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Your search returned 72 results from all items Search Only Journals

Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • . Kansas-Missouri and Nebraska-Iowa  3. South Dakota and North Dakota  4. Montana  5. Lewis and Clark Sites
  • of Biological and Historic Interest in the Central and Upper Missouri Valley References View entire book as one
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  • Texts
  • Paul A. Johnsgard
Montana [The Magazine of Western History] 21.3 (1971): 2–17.
  • Lewis & Clark on the Upper Missouri: Decision at the Mamas by John L. Allen (This article first
  • , headed up the Missouri River into the unknown—"a country at least two thousand miles in width, on which
  • to locate the portage between the heads of the Missouri and Columbia rivers and establish thereby the "most
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  • John L. Allen
Western Historical Quarterly 35 (Spring 2004): 53–72. Copyright © 2004, Western History Association.)
  • Lewis and Clark's Route Map: James MacKay's Map of the Missouri River Thomas C. Danisi and W
  • Office Map was James MacKay, leader of the third Missouri Company expedition up the Missouri River
  • Missouri (Missouri Company) por el Rio de Missouri. Este mapa fue probablemente transmitido a Lewis y Clark
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  • Thomas C. Danisi and W. Raymond Wood
Names 52:3 (September 2004):163–237 Copyright 2004 by The American Name Society 163
  • E. Foley* (This article first appeared in Missouri Historical Review, 2004 98 [4]: 270–82
  • for establishing a winter camp on the Missouri River. They chose instead a location on the eastern side
  • of the Mississippi across from the mouth of the Missouri at Wood River, or as the French called it, the Riviere du
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  • William E. Foley
Great Plains Quarterly 17.3–4 (1997): 165–84.
  • , as they traveled up the Missouri toward the continental divide, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark came to a fork
  • at this junction, unable to decide which river was the "main stream" of the Missouri and which was the tributary
  • the Missouri river, & such principal stream of it, as, by it's course and communication with the waters
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  • Barbara Belyea
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • Missouri. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1939. ———. Trudeau's Description of the Upper Missouri
  • with Jefferson, the Mentor. Bulletin of the Missouri Historical Society 1979. Adams, Mary P. Jefferson's Reaction
  • Magazine XV (December 1967). ———. Meriwether Lewis Prepares for a Trip West. Bulletin of the Missouri
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  • David Lavender
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • Kansas-Missouri and Nebraska-Iowa Summary of Route and Major Biological Discoveries Until
  • near the mouth of the Big Nemaha River on the Nebraska side and the Tarkio River on the Missouri side
  • was the first held between the natives of the central Missouri Valley and the U.S. government, and the bluff
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  • Paul A. Johnsgard
Montana 29:3 [1979]: 16–27.
  • , with rival North West Company traders traveling to the Mandan villages along the banks of the Missouri River
  • , this was the British company's first venture to the Missouri. Over the next fifteen-odd years, Hudson's Bay Company
  • return, American traders came up the Missouri with trade goods in hand eager to extract the finest pelts
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  • John A. Alwin
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • with whom you may happen to meet. The object of your mission is to explore the Missouri river
  • . Beginning at the mouth of the Missouri, you will take observations of latitude & longitude, at all
  • of the Missouri & the water offering the best communication with the Pacific Ocean should also be fixed
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  • David Lavender
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • Maps Route of Lewis and Clark in Kansas and Missouri Route of Lewis and Clark in Nebraska and Iowa
  • in Kansas and Missouri Outward Route Schedule: June 29 to September 7, 1804 Return Schedule: August 29
  • , the current distance is now substantially less. Map of route of Lewis and Clark in Kansas and Missouri Map 2
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  • Paul A. Johnsgard
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • Lewis and Clark Sites of Biological and Historic Interest in the Central and Upper Missouri Valley
  • ://www.npwrc.usgs.gov. Kansas and Northwestern Missouri Weston Bend State Park, Weston, Missouri Located one mile south
  • of mature hardwoods on the east side of the Missouri River. Camping is permitted. Weston Bend Bottomlands
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  • Paul A. Johnsgard
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 1. The Voyage Begins
  • into the Missouri current and headed upriver. Thomas Jefferson knew that as his explorers moved over the visible
  • formally to extend American power up the Missouri and toward the mountains. Jefferson's own words indicate
  • and Missouri, that they have surrendered to us all their subjects Spanish and French settled there, and all
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  • James P. Ronda
Oregon Historical Quarterly 102.3 [2001]: 290–315.
