is situated in a pleasant level plain, about twenty-five
yards from the river, into which it falls over some
steep, irregular rocks, with a sudden ascent of about
six feet in one part of its course. The water
boils up from among the rocks, and with such force
near the centre that the surface seems higher there
than the earth on the sides of the fountain, which
is a handsome turf of fine green grass. The water
is extremely pure, cold, and pleasant to the taste,
not being impregnated with lime or any foreign substance.
It is perfectly transparent, and continues its bluish
cast for half a mile down the Missouri, notwithstanding
the rapidity of the river. After examining it
for some time, Captain Lewis returned to the camp.
. . .”
“Two men were sent (June 30)
to the falls to look for the articles lost yesterday;
but they found nothing but the compass, covered with
mud and sand, at the mouth of the ravine. The
place at which Captain Clark had been caught by the
storm was filled with large rocks. The men complain
much of the bruises received yesterday from the hail.
A more than usual number of buffalo appeared about
the camp to-day, and furnished plenty of meat.
Captain Clark thought that at one view he must have
seen at least ten thousand.”
Of the party at the upper camp, opposite White Bear Islands,
the journal makes this observation: -
“The party continues to be occupied
with the boat, the cross-bars for which are now finished,
and there remain only the strips to complete the woodwork.
The skins necessary to cover it have already been prepared;
they amount to twenty-eight elk-skins and four buffalo-skins.
Among our game were two beaver, which we have had
occasion to observe are found wherever there is timber.
We also killed a large bull-bat or goatsucker, of
which there are many in this neighborhood, resembling
in every respect those of the same species in the
United States. We have not seen the leather-winged
bat for some time, nor are there any of the small
goatsucker in this part of the Missouri. We have
not seen that species of goatsucker called the whippoorwill,
which is commonly confounded in the United States
with the large goatsucker which we observe here.
This last prepares no nest, but lays its eggs on the
open plains; they generally begin to sit on two eggs,
and we believe raise only one brood in a season; at
the present moment they are just hatching their young.”
Dr. Coues says that we should bear
in mind that this was written “when bats were
birds and whales were fishes for most persons.”
The journal confounds bats, which are winged mammals,
with goatsuckers, or whippoorwills, which are birds.
The second of July was an interesting date for the explorers.
On that day we find the following entry in their journal: -
“A shower of rain fell very
early this morning. We then despatched some men
for the baggage left behind yesterday, and the rest
were engaged in putting the boat together. This
was accomplished in about three hours, and then we
began to sew on the leather over the crossbars of iron
on the inner side of the boat which form the ends
of the sections. By two o’clock the last
of the baggage arrived, to the great delight of the
party, who were anxious to proceed. The mosquitoes
we find very troublesome.
“Having completed our celestial
observations, we went over to the large island to
make an attack upon its inhabitants, the bears, which
have annoyed us very much of late, and were prowling
about our camp all last night. We found that
the part of the island frequented by the bears forms
an almost impenetrable thicket of the broad-leaved
willow. Into this we forced our way in parties
of three; but could see only one bear, which instantly
attacked Drewyer. Fortunately, as he was rushing
on, the hunter shot him through the heart within twenty
paces and he fell, which enabled Drewyer to get out
of his way. We then followed him one hundred
yards, and found that the wound had been mortal.
“Not being able to discover
any more of these animals, we returned to camp.
Here, in turning over some of the baggage, we caught
a rat somewhat larger than the common European rat,
and of a lighter color; the body and outer parts of
the legs and head of a light lead color; the inner
side of the legs, as well as the belly, feet, and ears,
white; the ears are not covered with hair, and are
much larger than those of the common rat; the toes
also are longer; the eyes are black and prominent,
the whiskers very long and full; the tail is rather
longer than the body, and covered with fine fur and
hair of the same size with that on the back, which
is very close, short, and silky in its texture.
This was the first we had met, although its nests
are very frequent in the cliffs of rocks and hollow
trees, where we also found large quantities of the
shells and seed of the prickly-pear.”
