Lewis and Clark's Route Map: James MacKay's Map of the Missouri River

Thomas C. Danisi and W. Raymond Wood

(This article first appeared in the Western Historical Quarterly 35 (Spring 2004): 53–72. Copyright © 2004, Western History Association.)

New evidence reveals that the author of the 1797 Indian Office Map was James MacKay, leader of the third Missouri Company expedition up the Missouri River. It probably was transmitted to Lewis and Clark when MacKay accepted a covert invitation by Private Joseph Field to visit Camp Dubois in 1804.

Nueva evidencia revela que el autor del Mapa de la Officina de los Indios (Indian Office Map) de 1797 fue James McKay, lider de la tercera expedicion de la Comania de Missouri (Missouri Company) por el Rio de Missouri. Este mapa fue probablemente transmitido a Lewis y Clark cuando McKay acepto una invitació n secreta para visitar el Campamento Dubois hecha por el Soldado (Private) Joseph Field en 1804.

Maps, no less than narratives, are among our most basic documents, and when they are examined carefully they shed great light on the time line of history and reveal the growth of knowledge as well as the progress of human endeavors. A history without maps is inconceivable.

Thus, a crucial aspect in the planning of the single most important exploration in American history, that of Thomas Jefferson's Corps of Discovery, the Lewis and Clark Expedition, was to obtain reliable maps to chart their route.

How did Lewis and Clark do this?

The answer to the captains' success in finding a viable map of the Upper Missouri River is to be found in the story of cartographer James MacKay, a Scotsman who, based on his extensive trading with the Indians in Canada, and on his proficiency in map—making and experience in surveying, had been hired to lead the Spanish expedition up to the Missouri in Louisiana territory.

A superficial look at history would indicate that MacKay was only one small player in the international intrigue of land and economic disputes in the late–eighteenth and early–nineteenth centuries. It would suggest that the handwriting on the map, in both French and English, proved that John Evans (MacKay's field assistant) and Nicolas De Finiels (a Frenchman who assisted MacKay and others in various cartographic efforts) contributed to the actual drawing of the map–which is now known as the Indian Office Map.

But, a cursory look at history, as always, can be misleading. It is true that it was John Evans who, on that 1795 expedition, traveled the Upper Missouri River to the Mandans, while MacKay remained in Fort Charles–795 miles above St. Louis–and it is logical to think, since it was Evans who explored the Upper Missouri, that he would have been the one to draw the map. Also, there did exist at the time an international aspect of cooperation: MacKay, Evans, Antoine Soulard (surveyor general of Upper Louisiana) and De Finiels all assisted one another on cartographic efforts. It is perhaps because of this, combined with Evans's explorations on the Upper Missouri that historians have denied MacKay's role as the primary draftsman of the Missouri River map. The truth is to be found in detailed detective work.

The story begins in the 1790s. At that time, Louisiana encompassed a huge swath of country west of the Mississippi, and distant European powers lacked the means to populate it or patrol its borders. (See Figure 1.) When Spain took control of the region in 1762, British traders in Canada had already begun establishing alliances with the various Indian nations along Louisiana's northern boundary. These alliances enabled the British to make deep forays into Spanish territory without fear of reprisal. It proved very difficult for Spain to wrest control from the British. Beginning in 1789, a few hunters, including Juan Munier and Joseph Garreau, were the first Spanish to explore the Missouri. Jacques D'Eglise followed a year later. These men reported that the British had been stealing the trade from the Spanish and were underselling them in their own territory. Something had to be done and quickly: the Spanish would have to ascend the Missouri, establish relations with the Indian tribes, and somehow win them over from the British. [1] In 1791, Spain appointed as governor general of Louisiana the Baron de Carondelet. One of Carondelet's first decrees was to throw open the trade to all subjects of His Catholic Majesty, Carlos IV. In that year, Spain learned that the British had established a trading alliance with the river tribes on the Upper Missouri, and, if war broke out, the Spanish would lose control of that river. While Carondelet's decree offered advantages, the Indians had already become allied with the British and thus discouraged Spanish traders from going upriver. This development demanded a strategic plan and, in 1793, a group of St. Louis traders formed the "Company of Explorers of the Upper Missouri," pooling their resources to finance well—equipped expeditions. While the financing appeared to come easily, finding suitable persons to lead the expedition proved challenging. The first two expeditions, led by Jean Baptiste Truteau and a man named Lecuyer, made little progress on the Missouri. [2] However, in choosing James MacKay to lead the third expedition in 1795, the traders found a well—prepared and uniquely talented man.

MacKay arrived in Canada some time in 1776–1777, and for the next five years his whereabouts are unknown. In 1783, the British traders Holmes and Grant hired him. Robert Grant, an experienced trader from Montreal associated with the North West Company took him to Grand Portage, the rendezvous for Canadian traders on the north shore of Lake Superior. [3]

Two years later MacKay was released to go to the Saskatchewan River as a clerk, but he was back on the Assiniboine River for the winter 1786–1787. On returning to Grant in 1787, he was given an opportunity to travel overland to the Mandan and Hidatsa villages on the Missouri River. [4] That overland journey was usually made during the winter using dog trains to haul small outfits and bring back peltry and foodstuffs, especially corn. When his contract ended in 1788, MacKay went back to Montreal with the returning canoes. Relations with the Canadian traders soured, however, and he left for the United States, where he renewed association with his brother, John, in New York City, and began trading in the United States. In June 1789, MacKay met with Don Diego Gardoqui, the Spanish chargé in New York City and presented him with a map, "a su modo" of the British—Canadian trade. [5]

MacKay started a fur—trading partnership with depots in Cahokia, Cincinnati, and New York City. [6] He had arrived in Cahokia by September 1791 and established a name by 1793. On 20 May 1793, Zenon Trudeau, lieutenant governor of Upper Louisiana, wrote to Baron de Carondelet, governor general of Louisiana, that he hoped "to see within a few days a well informed Canadian mozo [young man]" who had been trading with the Mandan nation. He hoped to obtain from him information on the British among those Indians. [7] Trudeau and Jacques Clamorgan, director of the St. Louis—based fur—trading Missouri Company, were so impressed with MacKay's abilities––to make maps, to write and speak the French language, and to trade with a variety of Indian tribes–that they hired him to head an expedition up the Missouri for the company. MacKay then left Spanish Louisiana to conclude his business in New York and Cincinnati. [8]