  • was born on February 11, 1805, at the winter camp of Lewis and Clark on the Upper Missouri (in what is now
  • the Missouri on an expedition of scientific curiosity. He met the youth, still in his teens, near the mouth
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  • Albert Furtwangler
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • -Missouri and Nebraska-Iowa South Dakota and North Dakota Montana Lewis and Clark Sites of Biological
  • and Historic Interest in the Central and Upper Missouri Valley References Maps Route of Lewis and Clark
  • in Kansas and Missouri Route of Lewis and Clark in Nebraska and Iowa Route of Lewis and Clark in South
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  • Paul A. Johnsgard
Lewis & Clark among the Indians Bibliography
  • to the Upper Missouri. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1939. Beaglehole Beaglehole, J. C., ed. The Voyage
  • . Brackenridge Brackenridge, Henry M. Views of Louisiana, Together with a Journal of a Voyage up the Missouri
  • Whitehouse: A Soldier with Lewis and Clark, Bulletin of the Missouri Historical Society, 27 (1972): 143–61
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  • James P. Ronda
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • Historical Overview When Meriwether Lewis and William Clark set off up the Missouri River in mid
  • of the Missouri Valley between the current Missouri-Kansas border and the vicinity of Three Forks, Montana, where
  • three mountain-fed rivers merge to form the Missouri. By the time they reached what is now western
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  • Paul A. Johnsgard
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • a supply boat, a corporal, and six privates to help the expedition partway up the Missouri during
  • the Missouri. In any event, Bissell wanted his soldiers back before Christmas, 1804. How many hands, he may
  • well have asked, did Lewis and Clark have for continuing from the Missouri's headwaters to the Pacific
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  • David Lavender
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • reached the Big Bend of the Missouri River, sending two men by horseback across the narrow peninsula
  • . They were approximately 1,600 river miles up the Missouri from their starting point and roughly halfway
  • , passing the mouth of the Little Missouri River on April 12 and reaching the mouth of the Yellowstone River
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  • Paul A. Johnsgard
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • tackle the lower part of the Missouri between the peak of high water that came with the melting of snow
  • over the reins as military governor of Missouri, confronted the Indian problem. Scores of Native
  • on the Missouri. The conferences completed, he would urge the men to travel to Washington under military
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  • David Lavender
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • Missouri milk-vetch Shadscale Silky wormwood Western juniper and lark sparrow Bushy-tailed woodrat Swift
  • Drawing of large-flowered clammyweed, with flower detail FIG. 27. Missouri milk-vetch Drawing of Missouri
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  • Paul A. Johnsgard
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • latching onto this: "The object of your mission is to explore the Missouri river, & such principal stream
  • of the navigable branches of the Missouri and Columbia Rivers." He described the route as modified by his return
  • over Lewis and Clark Pass. Travelers should go by boat 2,575 miles up the Missouri past caving banks
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  • David Lavender
J & MC Quarterly 80.4 (2003): 866–883
  • entries in the journals were written after the party started up the Missouri, but apparently also much
  • of his voyage up the Missouri? Is there further information about the furtrader, John Hay, or about his
  • history of the early Northwest, a statement that the boats of the expedition were pulled up the Missouri
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  • Bernard DeVoto
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 3. The Arikara Interlude
  • and escaping its tangles proved no easy task. When the expedition resumed its progress up the Missouri River
  • to the many years of Arikara migration along the Missouri. On the following day, September 30, some
  • incident. In the afternoon the wind picked up and the Missouri suddenly became a choppy lake. Rocking
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  • James P. Ronda
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • . The courses of the Yellowstone and Missouri Rivers have changed greatly in the past two centuries, leaving
  • ) on June 2, 1805. A major geographic discovery, the Great Falls of the Missouri River, was reached on June
  • the Missouri. It was also near here that Sacagawea had been captured five years previously. At Three Forks
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  • Paul A. Johnsgard
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • their transportation logistics. As a result of their experiences with the shoaling Missouri the previous fall
  • for completing the ascent of the Missouri. They were not roomy enough, however, to hold the thirty-three persons
  • . The trees the scouts found were awkwardly located some six miles up the Missouri and another mile and a half
  • N.D.