The queer rat discovered by Lewis and Clark was then unknown
to science. It is now known in the Far West as the pack-rat. It lives in holes
and crevices of the rocks, and it subsists on the shells and seeds of the
prickly pear, which is usually abundant in the hunting grounds of the little
animal. The explorers were now constantly in full view of the Rocky Mountain, on
which, however, their present title had not then been conferred. Under date of
July 2, the journal says: -
“The mosquitoes are uncommonly
troublesome. The wind was again high from the
southwest. These winds are in fact always the
coldest and most violent which we experience, and
the hypothesis which we have formed on that subject
is, that the air, coming in contact with the Snowy
Mountains, immediately becomes chilled and condensed,
and being thus rendered heavier than the air below,
it descends into the rarefied air below, or into the
vacuum formed by the constant action of the sun on
the open unsheltered plains. The clouds rise suddenly
near these mountains, and distribute their contents
partially over the neighboring plains. The same
cloud will discharge hail alone in one part, hail and
rain in another, and rain only in a third, all within
the space of a few miles; while at the same time there
is snow falling on the mountains to the southeast
of us. There is at present no snow on those mountains;
that which covered them on our arrival, as well as
that which has since fallen, having disappeared.
The mountains to the north and northwest of us are
still entirely covered with snow; indeed, there has
been no perceptible diminution of it since we first
saw them, which induces a belief either that the clouds
prevailing at this season do not reach their summits
or that they deposit their snow only. They glisten
with great beauty when the sun shines on them in a
particular direction, and most probably from this
glittering appearance have derived the name of the
Shining Mountains.”
A mysterious noise, heard by the party, here engaged their
attention, as it did years afterwards the attention of other explorers. The
journal says: -
“Since our arrival at the falls
we have repeatedly heard a strange noise coming from
the mountains in a direction a little to the north
of west. It is heard at different periods of
the day and night (sometimes when the air is perfectly
still and without a cloud), and consists of one stroke
only, or of five or six discharges in quick succession.
It is loud, and resembles precisely the sound of a
six-pound piece of ordnance at the distance of three
miles. The Minnetarees frequently mentioned this
noise, like thunder, which they said the mountains
made; but we had paid no attention to it, believing
it to have been some superstition, or perhaps a falsehood.
The watermen also of the party say that the Pawnees
and Ricaras give the same account of a noise heard
in the Black Mountains to the westward of them.
The solution of the mystery given by the philosophy
of the watermen is, that it is occasioned by the bursting
of the rich mines of silver confined within the bosom
of the mountains.”
Of these strange noises there are
many explanations, the most plausible being that they
are caused by the explosion of the species of stone
known as the geode, fragments of which are frequently
found among the mountains. The geode has a hollow
cell within, lined with beautiful crystals of many
colors.
Independence Day, 1805, was celebrated with becoming
patriotism and cheerfulness by these far-wandering adventurers. Their record
says: -
“An elk and a beaver are all
that were killed to-day; the buffalo seem to have
withdrawn from our neighborhood, though several of
the men, who went to-day to visit the falls for the
first time, mention that they are still abundant at
that place. We contrived, however, to spread not
a very sumptuous but a comfortable table in honor of
the day, and in the evening gave the men a drink of
spirits, which was the last of our stock. Some
of them appeared sensible to the effects of even so
small a quantity; and as is usual among them on all
festivals, the fiddle was produced and a dance begun,
which lasted till nine o’clock, when it was
interrupted by a heavy shower of rain. They continued
their merriment, however, till a late hour.”
Their bill-of-fare, according to Captain
Lewis, was bacon, beans, suet dumplings, and buffalo
meat, which, he says, “gave them no just cause
to covet the sumptuous feasts of our countrymen on
this day.” More than a year passed before
they again saw and tasted spirits.
Great expectations were entertained
of the boat that was built here on the iron frame
brought all the way from Harper’s Ferry, Virginia.
The frame was covered with dressed skins of buffalo
and elk, the seams being coated with a composition
of powdered charcoal and beeswax, in default of tar
or pitch. This craft was well named the “Experiment,”
and a disappointing experiment it proved to be.
Here is Captain Lewis’ account of her failure:
“The boat having now become
sufficiently dry, we gave her a coat of the composition,
which after a proper interval was repeated, and the
next morning, Tuesday, July 9th, she was launched
into the water, and swam perfectly well. The
seats were then fixed and the oars fitted; but after
we had loaded her, as well as the canoes, and were
on the point of setting out, a violent wind caused
the waves to wet the baggage, so that we were forced
to unload the boats. The wind continued high until
evening, when to our great disappointment we discovered
that nearly all the composition had separated from
the skins and left the seams perfectly exposed; so
that the boat now leaked very much. To repair
this misfortune without pitch is impossible, and as
none of that article is to be procured, we therefore,
however reluctantly, are obliged to abandon her, after
having had so much labor in the construction.