Two other notable men arrived in Spanish Louisiana at about the same time as MacKay: John Thomas Evans and Antoine Pierre Soulard. Evans had come to the United States looking for a tribe of Welsh Indians he thought might be the Mandans. On 10 October 1792 he arrived in Baltimore, where he stayed and worked for various Welshmen. In March 1794, he departed by boat and landed in New Madrid [present—day Missouri] about two months later. Upon entering Spanish domains, he took the oath of allegiance that the commandant, Thomas Porten, forced on all newcomers. It appears that Evans contracted malaria and stayed with a Welsh couple in New Madrid before he continued on toward St. Louis. On the way to St. Louis, Evans became lost and finally turned up at a Spanish post opposite Kaskaskia, deranged from the summer heat. Fortunately, he met another Welshman, the lawyer John Rice Jones, who took care of him on the Illinois side of the river. [9] A month later, Jones introduced him to a Cahokia merchant and court clerk, William Arundel. Evans stayed at Arundel's home until Christmas 1794, when he learned about James MacKay's forthcoming expedition up the Missouri River and left for St. Louis, hoping to join. [10] It was an inopportune time for Evans to go to St. Louis. War with Britain was imminent and explaining to Zenon Trudeau, the lieutenant governor, that he was on a quest to find a tribe of Welsh Indians must have sounded preposterous to the highest ranking official in Upper Louisiana. Suspicious of British spies entering Spanish country, Trudeau had Evans "[i]mprisoned, loaded with iron and put in the Stoks . . . in the dead of winter." [11]

A few months after Evans was thrown in jail, in February 1794, Antoine Soulard arrived at Ste. Genevieve. [12] The commandant of New Bourbon, Pierre Delassus de Luzié res, knew Soulard because he had deserted the naval service at Martinique, France, with one of De Luzié res's sons. This son had told De Luzié res that the two had not wished to recognize the French Republic as their home and had decided to join the family in America. [13] The commandant of Ste. Genevieve had fears that Kentuckians might attack Louisiana. With no defenses in the village, Soulard volunteered to help and began "directing the works on the fort" according to the "plans and sketches" of a Flemish engineer, Louis Vandenbenden. [14]The work was completed quickly, and Trudeau summoned Soulard to St. Louis, who arrived there by 20 March. [15]

In August of that same year, MacKay had gone to Cincinnati to conclude his partnership in his eastern business interests with John Robertson. While in Cincinnati, MacKay met with John Rees, or Rhys, a native of Wales, who told him of Evans's quest for Welsh Indians and gave him a small dictionary of Welsh and Mandan vocabulary. MacKay had been among the Mandans in 1787 but "had heard nothing of a Welch tribe. . . ." When MacKay arrived in St. Louis a few weeks later, he "sent for, & engaged for [his] assistant Mr. Evans who spoke and wrote the Welch language with facility...." [16] MacKay, realizing that Evans could be an asset to the expedition, decided to employ him as his lieutenant and field operator.

The story of the MacKay map of the Missouri River begins when the first expedition for the Missouri Company, headed by Jean Baptiste Truteau, a schoolmaster, left St. Louis on 7 June 1794. Clamorgan had provided Truteau with a plan or idea so "that he may know his whereabouts." [17] The north half of this plan, taken directly from MacKay's travels in Canada in 1784 through 1788, was the first of its kind and gave a tactical view of where the British traders had encroached upon Spanish soil. [18] When MacKay first met Zenon Trudeau and Jacques Clamorgan in May 1793, he had shown them this "topographical idea of the Upper Mississippi and Missouri." [19] MacKay had met with Soulard to help produce a map for Carondelet. Trudeau wrote to Carondelet on 24 November 1794, stating that he was remitting some maps drawn by Soulard "among which was a map of the Missouri river." [20] Trudeau's admission of a Soulard map is interesting; Soulard could not have completed it by himself, because during the summer and autumn months that year he suffered bouts of "most violent fever" and "would have succumbed," except that Trudeau and his wife took care of him. [21] In other words, being so ill, Soulard, who had not been on the Upper Missouri River, could only have completed a map of the river with MacKay's assistance, because MacKay had visited the Upper Missouri River. Nonetheless, Trudeau recommended that Soulard serve as the surveyor of Upper Louisiana, and in December, Soulard made a voyage to New Orleans where he was appointed surveyor general on 3 February 1795. [22]

Between January and August 1795, Soulard began to survey land grants in St. Louis and Cape Girardeau, as well as drafting a large–scale map, "Ydea Topografica," of the Missouri River Basin. [23] The original Spanish map is titled "A Topographical idea of the Upper Mississippi & Missouri that shows the progress of the Spanish Discovery of the Missouri river & the encroachments [or usurpations] of the English companies over the Spanish possessions." [24] The French copy attributes its drawing to Soulard who completed it in August 1795, though MacKay revised "Ydea Topografica" when he returned from his expedition in 1797. [25] Soulard wrote on 15 December of that year that the map was "corrected by one of the voyagers of the company of discovery," and that he would soon present a map of the Missouri to Gayoso de Lemos, the new governor general of Louisiana, "much more correct than what I gave you earlier." [26]

Charting a river requires at least two people: the surveyor and the draftsman. The surveyor takes measurements and sketches landmarks like islands, bends in the river, and large trees, recording the field notes in a book, while the draftsman draws a grid and translates the measurements from the field notes into a diagram that represents the river. In 1795, charting a river required taking detailed astronomical observations to determine longitude and latitude, the critical east and west directions. William Dunbar, who lived in Spanish Louisiana in the 1790s, had been hired by the Spanish as their astronomer. Dunbar had advanced the science of astronomical observation further than any of the prominent group of Philadelphian astronomers had during this period by "requiring neither assistant nor time–piece." [27] Dunbar was able to reduce the complexity yet raise the bar for accuracy; however in 1795, James MacKay knew only one method and, by hiring Evans, it presupposed that an assistant was mandatory. [28]

Near the end of August 1795, the third expedition for the Missouri Company left St. Louis with a number of objectives: to make a map ascertaining the northern boundary of the province, since no chart had been drawn nor evidence collected that verified the northern extent of Louisiana; to establish forts along the Missouri River; to reach the Mandans in North Dakota; and to find a water route to the Pacific Ocean. [29] Governor Carondelet was so pleased with the possibility of finding a water route that he offered a cash prize of 3000 piastres to the first Spanish subject who could penetrate to the Pacific Ocean via the Missouri River. He also promised to pay the salaries of one hundred men to guard the forts that MacKay would build along the route of that river. [30] How such a complex expedition with so few resources was to achieve its goal is a mystery, but MacKay, having been assured that the Missouri Company was well financed, embarked upon the exploration.

