A messenger was sent back to Captain
Clark, detailing what had been discovered, and giving
such instructions as would best enable him to bring
up the boats. It is now Captain Clark’s
turn to bear testimony to the spirit of the men:
“June 15th.... Proceeded
with great difficulty, in consequence of the increased
rapidity of the current. The channel is constantly
obstructed by rocks and dangerous rapids. During
the whole progress, the men are in the water holding
the canoes, and walking on sharp rocks and round stones,
which cut their feet or cause them to fall. Rattlesnakes
are so numerous that the men are constantly on their
guard against being bitten by them; yet they bear
the fatigues with the most undiminished cheerfulness.”
The severest labor was necessary in
making a portage of the falls. The remaining
periogue was abandoned, the canoes only being carried
on. To accomplish this, a large cottonwood tree
was felled, its trunk being cut into short sections
to serve as wheels for improvised carriages; the mast
of the periogue, cut into lengths, being used as axles.
Before these carriages could be utilized, it was necessary
for the men to carry the canoes and baggage upon their
shoulders to the level plains above the canyon walls,
where Captain Clark had marked out with stakes the
easiest path for a portage. This was a trying
labor; and the portage itself was not less laborious.
The journal says:
“Here [on the plains above the
river] 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 enough 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 most of them are
asleep in an instant; yet no one complains, and they
go on with great cheerfulness.”
Notwithstanding this hardship, Lewis’s
journal entry of June 25th has this fine bit:
“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.”
Captain Lewis had brought along in
the baggage a steel skeleton or framework for a boat,
thirty-six feet in length, which he had planned to
use in shallow water. It was to be completed by
stretching over the steel ribs a covering of skins,
making the whole water-tight by any means that might
be at hand. This was the place for the experiment.
Much time was spent in collecting and curing skins,
which, when fitted to the frame, were smeared with
a composition of tallow, beeswax, and charcoal.
This failed, however. As soon as the mixture dried,
it fell away in flakes, and the vessel was entirely
worthless. But Lewis wrote that “the boat
in every other rispect completely answers my most
sanguine expectations”! Then the men were
employed for some time in making “dugout”
canoes from cottonwood logs, a weary labor,
considering the tools they had. Not until July
15th was the long interruption ended, and the journey
resumed.
July 25th Captain Clark, who was in
advance of the main party, discovered the three forks
of the Missouri, which were named the Jefferson, Madison,
and Gallatin rivers. By the westernmost of these,
the Jefferson, they proceeded, keeping a careful lookout
for Indians.
“July 27th [Mr. Biddle’s
edition of the journals]. 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 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.”
By the first days of August this fear
for the scarcity of game had become a reality; they
were getting beyond the summer range of deer and buffalo,
which had been their chief reliance. Through their
long season of toil they had been plentifully fed;
but they were now to know the pains of hunger, and
the ills which follow upon a meagre diet. The
hunters were daily reporting increasingly bad luck
in the chase; some days would yield nothing; upon
other days the camp would heartily welcome an owl,
an eagle, or a bag of insignificant small birds of
any sort, or even a wolf anything that
had flesh on its bones.
But these deprivations did not one
whit abate the zeal for discovery. About this
time they found the Jefferson River to be formed by
three minor streams, to which they gave the names
of Philosophy, Philanthropy, and Wisdom rivers, “in
commemoration of those cardinal virtues which have
so eminently marked that deservedly selibrated character.”
It is a pity to record that this complimentary intention
was thwarted by time; but Philosophy is now known as
Willow Creek, Wisdom is now the Big Hole, and Philanthropy
bears the hard name of Stinking Water.
Since leaving Fort Mandan, in the
preceding April, they had seen no Indians. They
were now somewhat reassured by Sacajawea, the “Bird
Woman,” who said that they were nearing the site
of her old home with the Snakes. She was as anxious
as they for a meeting with her people, which she told
them must soon occur. But anxiety increased as
the days passed, and on the 9th of August Captain
Lewis, accompanied by several of the men, set out
in advance of the rest, “with a resolution to
meet some nation of Indians before they returned,
however long they might be separated from the party.”
Three days later the stream, along
which their route had lain for so long, was shrunken
to such a width that one of the men was able to stand
with his feet upon opposite banks; and in that posture
he thanked God that he had lived to bestride the Missouri.
Within a little time they drank from the icy spring
that gave the rivulet its birth. They then stood
upon the crest of the great Continental Divide, on
the boundary between the present States of Montana
and Idaho. They had run the mighty Missouri to
its lair!
As if that were not satisfaction enough
for one day, they went forward for three fourths of
a mile, and there “reached a handsome, bold creek
of cold, clear water, running to the westward.”
Stooping, they drank of the waters of the Lemhi River,
one of the upper branches of the Columbia.
On the following day, as they were
tracing the course of this stream, they observed two
women, a man, and some dogs, stationed upon the summit
of a hill at the distance of a mile. Captain Lewis
advanced, unarmed, displaying a flag. The women
retreated at once; and the man, after waiting until
Lewis had approached to within a hundred paces, also
disappeared in the thick brush. After following
the trail for a mile, they came suddenly upon three
Indian women. One of these made her escape; but
the others, an old dame and a child, seated themselves
upon the ground and bowed their heads, as though expecting
to be put to death forthwith. Captain Lewis advanced,
took the older woman by the hand and raised her to
her feet, at the same time displaying the white skin
of his arm, for exposure had tanned his
face and hands as dark as those of the natives themselves.
He then gave them some trinkets, and the other woman
being recalled, he painted the faces of the three with
vermilion, an act understood by all Indians as signifying
pacific intentions. While he was thus engaged,
sixty mounted Shoshone warriors galloped up, armed
and voicing their war-cry, thinking to do battle with
Minnetaree foes, for whom they had mistaken the whites.
They were overjoyed upon discovering the identity
of their visitors, saluted them heartily, smoked with
them the pipe of peace, and offered such entertainment
as they had. They were without food, excepting
some indifferent cakes made from service-berries and
choke-cherries, dried in the sun.
To secure the friendly regard of these
people, Captain Lewis tried to induce some of them
to return with him to the point where he was to rejoin
Captain Clark and the others, saying that the main
party was bringing merchandise for trade; and he was
at last successful in getting a goodly escort.
When he met with the men of the main
party, they were still toiling heavily up the narrow
channel of the Missouri, dragging the canoes.
Sacajawea at once recognized the members of her tribe.
A woman of the band ran forward to meet her, and they
embraced with signs of extravagant joy, for they had
been playmates in childhood.
“While Sacajawea was renewing
among the women the friendships of former days,”
says the journal, “Captain Clark went on, and
was received by Captain Lewis and the chief, who,
after the first embraces and salutations were over,
conducted him to a sort of circular tent or shade
of willows. Here he was seated on a white robe,
and the chief immediately tied in his hair six small
shells resembling pearls, an ornament highly valued
by these people, who procure them in the course of
trade from the seacoast. The moccasins of the
whole party were then taken off, and after much ceremony
the smoking began. After this the conference
was to be opened. Glad of an opportunity of being
able to converse more intelligibly, they sent for
Sacajawea, who came into the tent, sat down, and was
beginning to interpret, when in the person of Cameawait
(the chief) she recognized her brother. She instantly
jumped up and ran and embraced him, throwing over
him her blanket, and weeping profusely. The chief
was himself moved, though not in the same degree.
After some conversation between them, she resumed her
seat and attempted to interpret for us; but her new
situation seemed to overpower her, and she was frequently
interrupted by tears.”