We now saw that the section of the boat covered with
buffalo-skins on which hair had been left answered
better than the elk-skins, and leaked but little;
while that part which was covered with hair about one-eighth
of an inch retained the composition perfectly, and
remained sound and dry. From this we perceived
that had we employed buffalo instead of elk skins,
not singed them so closely as we did, and carefully
avoided cutting the leather in sewing, the boat would
have been sufficient even with the present composition;
or had we singed instead of shaving the elk-skins,
we might have succeeded. But we discovered our
error too late; the buffalo had deserted us, and the
travelling season was so fast advancing that we had
no time to spare for experiments; therefore, finding
that she could be no longer useful, she was sunk in
the water, so as to soften the skins, and enable us
the more easily to take her to pieces.
“It now became necessary to
provide other means for transporting the baggage which
we had intended to stow in her. For this purpose
we shall want two more canoes; but for many miles - from
below the mouth of the Musselshell River to this place - we
have not seen a single tree fit to be used in that
way. The hunters, however, who have hitherto been
sent after timber, mention that there is a low ground
on the opposite side of the river, about eight miles
above us by land, and more than twice that distance
by water, in which we may probably find trees large
enough for our purposes. Captain Clark determined,
therefore, to set out by land for that place with
ten of the best workmen, who would be occupied in
building the canoes till the rest of the party, after
taking the boat to pieces, and making the necessary
deposits, should transport the baggage, and join them
with the other six canoes.
“He accordingly passed over
to the opposite side of the river with his party next
day, and proceeded on eight miles by land, the distance
by water being twenty-three and three quarter miles.
Here he found two cottonwood trees; but, on cutting
them down, one proved to be hollow, split at the top
in falling, and both were much damaged at the bottom.
He searched the neighborhood, but could find none which
would suit better, and therefore was obliged to make
use of those which he had felled, shortening them
in order to avoid the cracks, and supplying the deficiency
by making them as wide as possible. They were
equally at a loss for wood of which they might make
handles for their axes, the eyes of which not being
round, they were obliged to split the timber in such
a manner that thirteen of the handles broke in the
course of the day, though made of the best wood they
could find for the purpose, which was the chokecherry.
“The rest of the party took
the frame of the boat to pieces, deposited it in a
cache or hole, with a draught of the country from Fort
Mandan to this place, and also some other papers and
small articles of less importance.”
High winds prevented the party from
making rapid progress, and notwithstanding the winds
they were greatly troubled with mosquitoes. Lest
the reader should think the explorers too sensitive
on the subject of these troublesome pests, it should
be said that only western travellers can realize the
numbers and venom of the mosquitoes of that region.
Early emigrants across the continent were so afflicted
by these insects that the air at times seemed full
of gray clouds of them. It was the custom of
the wayfarers to build a “smudge,” as it
was called, a low, smouldering fire of green boughs
and brush, the dense smoke from which (almost as annoying
as the mosquitoes) would drive off their persecutors
as long, as the victims sat in the smoke. The
sleeping tent was usually cleared in this way before
“turning in” at night, every opening of
the canvas being afterwards closed.
Captain Lewis, on the thirteenth of
July, followed Captain Clark up the river; crossing
the stream to the north bank, with his six canoes and
all his baggage, he overtook the other party on the
same day and found them all engaged in boat-building.
“On his way he passed a very
large Indian lodge, which was probably designed as
a great council-house; but it differed in its construction
from all that we had seen, lower down the Missouri
or elsewhere. The form of it was a circle two
hundred and sixteen feet in circumference at the base;
it was composed of sixteen large cottonwood poles about
fifty feet long and at their thicker ends, which touched
the ground, about the size of a man’s body.
They were distributed at equal distances, except that
one was omitted to the cast, probably for the entrance.
From the circumference of this circle the poles converged
toward the centre, where they were united and secured
by large withes of willow-brush. There was no
covering over this fabric, in the centre of which were
the remains of a large fire, and around it the marks
of about eighty leathern lodges. He also saw
a number of turtle-doves, and some pigeons, of which
he shot one, differing in no respect from the wild
pigeon of the United States. . . .”
“The buffalo have not yet quite
gone, for the hunters brought in three, in very good
order. It requires some diligence to supply us
plentifully, for as we reserve our parched meal for
the Rocky Mountains, where we do not expect to find
much game, our principal article of food is meat, and
the consumption of the whole thirty-two persons belonging
to the party amounts to four deer, an elk and a deer,
or one buffalo, every twenty-four hours. The
mosquitoes and gnats persecute us as violently as
below, so that we can get no sleep unless defended
by biers (nets), with which we are all provided.