The expedition arrived at the Omaha village in Nebraska in mid—October and built Fort Charles, approximately twenty miles south of present—day Sioux City, Iowa. The Omaha chief, Blackbird, had the reputation of being both difficult and tyrannical. He demanded daily communication with MacKay. This meant that MacKay had to remain at the fort when Evans left for the Mandans at the end of November. MacKay realized that Evans would have to continue the survey of the river on his own, and so MacKay taught Evans with precision and gave him a comprehensive list of instructions:

You will keep a journal of each day and month of the year to avoid any error in the observations of the important journey which you are undertaking. In your journal you will place all that will be remarkable in the country that you will traverse; likewise the route, distance, latitude and longitude, when you observe it, also the winds and weather. You will also keep another journal in which you will make note of all the ... territory . . . lakes; rivers; mountains; portages, with their extent and location. [31]

MacKay also wrote about the accuracy of the observations:

In your route from here to the home of the Ponca, trace out as exactly as possible a general route and distance from the Missouri as well as the rivers which fall into it; and although you cannot take the direction of each turn and current of the Missouri, since you go by land, you can mark the general course of the mountains which will be parallel to each bank. You will observe the same thing for every other river (landmark) which you may see during your journey, whether river, lake, ocean, or chain of mountains which may effect your observations. [32]

MacKay, in effect, instructed Evans on how to take a detailed set of field notes so that when he received them, he could continue updating the map of the Missouri River. MacKay also reminded Evans that if he ran out of ink to "use the powder, and for want of powder, in the summer you will surely find some fruit whose juice can replace both." [33] Clearly, the man who needed such orders written down could not have been the author of the map.

MacKay also gave Evans a supplemental set of instructions to ensure that Evans's observations, regardless of the distance between them, remain accurate. He wrote, "As I mean to make Sunday (being a remarkable day) the day for observing the distance of the moon from the sun I wish you to do the same when convenient so that we may be the better able to compare them when you return." He treated Evans as a novice and his student. His instructions continued: "I will always make my observations when the sun is on the meridian which will of course give the just time of day. You may draw a meridian line by the north star if you should be a couple of days in one place & if the sky be clear at night if this cannot be you may take it by the compass if you know exactly the variation." He also told Evans not to reveal his plans to anyone, including Truteau, the leader of the first expedition. [34]

MacKay had sent a message to the Sioux before Evans left to notify them that an expedition was en route. A few weeks after Evans left Fort Charles, his party came upon a band of Sioux who chased him for an entire day and were about to overtake him when night fell. [35] Evans returned to Fort Charles on 6 January 1796, although he left again on the twenty-eighth. [36] It took him two months to reach the Arikara village–traveling seven hundred miles by water and then spending an additional six weeks to talk the Arikaras into letting him journey onward. [37] On 23 September, Evans arrived at the lower Mandan village, in present—day North Dakota, and found a fort built by the merchants of Montreal, that he named Fort Makay [Evans's spelling]. Carrying a formal notice written by MacKay, Evans ordered several British traders on 8 October to leave Spanish soil. The traders were surprised to learn that it was the same James MacKay, a former trader and friend, who was chasing them out of the territory. [38]

Evans had assumed that supplies were forthcoming, but when none arrived and what he had at Fort Makay ran out, he departed for St. Louis. MacKay's supplies were also depleted by March 1797, when Clamorgan ordered him to return to St. Louis. MacKay arrived a few days before 13 May. Evans arrived on 15 July. Trudeau wrote to Carondelet at the end of May, informing the governor that MacKay had arrived and had already completed a substantial section of the map–the first "three hundred and fifty leagues." [39] (See Figure 2.) When Evans returned from the Mandans, MacKay took the Upper Missouri River data and completed drafting the expedition map. He referred to several documents that were an integral part of the expedition: MacKay's Table of Distances and the journals written by him and Evans. [40] The map employed the French language to designate the names of rivers and locations. Jacques Clamorgan, on 14 October 1797, wrote about the map to André Lopez, the intendant at New Orleans:

I am sending to the governor, the well—chartered map at the expenses and fees of the company. I hope that the company will take back its usual vigor without delay and that it will merit in the future by its zealousness and activity in making discoveries, the bounty of the government. [41]

Two months later, on 16 January 1798, Zenon Trudeau informed Manuel de Gayoso, governor general of Louisiana, that he was sending the river map and "a relació n," or record, of the voyage:

I am enclosing to Your Excellency a relació n of the voyage which M. Mackay has made in the Upper Missouri, and the map of the said river, as far as the Mandan nation, made by the same person, which I believe to be the most exact of those which have been formed up to the present, since M. Mackay was instructed in the matter and knew that he had pledged himself to procure this map with careful attention for the government. Up to the present time the government had only [information] intellectually based upon the simple relació nes of the hunters. [42]

Trudeau wrote again to Gayoso on 5 March 1798, explaining that Chouteau would deliver another copy of the map.

I have spoken to you in different letters about Mr. Mackay and this would be a good occasion to let you meet/know him. Even if Mr. Mackay would not ask for the favor of being presented to you, I will take the liberty of asking you to look upon him with interest. I can assure you that he deserves it, and in a few days you are going to appreciate him as I and all persons that already know him do. Can Mackay meet with you to talk about the Missouri? He is the author of the map that Mr. Chouteau is going to give you. [43],

MacKay had suggested to Trudeau that he would make another map of the Missouri more detailed than the one being sent with Chouteau. Trudeau wrote to Gayoso speaking about MacKay and the maps, "He also has the intention [literally: ambition] of continuing to make another complete one, but the expenses will be too considerable to propose them to you.” [44] As Trudeau noted, the expenses would certainly have been prohibitive since the Missouri Company had expended all of its resources on the three expeditions. MacKay departed in late March 1798 to meet Gayoso and talk with him about the success of the expedition. John Evans, after completing his work as a deputy surveyor, departed for New Orleans in the beginning of July.