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  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • that stream to the Missouri, long regarded as the gateway to the West. After his keelboat and pirogue had
  • ascended the Missouri as far as possible, then what? Some theoretical geographers believed that only
  • a short portage—perhaps as little as half a mile—separated the headwaters of the Missouri from those
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  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • continue as far as the Falls of the Missouri, acting as both guides and peace delegates to the Blackfeet
  • toiling along the upper Missouri the year before; the captains could not sit still and write except under
  • would strike as directly east as possible to the vicinity of the Great Falls of the Missouri. He knew
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  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • since learning they customarily ranged along the headwaters of both the Missouri and Columbia rivers
  • on the point, only a few miles ahead, where the Missouri breaks out of the spur of the northern Rockies now
  • seeing the head of the Missouri yet unknown to the civilized world." Clark, too, was buoyed by the news
  • N.D.
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  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • , the expedition traversed the crinkled, miles-long curve called the Great Bend of the Missouri
  • the ninety-three miles to the mouth of the Little Missouri in slightly more than four days. Paradise did have
  • on the way up the Missouri to the Mandan villages, he kept careful compass records of the river's many
  • N.D.
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  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • . If the father's children displeased him, he would cut off trade, and the families of the Otos and Missouris would
  • suffer want. But if all went well and if the Missouri River became a true road of peace for both red men
  • farther up the Missouri. The visiting Otos said they would like to see the conflict ended. Such a peace
  • N.D.
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  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • by the Arikaras. It stood atop a bluff about fifty feet high, the Missouri curling at its base. To land
  • the Missouri and return to Canada, Jessaume had tried to kill him, or so Evans charged. After talking
  • meanders of the Missouri past a second Mandan village. Clark, struggling with the heavy sounds
  • N.D.
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  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • . If the father's children displeased him, he would cut off trade, and the families of the Otos and Missouris would
  • suffer want. But if all went well and if the Missouri River became a true road of peace for both red men
  • farther up the Missouri. The visiting Otos said they would like to see the conflict ended. Such a peace
  • N.D.
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  • David Lavender
North Dakota Quarterly 71.2 (2004): 6–27.
  • on the upper Missouri: By now the temperature was falling below freezing at night. The men of the mission
  • Missouri country already at least once by the time the discoverers arrived. More waves would follow over
  • straining against the Missouri for 1600 miles. Aside from a couple of days of respite at the mouth
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  • Clay S. Jenkinson
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 2. The Teton Confrontation
  • of the Missouri, until such measures are pursued, by our government, as will make them feel a dependence on its
  • expedition swept down the Missouri near present-day Yankton, South Dakota, the explorers caught sight of more
  • remained a powerful force in Brulé politics and Missouri River trade until his death in July 1813. When
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  • James P. Ronda
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • a prize of one thousand guineas to be awarded to anyone who, after following the Missouri River to its
  • Grande southward, the Missouri eastward, and, interlocking with the headwaters of the Missouri
  • between the higher parts of the Missouri & the Pacific ocean." Another society member was appointed
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  • David Lavender
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 4. The Mandan Winter
  • been called "the keystone of the Upper Missouri region"—the Mandan and Hidatsa villages. The American
  • lodge villages along the Missouri. The Mandan and Hidatsa towns were the center of northern plains trade
  • impressions. A traveler coming up the Missouri from St. Louis in 1804 would have found five Indian settlements
  • N.D.
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  • James P. Ronda
Heritage of the Great Plains 37: no. 1 (Spring/Summer 2004)
  • in 1778. Although his main directive to the expedition was to "explore the Missouri river
  • , leaving the last of the well wooded areas in Missouri behind and entering the grassy Plains. What
  • between the Platte and the Missouri Rivers as "Barren Country covered with efflorescent Salt" and "Barren
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  • Karen Jean De Bres
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • Rest to the Missouri, they began to wonder, inevitably, about ways to rescue the diplomatic assignments
  • they persuade the belligerent Teton Sioux to quiet down and let the expedition pass safely along the Missouri
  • , Regis Loisel, head of the Spanish-licensed Missouri Company, operating out of St. Louis
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  • David Lavender
Lewis & Clark among the Indians
  • , I went in search of an even larger cast, one that acted on a stage that stretched up the Missouri
  • and archaeological literature, especially the site reports from digs along the Missouri and Columbia Rivers. Here I
  • explore Jefferson's travelers and the things they carried with them. What happened from the Missouri
  • N.D.