We here found several plants hitherto unknown to us,
of which we preserved specimens.”
On the fourteenth of July, the boats
were finally launched, and next day the journal records
this important event:
“We rose early, embarked all
our baggage on board the canoes, which, though eight
in number, are heavily loaded, and at ten o’clock
set out on our journey. . . . At the distance
of seven and a half miles we came to the lower point
of a woodland, at the entrance of a beautiful river,
which, in honor of the Secretary of the Navy, we called
Smith’s River. This stream falls into a
bend on the south side of the Missouri, and is eighty
yards wide. As far as we could discern its course,
it wound through a charming valley towards the southeast,
in which many herds of buffalo were feeding, till,
at the distance of twenty-five miles, it entered the
Rocky Mountains and was lost from our view. . . .
“We find the prickly pear, one
of the greatest beauties as well as greatest inconveniences
of the plains, now in full bloom. The sunflower,
too, a plant common on every part of the Missouri from
its entrance to this place, is here very abundant,
and in bloom. The lamb’s-quarter, wild
cucumber, sand-rush, and narrow dock, are also common.”
The journal here records the fact
that the great river had now become so crooked that
it was expedient to note only its general course, leaving
out all description of its turns and windings.
The Missouri was now flowing due north, leaving its
bends out of account, and the explorers, ascending
the river, were therefore travelling south; and although
the journal sets forth “the north bank”
and “the south bank,” it should be understood
that west is meant by the one, and east by the other.
Buffalo were observed in great numbers. Many
obstacles to navigating the river were encountered.
Under date of July 17, the journal says:
“The navigation is now very
laborious. The river is deep, but with little
current, and from seventy to one hundred yards wide;
the low grounds are very narrow, with but little timber,
and that chiefly the aspen tree. The cliffs are
steep, and hang over the river so much that often
we could not cross them, but were obliged to pass and
repass from one side of the river to the other, in
order to make our way. In some places the banks
are formed of dark or black granite rising perpendicularly
to a great height, through which the river seems, in
the progress of time, to have worn its channel.
On these mountains we see more pine than usual, but
it is still in small quantities. Along the bottoms,
which have a covering of high grass, we observed the
sunflower blooming in great abundance. The Indians
of the Missouri, more especially those who do not
cultivate maize, make great use of the seed of this
plant for bread, or in thickening their soup.
They first parch and then pound it between two stones,
until it is reduced to a fine meal. Sometimes
they add a portion of water, and drink it thus diluted;
at other times they add a sufficient proportion of
marrow-grease to reduce it to the consistency of common
dough, and eat it in that manner. This last composition
we preferred to all the rest, and thought it at that
time a very palatable dish.”
They also feasted on a great variety
of wild berries, purple, yellow, and black currants,
which were delicious and more pleasant to the palate
than those grown in their Virginia home-gardens; also
service-berries, popularly known to later emigrants
as “sarvice-berries.” These grow on
small bushes, two or three feet high; and the fruit
is purple-skinned, with a white pulp, resembling a
ripe gooseberry.
The journal, next day, has the following entry: -
“This morning early, before
our departure, we saw a large herd of the big-horned
animals, which were bounding among the rocks on the
opposite cliff with great agility. These inaccessible
spots secure them from all their enemies, and their
only danger is in wandering among these precipices,
where we would suppose it scarcely possible for any
animal to stand; a single false step would precipitate
them at least five hundred feet into the water.
“At one and one fourth miles
we passed another single cliff on the left; at the
same distance beyond which is the mouth of a large
river emptying from the north. It is a handsome,
bold, and clear stream, eighty yards wide - that
is, nearly as broad as the Missouri - with
a rapid current, over a bed of small smooth stones
of various figures. The water is extremely transparent;
the low grounds are narrow, but possess as much wood
as those of the Missouri. The river has every
appearance of being navigable, though to what distance
we cannot ascertain, as the country which it waters
is broken and mountainous. In honor of the Secretary
of War we called it Dearborn’s River.”
General Henry Dearborn, who was then
Secretary of War, in Jefferson’s administration,
gave his name, a few years later, to a collection of
camps and log-cabins on Lake Michigan; and in due time
Fort Dearborn became the great city of Chicago.