More evidence disputes that either Evans or Finiels drafted the Missouri River map. In 1908, Frederick Teggart discussed an Evans map that came into the possession of John Hay and William Henry Harrison. [45] In late October 1797, Soulard had appointed Evans the deputy surveyor of Cape Girardeau and on 7 November, Evans had departed for the district with surveying instructions. [46] Sometime in May 1798, a flood devastated the district and Evans lost most of his belongings. Intent on going to New Orleans to meet MacKay and Gayoso, he tried to sell his surveying instruments and asked Bartholomew Cousin, the newly appointed surveyor of Cape Girardeau to help him with his map and to buy his instruments. Cousin replied that he had no use for his instruments and that his assistant would "send you your . . . chart which I have not divided because I don't remember on what scale it is drawn, nor what is the exact longitude and latitude of any plan on it...." [47] In the meantime, Jones gave the incomplete chart to John Hay who had the means to complete it. [48] Hay had been a British trader and had a merchant store established at Cahokia under the name Todd and Hay. Events that were to thrust the map into the limelight began to converge: in January 1801, Jones was appointed attorney general of the Indiana Territory and moved to Vincennes, the capitol. [49] When William Henry Harrison, governor of the territory, was apprised of the expedition in 1803, Jones delivered the map to him. Harrison wrote to William Clark on 13 November 1803, informing him that he had the map copied and "now send it to you by Post rider." [50]

On 26 November 1803, Harrison wrote President Jefferson that he was sending a "map which is a copy of the manuscript map of Mr. Evans who ascended the Missouri river by order of the Sp. gov't further than any other person." [51] He wrote to Lewis on 13 January 1804 that he was sending him a map, which was a copy of the copy from Harrison: "I now enclose a map of the Missouri as far as the Mandans, 12. or 1500. miles I presume above its mouth. It is said to be very accurate, having been done by a mr. [sic] Evans by order of the Spanish Government. But whether he corrected by astronomical observations or not we are not informed." [52] The map was indeed incorrect. MacKay had given Evans a raw copy, a template of the map, because he believed Evans had the ability to complete it.

Before MacKay went to New Orleans, Finiels drafted a map for him. In fact, he and Finiels assisted each other, which has not been fully understood because the dates of their map–making overlap. They both produced maps during 1797 and 1798: MacKay, from May to December 1797; Finiels, from August 1797 to June 1798. Finiels arrived in St. Louis on 3 June 1797. He had been hired in Philadelphia to oversee the building of defenses at St. Louis. But Carlos Howard, the military commandant, refused to employ him. Howard had no explicit order from Carondelet and believed that Finiels, an artillerist engineer, was not as competent as Louis Vandenbenden, a fortifications engineer. [53] Finiels decided to embark upon a private mapping project during 1797–1798.

Finiels refers to a map completed in mid–1798. "La carte de cette Riviere que j'ai dressé e en 1798 sur les memoirs ds/des Mess./Messieurs MacKay et Evans donnera une notion tré s exacte de la partie de son tours que Pont peut regarder comme la mieux connue jusques apresant" ("The map of this river that I drew up in 1798 [based] upon the accounts of Messieurs MacKay and Evans will give a very exact notion/idea of its [the river's] course which one can regard as the best known up to the present"). [54] The Finiels map, which measures ten feet long and a yard wide, shows the Missouri River for more than eighty miles west of its mouth.

This map is Finiels's greatest achievement, a colossal, unauthorized, and personal project: mapping the central Mississippi valley. His idea for it was likely due to MacKay's arrival from the Upper Missouri, replete with fresh data regarding the expedition and Soulard's "Ydea Topografica," as well as the fact that Soulard possessed the surveying measurements for many of the villages. In terms of artistry and accuracy of detail, Finiels's map of the central Mississippi valley stands apart from any other produced in the history of North America. [55] Even now, Finiels's hand translates an ancient time into a living one. The map details St. Louis, Carondelet, Prairie du Pont ("Prairie of the Bridge," now Dupo), Cahokia, River Des Peres, Chouteau's Pond, the Commonfields, Cape Girardeau, Ste. Genevieve, and New Madrid. Tiny red squares represent houses, and he depicts each field under cultivation, the hills, and the green—tinted Mississippi River. The breadth and majesty of this map argue for the amount of time and concentration Finiels took to complete it.

The time necessary to complete this map precludes the idea that Finiels could have also drafted a Missouri River map laden with all the complexities of a course of 1510 miles. But surprisingly, Finiels describes another map that he drafted in 1797 near the Bon Homme Creek on the Missouri River. From the French manuscript of "Notice sur la Louisiane Supé rieure" ("An Account of Upper Louisiana"), Finiels states that he made a map for MacKay–not the Missouri Company: "C'est sur ses memoires et sur ses relevé s que j'ai dressé pour lui en 1797 la derniere carte du Missouri." ("It is upon his written statement & upon his account that I drew up for him in 1797 the latest map of the Missouri.") [56] Finiels attempts to make a distinction between MacKay's Missouri River map (a version of the Indian Office map) and the one that he drafted for MacKay that was of an unnamed district; thus the appellation "latest map of the Missouri." The map is titled "Plan ideal de las habitaciones del riachuelo bon homme cuyos tierras no se hallan aun apeadas," or "An ideal map of the habitations of the Bon Homme creek whose lands have not been delineated [up until now]." (See Figure 3.) [57] It was a proposed plan of the district subject to approval by the governor and soon to be given the name St. André . Trudeau forwarded the map to Gayoso on 28 February 1798, adding his description of the progress of the new settlement:

