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Search : missouri
Creator : David Lavender
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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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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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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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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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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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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
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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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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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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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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  • 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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  • 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
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  • . 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
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  • 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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  • ," 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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The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • was necessary because too much salt had been cached beside the Missouri, awaiting the return journey. Of what
  • the mouth of the Flathead River (now the Bitterroot) to the junction of the Dearborn and Missouri above
  • curve the outward bound expedition had followed south along the Missouri to Lemhi Pass and then north
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  • guineas to be awarded to anyone who, after following the Missouri River to its source, brought back proof
  • 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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The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • the preceding year with the tribes they had encountered along the Missouri. Like its predecessors the meeting
  • , the combined parties would move down the Missouri on their dangerous trek to the buffalo grounds. With them
  • of the sort that had served the expedition well on some of the tributary streams of the Missouri
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The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • , but that and spaciousness were the only traits the region shared with the High Plains bordering the Missouri. There were
  • calculation 3,714 miles from Camp Wood at the mouth of the Missouri, they reached the Columbia. It was one
  • resurgence of the awe that had gripped him at the Great Falls of the Missouri, it is not mentioned. Nor does
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The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • of Captains Lewis and Clark, to the Sources of the Missouri, thence across the Rocky Mountains and down
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  • appeared. The delay might force them to spend another winter on the Missouri. The Nez Percés might leave
  • swivel gun was cached with the white pirogue near the Great Falls of the Missouri. How did he happen
  • of the Missouri on its northern slopes, of the Platte and Arkansas on the east, of the Rio Grande and Colorado
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