Continuing, the journal says:
“Being now very anxious to meet
with the Shoshonees or Snake Indians, for the purpose
of obtaining the necessary information of our route,
as well as to procure horses, it was thought best for
one of us to go forward with a small party and endeavor
to discover them, before the daily discharge of our
guns, which is necessary for our subsistence, should
give them notice of our approach. If by an accident
they hear us, they will most probably retreat to the
mountains, mistaking us for their enemies, who usually
attack them on this side.” . . . . . . . . .
Captain Clark was now in the lead with a small party, and he
came upon the remains of several Indian camps formed of willow-brush, Traces of
Indians became more plentiful. The journal adds: -
“At the same time Captain Clark
observed that the pine trees had been stripped of
their bark about the same season, which our Indian
woman says her countrymen do in order to obtain the
sap and the soft parts of the wood and bark for food.
About eleven o’clock he met a herd of elk and
killed two of them; but such was the want of wood in
the neighborhood that he was unable to procure enough
to make a fire, and was therefore obliged to substitute
the dung of the buffalo, with which he cooked his
breakfast. They then resumed their course along
an old Indian road. In the afternoon they reached
a handsome valley, watered by a large creek, both
of which extended a considerable distance into the
mountain. This they crossed, and during the evening
travelled over a mountainous country covered with
sharp fragments of flint rock; these bruised and cut
their feet very much, but were scarcely less troublesome
than the prickly-pear of the open plains, which have
now become so abundant that it is impossible to avoid
them, and the thorns are so strong that they pierce
a double sole of dressed deer-skin; the best resource
against them is a sole of buffalo-hide in parchment
(that is, hard dried). At night they reached
the river much fatigued, having passed two mountains
in the course of the day, and travelled thirty miles.
Captain Clark’s first employment, on lighting
a fire, was to extract from his feet the thorns, which
he found seventeen in number.”
The dung of the buffalo, exposed for
many years to the action of sun, wind, and rain, became
as dry and firm as the finest compressed hay.
As “buffalo chips,” in these treeless regions,
it was the overland emigrants’ sole dependence
for fuel.
The explorers now approached a wonderful
pass in the Rocky Mountains which their journal thus
describes:
“A mile and a half beyond this
creek (Cottonwood Creek) the rocks approach the river
on both sides, forming a most sublime and extraordinary
spectacle. For five and three quarter miles these
rocks rise perpendicularly from the water’s
edge to the height of nearly twelve hundred feet.
They are composed of a black granite near their base,
but from the lighter color above, and from the fragments,
we suppose the upper part to be flint of a yellowish
brown and cream color.
“Nothing can be imagined more
tremendous than the frowning darkness of these rocks,
which project over the river and menace us with destruction.
The river, one hundred and fifty yards in width, seems
to have forced its channel down this solid mass; but
so reluctantly has it given way, that during the whole
distance the water is very deep even at the edges,
and for the first three miles there is not a spot,
except one of a few yards, in which a man could stand
between the water and the towering perpendicular of
the mountain. The convulsion of the passage must
have been terrible, since at its outlet there are vast
columns of rock torn from the mountain, which are
strewed on both sides of the river, the trophies,
as it were, of its victory. Several fine springs
burst out from the chasms of the rock, and contribute
to increase the river, which has a strong current,
but, very fortunately, we were able to overcome it
with our oars, since it would have been impossible
to use either the cord or the pole. We were obliged
to go on some time after dark, not being able to find
a spot large enough to encamp on; but at length, about
two miles above a small island in the middle of the
river, we met with a place on the left side, where
we procured plenty of light wood and pitch pine.
This extraordinary range of rocks we called the Gates
of the Rocky Mountains.”
Some of Captain Clark’s men,
engaged in hunting, gave the alarm to roving bands
of Shoshonee Indians, hunting in that vicinity.
The noise of their guns attracted the attention of
the Indians, who, having set fire to the grass as
a warning to their comrades, fled to the mountains.
The whole country soon appeared to have taken fright,
and great clouds of smoke were observed in all directions.
Falling into an old Indian trail, Captain Clark waited,
with his weary and footsore men, for the rest of the
party to come up with them.
The explorers had now passed south,
between the Big Belt range of mountains on the cast
and the main chain of the Rocky Mountains on the west.
Meagher County, Montana, now lies on the cast of their
trail, and on the west side of that route is the county
of Lewis and Clark. They were now - still
travelling southward - approaching the ultimate sources of the great Missouri.