I am sending you a small ideal map of the American's habitations, situated on the shores of the Missouri and the Bonhomme creek. Part of these are already established and in all of them they made the corn harvest last year; currently we are working to construct a mill over that which belongs to Lorenzo Long, who has brought in (for this) black stones and very intelligent workers, such that I have no doubt that this place will be prosperous before two years, for a distance from seven to ten leagues from St. Louis, and that each day's experience has shown me the necessity of appointing there a trustworthy person as Commander and who can correspond with me at least in the French language. I propose to you Mr. James (Don Juan) MacKay who has already held from your predecessor the title of Commander of the forts which are to be constructed in the Upper Missouri, he is well known as an intelligent and prudent man and the only one who speaks the French language among those who hold lands in the said place and that you can have confidence in his fidelity and it is equally well that the above—mentioned Mr. MacKay be named captain of the militia company that needs to be formed out of the said inhabitants. And as I have expressed to you, the commanders of the town of Ste. Genevieve, New Bourbon and Cape Girardeau have a compensation of 800 pesos yearly, the others equally deserve it and among them Mr. MacKay. I find that it is appropriate that you appoint him to that which I propose to you. [58]

MacKay's interest in the area of this plan came naturally. Once he had completed the chart for Clamorgan in October, he began looking for a place to live. The Bon Homme settlement attracted him probably because it was in need of a commandant. [59] Therefore, he set himself to making a plan of the district with Finiels's assistance. Like Soulard, in 1795, when Trudeau proposed him as surveyor general, MacKay also demonstrated his abilities to the lieutenant governor. Evidently the idea worked. MacKay had already chosen the location for the tract he was asking Trudeau to grant him. Trudeau agreed, granting MacKay about 3700 acres near the Bon Homme Creek on 23 December 1797. [60] MacKay's plan of the Bon Homme district is a small—scale map, illustrating houses, rivers, islands, hills, lot sizes, and the names of the owners of lots. This map is unique to MacKay's heritage; however, when comparing it to Finiels's Mississippi Valley map, a recognizable feature stands out: the manner in which the rivers are drawn. The shape and contours of the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, and the rendering of their sandbars, are so similar that they appear to be made by the same hand. To the untrained eye, the technical skills between MacKay and Finiels would have been difficult to ascertain, but it was their artistic treatment that helped solve who drafted which map. Unaware of the Bon Homme plan, historians have mistakenly credited Finiels with the drafting of MacKay's Missouri River map. [61] But an identifiable design element exists on MacKay's Missouri River map and on the Bon Homme plan that does not appear on Finiels's map: it is the fleur—des—lis drawn by MacKay on the north arrow. (See Figure 3.) This element, an unconventional map symbol, assisted in the recognition of his maps.

When MacKay began as commandant at St. André in November 1798, he continued surveying while handling all civil and criminal matters in the district. [62] Five months earlier, when Gayoso appointed Charles De Lassus as lieutenant governor, he told him that MacKay merited his special attention. De Lassus was instructed to help MacKay fulfill his duties and to pay particular attention in "obtaining the most rapid and exact information concerning the intentions of the traders from Canada in Spanish territory." [63] In 1802, Francois Perrin du Lac allegedly made a voyage up the Missouri and produced a map that he ambiguously credited to "un ancien traiteur de la rivié re des Illinois...." [64] Historian Annie Abel's claim that Perrin du Lac was referring to Jean Baptiste Trudeau as the ancient trader gave rise to an arduous debate over MacKay's expertise in the ensuing decades. [65]

One of Meriwether Lewis's primary goals when planning the expedition was to find the most up—to—date maps of the Missouri River, and he had obtained several of them before arriving in St. Louis, including one by Aaron Arrowsmith and another by David Thompson. On 8 December 1803, Lewis arrived in St. Louis without William Clark but accompanied by two interpreters from Cahokia, John Hay and Nicholas Jarrot. Lewis met with Charles De Lassus, the lieutenant governor, who had become suspicious about the expedition because Lewis presented a French passport instead of a Spanish one. De Lassus told Lewis that if the papers had been in the name of the Spanish king, there would have been no difficulty granting the expedition access to the Missouri. De Lassus needed time to write to his superiors in New Orleans and ask permission; he told Lewis he would have an answer by the spring of 1804. Lewis "agreed to wait" and said that he would spend the winter on the east side of the Mississippi. [66]

A day later, Clark and the remainder of the Corps made their formal entrance in St. Louis. "Under Sales & Cullers," Clark noted, they put ashore where "hundreds Came to the bank to view us." Clark was surprised to see some of his old friends from Vincennes and Kaskaskia. While Lewis remained in St. Louis tending to business affairs, Clark "proceeded on" to find a site where the group could establish the temporary encampment. [67] Lewis had asked De Lassus if he could meet with individuals in St. Louis who might be able to help him with the geographic information of the country. Although De Lassus granted permission, Lewis wrote that, while the inhabitants were eager to help, "every thing must be obtained by stealth." Furthermore, Lewis stated that everything underwent his examination and "you may readily conceive the restraint which exists on many points." For example, when Lewis met with some merchants, he reported that they were all afraid of De Lassus, especially the inhabitants who moved more "as tho' the fear of the Commandant, than that of god, was before their eyes. . . ." Even some of the wealthiest had been jailed for slight offenses, which "has produced a general dread of him [De Lassus] among all classes of the people." Antoine Soulard, surveyor general of Upper Louisiana, had agreed to let Lewis copy government information from the 1800 census, but when he realized that Lewis was going to copy the whole document, he expressed extreme fear. Soulard became so agitated that Lewis desisted and wrote "if it were known that he had given me permission to copy an official paper . . . it would injure him with his government." [68] Although full of trepidation, Soulard did help Lewis, but he failed to obtain the genuine map of the Missouri River. If Lewis and Clark were to depend on MacKay's map for the first part of their journey, it was absolutely urgent to meet with him.

But De Lassus had only granted the Americans access to St. Louis, and MacKay, commandant of St. André, wrote that his district was a "long journey" from there. Finiels believed that a trip to St. Charles by water took about two days and St. André was almost nine miles further west. [69] Delays continued to hamper Lewis, and now, the most important person in Upper Louisiana lay out of reach. If the Scotsman was truly an expert, then they probably would meet often to strategize and make maps, yet it could be the height of summer before they departed.