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  • James P. Ronda
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 5. Lewis and Clark as Plains Ethnographers
  • spent many years among Upper Missouri and Upper Mississippi peoples and seemed quite ready to share his
  • . During the Mandan winter, Lewis, Clark, and Ordway made important observations on Upper Missouri native
  • that characterized Upper Missouri Indian cultures. The sergeant was never systematic in his observations. He simply
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  • James P. Ronda
Exploring the Explorers: Great Plains Peoples and the the Lewis and Clark Expedition Great Plains Quarterly 13.2 (1993): 81–90
  • patterns of meaning. What happened along the Missouri River was mutual discovery. When we say the word
  • the Missouri in 1804 the Corps of Discovery presented native people with a spectacle at once familiar and yet
  • standard a very large party, perhaps the largest yet seen on the Missouri. While the precise number remains
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  • JAMES P. RONDA
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • the Missouri before winter set in. With that as a goal, they had allotted one week for the work at Harpers
  • , but there was no need to worry. "I still think it practicable to reach the mouth of the Missouri by the 1st of August
  • to the Mississippi, whose course from the mouth of the Missouri to the gulf he had surveyed more accurately than
  • N.D.
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  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • . Two hundred feet almost directly below them the Missouri—for such it most convincingly was—poured over
  • to bed he wrote Clark a letter headed triumphantly "from the Great Falls of the Missouri." They were
  • of the Missouri. What was more, the walls of the river's trough at last subsided, just above the final cascade
  • N.D.
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  • David Lavender
Lewis & Clark among the Indians Acknowledgments
  • interest paid here. I am especially grateful to the staff at the Missouri Historical Society, William Lang
  • N.D.
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  • James P. Ronda
J & MC Quarterly 80.4 (2003): 866–883
  • , the expedition left Woods River, which is across the Mississippi River from St. Louis; it went up the Missouri
  • one hundred and sixty miles from the head of the Missouri to the Columbia river." The Frederickstown
  • the Missouri headwaters, as Jefferson requested. The newspaper explained that the challenge was too great
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  • Betty Houchin Winfield
The Men of the Lewis & Clark Expedition The Men of the Lewis & Clark Expedition
  • Trail. On a warm summer evening, after a pleasant day of paddling canoes on the Missouri River, we
  • out against the Missouri's relentless current. Unlike the Corps of Discovery, we felt no concerns
  • of the Columbia the huge and noisy flocks of geese and brants had done the same thing. Along the Missouri
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  • Charles G. Clarke
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • in St. Louis and other towns and farms of the Missouri country would have to be persuaded to vacate
  • tribe and foreign trader within reach from the Missouri River. As the president and his secretary grew
  • miles up the Missourie before the commencement of the ensuing winter." He mentioned, again
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  • David Lavender
Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 85:2 (1961): 163–77.
  • of the Missouri and its several branches; of the mountains seperating the Eastern from the Western waters
  • ; of the several Tribes of Indians on the Missouri and Columbia rivers; of the vegetable, animal and [mineral
  • of the Missouri to the Pacific ocean "performed by order of the government;" that I have arranged and transcribed
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  • DONALD JACKSON
Great Plains Quarterly 24:4 (2004): 263–82.
  • . For the purposes of this study, the Great Plains extends from Kaw Point (the confluence of the Kansas and Missouri
  • though the mountains are not always in close proximity to the Missouri River upstream of Gates
  • (Sahnish), and Mandan-Hidatsa, with an intent to promote peaceful trade along the Missouri, inform
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  • Kevin S. Blake
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • ," probably the mooring rope. In just such fashion one of the Missouri Company's pirogues had been made
  • , but they wanted to be able to keep the keelboat in midstream in case the Sioux followed. But the turbid Missouri
  • tribe migrating up the Missouri in the hope of making an alliance with the Mandans. It didn't work
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  • David Lavender