The journal says: -
“We are delighted to find that
the Indian woman recognizes the country; she tells
us that to this creek her countrymen make excursions
to procure white paint on its banks, and we therefore
call it Whiteearth Creek. She says also that
the Three Forks of the Missouri are at no great distance - a
piece of intelligence which has cheered the spirits
of us all, as we hope soon to reach the head of that
river. This is the warmest day, except one, we
have experienced this summer. In the shade the
mercury stood at eighty degrees, which is the second
time it has reached that height during this season.
We camped on an island, after making nineteen and
three quarters miles.
“In the course of the day we
saw many geese, cranes, small birds common to the
plains, and a few pheasants. We also observed
a small plover or curlew of a brown color, about the
size of a yellow-legged plover or jack-curlew, but
of a different species. It first appeared near
the mouth of Smith’s River, but is so shy and
vigilant that we were unable to shoot it. Both
the broad and narrow-leaved willow continue, though
the sweet willow has become very scarce. The rosebush,
small honeysuckle, pulpy-leaved thorn, southernwood,
sage, box-elder, narrow-leaved cottonwood, redwood,
and a species of sumach, are all abundant. So,
too, are the red and black gooseberries, service-berry,
choke-cherry, and the black, yellow, red, and purple
currants, which last seems to be a favorite food of
the bear. Before camping we landed and took on
board Captain Clark, with the meat he had collected
during this day’s hunt, which consisted of one
deer and an elk; we had, ourselves, shot a deer and
an antelope.”
The party found quantities of wild onions of good flavor and
size. They also observed wild flax, garlic, and other vegetable products of
value. The journal adds: -
“We saw many otter and beaver
to-day (July 24th). The latter seem to contribute
very much to the number of islands, and the widening
of the river. They begin by damming up the small
channels of about twenty yards between the islands:
this obliges the river to seek another outlet, and,
as soon as this is effected, the channel stopped by
the beaver becomes filled with mud and sand.
The industrious animal is then driven to another channel,
which soon shares the same fate, till the river spreads
on all sides, and cuts the projecting points of the
land into islands. We killed a deer, and saw
great numbers of antelopes, cranes, some geese, and
a few red-headed ducks. The small birds of the
plains and the curlew are still abundant: we
saw a large bear, but could not come within gunshot
of him. There are numerous tracks of the elk,
but none of the animals themselves; and, from the
appearance of bones and old excrement, we suppose
that buffalo sometimes stray into the valley, though
we have as yet seen no recent sign of them. Along
the water are a number of snakes, some of a uniform
brown color, others black, and a third speckled on
the abdomen, and striped with black and a brownish
yellow on the back and sides. The first, which
is the largest, is about four feet long; the second
is of the kind mentioned yesterday; and the third
resembles in size and appearance the garter-snake of
the United States. On examining the teeth of
all these several kinds, we found them free from poison:
they are fond of the water, in which they take shelter
on being pursued. The mosquitoes, gnats, and prickly
pear, our three persecutors, still continue with us,
and, joined with the labor of working the canoes,
have fatigued us all excessively.”
On Thursday, July 25, Captain Clark, who was in the lead, as
usual, arrived at the famous Three Forks of the Missouri. The stream flowing in
a generally northeastern direction was the true, or principal Missouri, and was
named the Jefferson. The middle branch was named the Madison, in honor of James
Madison, then Secretary of State, and the fork next to the eastward received the
name of Albert Gallatin, then Secretary of the Treasury; and by these titles the
streams are known to this day. The explorers had now passed down to their
furthest southern limit, their trail being to the eastward of the modern cities
of Helena and Butte, and separated only by a narrow divide (then unknown to
them) from the sources of some of the streams that fall into the Pacific Ocean.
Under the date of July 27, the journal says: -
“We are now very anxious to
see the Snake Indians. After advancing for several
hundred miles into this wild and mountainous country,
we may soon expect that the game will abandon us.
With no information of the route, we may be unable
to find a passage across the mountains when we reach
the head of the river - at least, such a pass
as will lead us to the Columbia. Even are we
so fortunate as to find a branch of that river, the
timber which we have hitherto seen in these mountains
does not promise us any fit to make canoes, so that
our chief dependence is on meeting some tribe from
whom we may procure horses. Our consolation is
that this southwest branch can scarcely head with any
other river than the Columbia; and that if any nation
of Indians can live in the mountains we are able to
endure as much as they can, and have even better means
of procuring subsistence.”