Jefferson believed that the transfer of the country would take place at the end of December and Lewis had relied on that information. Henry Dearborn, the secretary of war, had approved a journey up the Missouri in July 1803, and when Lewis wrote to Jefferson on 3 October from Cincinnati, he confirmed that he would "make a tour this winter on horseback of some hundred miles ... on the South side of the Missouri." He also thought that he could prevail on William Clark "to undertake a similar excurtion through some other portion of the country." Lewis had hoped that when he arrived in St. Louis, Louisiana would have been transferred to American soil, so that by February or 1 March, he would have procured additional information about the country that would further attest "to the utility" of the expedition. In a letter dated 16 November, Jefferson cautioned Lewis to revise his plans because he believed by the time Lewis arrived in St. Louis, the Missouri River would begin to freeze. He thought that Lewis should remain at Cahokia or Kaskaskia for the winter and gain the necessary information he had requested months earlier instead of taking an ambiguous trip that may incur Spanish opposition, and be "exposed to risques," that Jefferson wanted to avoid at all cost. [70]

In the meantime, Clark found an excellent site for the military encampment opposite the mouth of the Missouri River and named it Camp Dubois. Apparently, the site was well—known to the local population too and after Clark had landed at the bank, several canoes of drunken Indians managed to camp near him. In the following days, Clark noted Indians paddling up and down the Mississippi who undoubtedly alerted villagers at Portage des Sioux of the American encampment. Portage des Sioux, located on the west bank of Mississippi, was the closest Spanish settlement to Camp Dubois, about five miles up the Mississippi. Samuel Griffith, an American farmer from Portage des Sioux, visited Clark on December 16, 23, and 24. Clark ordered John Shields to accompany Griffith to purchase dairy items and Shields returned on Christmas Day with "a cheese and 4 lb butter." [71]

Jefferson had sent another letter repeating his orders to Lewis that he should not enter the Missouri until spring, to which Lewis had already indicated his compliance in his 28 December letter. Still, the most essential part of the expedition, examining an accurate map, was out of their grasp. Deciding not to wait any longer, they implemented a plan that has remained hidden for two centuries. Lewis and Clark dispatched Private Joseph Field up the Missouri to locate James MacKay and invite him to Camp Dubois. Field traveled "30 miles up" river to St. André where MacKay was commandant. [72]

The journal entry on 10 January 1804 reveals that the historic meeting between Lewis and Clark and MacKay was kept secret. Lewis and Clark ordered Field up the Missouri regardless of the subtle illegality. While De Lassus had granted access to St. Louis where he could monitor their activities, he certainly did not intend for MacKay to reveal government information. Yet, would the St. André commandant accept the invitation? If he did, he would have to evade telling De Lassus. And, if he brought the official map of the Missouri River, a classified government document, that too would be illegal. But MacKay took the risk because he needed a job. He learned in September 1803 that the United States had bought Louisiana, and he had informed a Kentucky congressman that becoming an American citizen would deprive him of his office and salary. [73] By handing over the genuine map to Lewis and Clark updated with an additional five years of river information, MacKay would demonstrate his allegiance to the new American government.

The journal entries preceding 10 January were brief, and Clark does not mention when he sent Private Field to locate MacKay. Field probably left on 7 January, the same day that Clark began drawing a map of the Missouri River "for the purpose of correcting from the information which I may get of the countrey to the NW." [74] It may have taken Field until the morning of 9 January to find MacKay, who had witnessed the signing of a warranty deed at St. André. Later in the day, MacKay went to Marais des Lairds (Bridgeton, Missouri) to witness and authorize other documents and then went to Portage des Sioux. The portage was a thin strip of land, a peninsula between the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers north of Camp Dubois. [75] After surveying some lots at Portage des Sioux on 10 January, MacKay made his way to Lewis and Clark's headquarters at Wood River. [76]

As Field returned to Camp Dubois, Clark watched the private cross the Mississippi "between the Sheets of floating Ice with Some risque. . . ." Suspicious that Field took too long to return, Clark questioned him about the trip and was told that it had been impossible for Field to cross, for "the Ice run so thick in the Missourie." That took time. Clark also didn't like the fact that Field had remained "so long" on the Missouri where he likely was recognized by the inhabitants. Field allayed Clark's fears by saying "that the people is greatly in favour of the Americans." Field returned at 1:00 p.m., and MacKay arrived at camp some time thereafter. [77]

The meeting probably was long. Due to the winter weather, the afternoon hour when MacKay arrived, and the fact they needed much time to discuss the intricacies of a river map written in French, MacKay stayed overnight and possibly longer. Clark's journal entries for the next two days were short; he continued to complain of being ill due to the severe "Ducking" on 9 January, and indicated that Lewis may have left the camp late on 12 January. By 21 January, Clark began making detailed calculations based on the distances from Camp Dubois to the Mandans, from the Mandans to the Rocky Mountains, and from the mountains to the Pacific.78 [78]

Finally, De Lassus received official word that Louisiana had indeed been sold to the United States. On 21 February, he wrote to Captain Amos Stoddard, the American military official who was to oversee the transfer of the country, and informed him that they should meet. They agreed to the dates to transfer ownership: on 9 March, Spain would transfer the country to France and on 10 March, France would transfer it to the United States. By 21 March, Lewis and Clark had traveled up the Missouri with Chouteau and Gratiot. Sometime in the spring of 1804, Lewis and Clark drafted a new map based on previous maps made by MacKay, Soulard, Chouteau, and on information gleaned from traders. That map was sent to President Jefferson with Pierre Chouteau, who accompanied an Osage Indian delegation to Washington. [79]

The convoluted history of the map of the Missouri River as high as the Mandan and Hidatsa villages is an important but overlooked detail of the march of the Corps of Discovery. The background of James MacKay and the contribution of his invaluable map shows a curious international progression to what is usually regarded as a strictly national enterprise. It was a transplanted Scot with a history of British service who, at personal risk, provided the link between the preceding Spanish and fleeting French regime to the United States' assumption of authority in Louisiana. Lewis and Clark's predecessors had already carefully laid out a third of the landmarks that the expedition's members would note in their journals–landmarks that had been named by French voyageurs nearly a century earlier, and that, indeed, persist as toponyms (though often in English translation) to this day.

THOMAS C. DANISI, an independent historian, is completing a book on Meriwether Lewis. W. RAYMOND WOOD is professor emeritus of anthropology at the University of Missouri-Columbia.

Figure 1. Major features and tribes mentioned in the text. Map © 2003 by W. R. Wood.

Figure 2. Detail of the lower Missouri River from the Indian Office map, created by James MacKay. Photo courtesy of Library of Congress.

