Lewis and Clark Expedition
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The Lewis and Clark expedition (1804-1806) was the first American overland expedition to the Pacific coast and back. The Louisiana Purchase in 1803 sparked the interest of United States expansion to the west coast. A few weeks after the purchase, United States President, Thomas Jefferson, an advocate of western expansion, had Congress appropriate $2500, "to send intelligent officers with ten or twelve men, to explore even to the western ocean." They were to study the Indian tribes, botany, geology and wildlife in the region. He selected Captain Meriwether Lewis to lead the expedition, known as the Corps of Discovery; Lewis selected William Clark as his lieutenant.
The group, consisting of 33 members including York, a slave, and Sacagawea who was an Indian woman, departed from Camp Dubois and began their historic journey on May 14, 1804. They soon met-up with Lewis in Saint Charles, Missouri and the approximately forty men followed the Missouri River westward (On August 20, 1804 The Corps of Discovery suffered its first and only death when Sergeant Charles Floyd died, apparently from acute appendicitis). The group followed the Missouri through what is now Kansas City, Missouri and Omaha, Nebraska, crossed the Rocky Mountains and descended by the Clearwater River, the Snake River, and the Columbia River through what is now Portland, Oregon until they reached the Pacific Ocean in the summer of 1805. Lewis had written in his journal, "Ocean in view. Oh! The Joy". But by that time it was the second bitter winter they faced. So the group decided to vote on which Indian tribe to stay at. That was the "Real American Moment", for York, who was a slave, and Sacajadwea, who was a Indian and a woman, voted. The explorers started their journey home on March 23, 1806 and arrived on September 23.
A contemporary explorer was Zebulon Pike (as in Pikes Peak) who in 1805-1807 traveled from the upper Mississippi River down to the Spanish territories near the Rocky Mountains.
Accomplishments of the Expedition
- The U.S. gained an extensive knowledge of the geography of the West in the form of maps of major rivers and mountain ranges
- Naming of several hundred unknown species of animals and plants; plant samples were brought back to the States for analysis by top scientists
- Opened fur trade in the West
- Paved the way for peaceful relations with the Indians
- Established a precedent for Army exploration of the West
- Strengthened the U.S. claim to Oregon Territory
- Focused U.S. and media attention on the West
- Produced the first literature about the West (the Lewis and Clark diaries)
- "Undaunted Courage" by Stephen E. Ambrose
- "I Should Be Extremely Happy in Your Company" by Brian Hall
External link