Figure 3. The Bon Homme map: The district of St. André was located south of Bon Homme Island on the Missouri River. This map covers about 23 air miles of the Missouri Valley and locates tracts by owner, houses, springs, rivers, and the river bluffs. Photo courtesy of the Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley: catalog M–M 508, Box 5, #516, MSS.

Notes

1. A.P. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark: Documents Illustrating the History of Missouri, 1785–1804, 2 vols. (St. Louis: St. Louis Historical Documents Foundation, 1952), 1: 80–3. Many of the MacKay, De Finiels, and Soulard papers are to be found in the Papeles de Cuba Collection (hereafter PC) of the Archivo General de Indias in Seville, Spain (hereafter cited as AGI). We thank Nancy Durbin of Lindenwood University and Anna Price for their French and Spanish translations of the MacKay, Soulard, De Finiels, and Trudeau documents. (back)
2. H.T. Beauregard, "Journal of Jean Baptiste Truteau among the Ankara Indians in 1795," Missouri Historical Society Collections 4 (St. Louis: Missouri Historical Society, 1912): 22. (back)
3. W.S. Wallace, ed., Documents relating to the North West Company (Toronto, The Champlain Society, 1934), 14. (back)
4. "Narrative of Donald McKay," transcribed by John C. Jackson, December 1995 E.223/1, Hudson's Bay Company Archives, Winnipeg, Manitoba (hereafter HBCA); Manchester House Journal, 17 April 1786/87, B121/a/1, HBCA; Cumberland House Journal, 30 May 1786, B49/a/16, 34, HBCA. (back)
5. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 1: 130–1. (back)
6. Perrin Collection, 1737–1809, St. Clair County Circuit Court, Case File 114 (1792), Illinois Regional Archives Depository, Illinois State Archives, Archives Building, Springfield. (back)
7. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 1: 181. (back)
8. Charles Theodore Greve, Centennial History of Cincinnati and Representative Citizens, 2 vols. (Chicago: Biographical Publishing Co., 1904), 1: 360–1. (back)
9. W. Raymond Wood, Prologue to Lewis and Clark: The Mackay and Evans Expedition (Norman: University of Oklahmoa Press, 2003), 190–3. (back)
10. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 1: 97. (back)
11. Gwyn A. Williams, Madoc: The Making of a Myth (New York: Oxford University Press, 1987), 153. (back)
12. Francois Valle to Zenon Trudeau, 6 March 1794, Letter 22, AGI–PC 209: 598; microfilm copy in the Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis. (back)
13. Pierre Charles Delassus De Luzieres to Francisco Louis Hector Carondelet, 16 April 1794, AGI–PC 208a: 480. (back)
14. Henry Peyroux to Francois Valle, 26 December 1793, AGI–PC 208a: 490; Trudeau to Carondelet, 28 January 1794, AGI–PC 209: 634, AGI–PC 208a: 480. (back)
15. St. Louis Recorded Archives, Vol. 2, Bk. 2, Instrument 625, p. 388, Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, Courthouse, National Park Service, St. Louis, MO. (back)
16. Manuscript, ca. 1804, notes on Indian tribes in James MacKay's hand, note 4. Clark Family Papers, Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis. We cannot help but be curious as to where Rhys had obtained his Mandan vocabulary. (back)
17. Aubrey Diller, "Maps of the Missouri River before Lewis and Clark," in Studies and Essays in the History of Science and Learning, ed. Ashley Montagu (New York: Schuman, 1946), 507. (back)
18. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 1: 96, note 61; A.P. Nasatir, "Anglo–Spanish Rivalry on the Upper Missouri," Mississippi Valley Historical Review 16 (March 1930): 507. (back)
19. Jacques Clamorgan to Jean Baptiste Truteau, 30 June 1794, Box 2, Folder 34, Louis Houck Collection, Document 66, Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis. (back)
20. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 1: 257, note 6. (back)
21. Zenon Trudeau to Francisco Louis Hector Carondelet, 8 August 1794, AGI–PC 197: 707. De Luziéres to Carondelet, 17 September 1794, AGI–PC 209: 663, 17 October, PC 209: 666. (back)
22. Antoine Soulard to Manuel Gayoso de Lemos, 15 December 1797, AGI–PC 213: 833; U.S. Congress. Senate. Substance of an Argument, 21st Cong., 2d session, 1830. S. Doc. 12, Serial 203, 27. (back)
23. Diller, "Maps of the Missouri River," 508. (back)
24. This map is illustrated in Wood, "The Missouri River Basin," Figure 1. (back)
25. Diller, "Maps of the Missouri River," 507–8. (back)
26. Antoine Soulard to Manuel Gayoso de Lemos, 15 December 1797, AGI–PC 213: 833–5. (back)
27. William Dunbar to Thomas Jefferson, 18 March 1806, Thomas Jefferson Papers, Document 27579, National Archives, Washington, DC. In this letter, Dunbar speaks of "Mackay's treatise on longitude," but this is not our James MacKay from St. Louis. John Garnett, Tables requisite to be used with the nautical ephemeris, for finding the latitude and longitude at sea. . . . (London, Commissioners of Longitude, 1806). (back)
28. William Dunbar to Thomas Jefferson, 18 March 1806. (back)
29. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark, 1: 97. (back)
30. Ibid., 1: 86 and 2: 520; St. Charles Papers, 1797: Deposition of James MacKay, 7 March 1817, Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis; Francisco Louis Hector Carondelet to Jacques Clamorgan, 18 September and 26 October 1796, Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis. (back)
31. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 2: 410–1. (back)
32. Ibid. (back)
33. Ibid. (back)
34. Ibid., 416–7. (back)
35. Ibid. (back)
36. Ibid., 410–4. (back)
37. Bernard De Voto, Course of Empire (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1952), 377. (back)
38. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 2: 461–2, 500. (back)
39. A.P. Nasatir, "Anglo–Spanish Rivalry in Iowa," Iowa Journal of History and Politics 28 (July 1930): 359; Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 2: 520 (quote). (back)
40. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 2: 485–99. (back)
41. Ibid., 520, n. 6. (back)
42. Ibid., 545. (back)
43. Trudeau to Gayoso, 5 March 1798, AGI–PC 49: 822. (back)
44. Ibid. A condensed version of the letter is in Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 2: 545, n. 3. (back)
45. Frederick Teggart, "Notes Supplementary to any Edition of Lewis and Clark," American Historical Association Annual Report 1 (1908): 186. Reuben Gold Thwaites edited and published the letter in the Original Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1905), 7: 291, but did not comment on it. (back)
46. Nasatir, "John Evans, Explorer and Surveyor," Missouri Historical Review 25 (July 1931): 591, n. 29. (back)
47. Ibid., 608. (back)
48. Ernest Staples Osgood, ed., The Field Notes of Captain William Clark , 1803–1805 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1964), 25, n. 8. (back)
49. "Executive Journal of Indiana Territory, 1800–1816," Indiana Historical Society Publications 3, no. 2 (1900): 95; Clarence Edwin Carter, ed. The Territorial Papers of the United States, Orleans Territory, 7 vols. (Washington, DC, 1948), 7: 34. (back)
50. Donald Jackson, Letters of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 2 vols. (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1978), 2: 689. (back)
51. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 2: 718–9. (back)
52. Jackson, Letters, 1: 163. (back)
53. Nasatir, "Anglo–Spanish Rivalry in Iowa," 366, 369. De Finiels's wife, Marie Anne Riviere, gave birth to Marie Susann—Adele De Finiels on 13 July 1797, in St. Louis (Oscar Collet, Index to St. Louis Cathedral and Carondelet Church Baptisms, p. 66, Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis). (back)
54. Nicolas De Finiels, "Notice sur la Louisiane Supé rieure," p. 89, Box 41, Folder 20, John Francis McDermott Collection, Lovejoy Library, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville (hereafter McDermott Collection). (back)
55. Reproduction de la carte du Mississippi de Nicolas De Finiels, Recueil, 69 carte 34, Marine Nationale, Service historique de la Marine, Chateau de Vincennes, B.P. n–2–00300 Armé es, France; illustrated in W. Raymond Wood, "An Atlas of Early Maps of the American Midwest, Part 2," Illinois State Museum, Scientific Papers, Vol. 28, 2001, plate 13. (back)
56. "Notice sur la Louisiane Supé rieure," p. 62, McDermott Collection. (back)
57. Map can be found in M–M 508, Box 5 #516, MSS, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. The Spanish word, apeadas or afseadas, is unknown. (back)
58. Ibid. (back)
59. MacKay was appointed commandant of St. André, the Bon Homme settlement, in 1798. See Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 2: 587. (back)
60. American State Papers, Public Lands, ed. Walter Lowrie (Washington, DC, 1894), 2, 495. (back)
61. Nicolas De Finiels, An Account of Upper Louisiana, ed. Carl J. Ekberg and William E. Foley (Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1989), 72, n. 118. MacKay produced a rough "plan" in October 1802 of Femme Osage, Daniel Boone's settlement. See James MacKay to Charles Dehault de Lassus, 29 October 1802, AGI–PC 219: 559. (back)
62. Nasatir, Before Lewis and Clark , 2: 605 and 545, n. 3. (back)
63. Manuel Gayoso de Lemos to Charles Dehault de Lassus, 12 May 1799, AGI–PC 134a: 387. (back)
64. Annie H. Abel, "Trudeau's Description of the Upper Missouri," Mississippi Valley Historical Review 8 (June–September 1921): 154. (back)
65. Frederick Teggart, "Notes Supplementary to any Edition of Lewis and Clark," American Historical Association Annual Report 1 (1908): 188; Annie H. Abel—Henderson, "Mackay's Table of Distances," Mississippi Valley Historical Review 10 (March 1924): 428–46; Milo M. Quaife, "Extracts from McKay's Journal–and Others," Wisconsin Historical Society, Proceedings 63 (1916): 186–210; Annie H. Abel, "A New Lewis and Clark Map," Geographical Review 1 (May 1916): 329–45; Bernard De Voto, Course of Empire, 372–9; David Williams, "John Evans' Strange Journey," American Historical Review 54 (January 1949): 277–95, and (April 1949): 508–29; Aubrey Diller, "James Mackay's Journey in Nebraska in 1796," Nebraska History 36 (June 1955): 123–8; John Logan Allen, Passage Through the Garden (Urbana: University of Illionois Press, 1975), 141–2; Jackson, Letters, 1: 135–6. (back)
66. Jackson, Letters, 1: 104–5, 142–3. (back)
67. James Holmberg , ed., Dear Brother: Letters of William Clark to Jonathan Clark (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002), 61. (back)
68. Meriwether Lewis to Thomas Jefferson, 28 December 1803, in Jackson, Letters, 1: 163, 148–55. (back)
69. James MacKay to Charles Dehault de Lassus, 10 July 1800, AGI–PC 217b: 180; De Finiels, An Account of Upper Louisiana, 72–3. (back)
70. Jackson, Letters, 1: 131, 137. (back)
71. Moulton, The Journals of Lewis and Clark Expedition, 2: 134, 140–1. (back)
72. Ibid., 2: 154. When Soulard surveyed MacKay's land on Bon Homme Creek on 5 March 1798, he stated that it was about thirty–one miles west of St. Louis. See Pintado Papers, Book IX and Book P: 141, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge. De Finiels gauged the distance at about thirty miles. See De Finiels, An Account of Upper Louisiana, 70–1. (back)
73. James MacKay to John Fowler, 24 September 1803, Breckenridge Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC. (back)
74. Osgood, Field Notes, 16. Various historians have agreed on this date to suggest that MacKay's meeting on 10 January had been planned. (back)
75. W. Raymond Wood, "An Atlas of Early Maps of the American Midwest, Part 2," Illinois State Museum, Scientific Papers 28 (2001): plate 13. (back)
76. See St. Louis Recorded Archives, Vol. 4, Book 1, Instrument #1128 and 1132, pp. 53–5; Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, Courthouse, St. Louis, RG 952, Series 5, U.S. Surveyor General for Missouri, Outgoing Correspondence 1816–1863, Box 32, Book Q: 315, Missouri State Archives, Jefferson City. (back)
77. Moulton, Journals of Lewis and Clark , 2: 154. (back)
78. Osgood, Field Notes, 14, 19–23. (back)
79. Ibid., 27; Donald Jackson, "A New Lewis and Clark Map," Missouri Historical Society Bulletin 17 (January 1961): 119–26. (back)

Copyright by the Western History Association. Reprinted by permission.