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Search : missouri
Creator : James P. Ronda
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Your search returned 16 results from all items Search Only Journals

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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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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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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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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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
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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
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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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Lewis & Clark among the Indians Acknowledgments
  • interest paid here. I am especially grateful to the staff at the Missouri Historical Society, William Lang
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Lewis & Clark among the Indians Appendix: A Note on Sacagawea
  • of the Missouri with others from her band. As so often happened to northern Shoshonis who ventured out
  • at the Great Falls of the Missouri, Lewis admitted, "This gave me some concern as well as for the poor object
  • a critical decision in early June 1805 about the true channel of the Missouri, she took no part
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Lewis & Clark among the Indians Introduction to the Bicentennial Edition
  • , 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
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Lewis & Clark among the Indians 9. The Way Home
  • bit as challenging as those that had driven the explorers up the Missouri and across the mountains
  • Travelers' Rest and the Great Falls of the Missouri. All that exploring would demand skill and coordination
  • the Upper Missouri before freeze-up. All told, the return journey presented challenges and opportunities
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Lewis & Clark among the Indians 6. Across the Divide
  • over land, from the Missouri, to the Columbia river." Led to believe that the Shoshonis would
  • be encountered somewhere between the Great Falls of the Missouri and the Three Forks, Lewis and Clark made
  • finding them a central goal in the second season of exploration. The journey up the Missouri
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Western Historical Quarterly 33.1 (2002): 5–18
  • intrepid captains pushing their way up the Missouri, struggling over the mountains, and then rushing down
  • of the Great Lakes or beyond the wide Missouri. Goetzmann located the expedition story within a large
  • dominion. The Corps of Discovery went up the Missouri representing a new commercial order. The phrase
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Lewis & Clark among the Indians 7. Down the Columbia
  • -Indian relations since those early days along the Missouri. On the Columbia, salmon was king and fishing
  • -Columbia confluence and, as had so often happened on the Upper Missouri, the Americans quickly became
  • boundary. Just as the Middle Missouri trade network and the people involved in it had a profound impact
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Lewis & Clark among the Indians Preface
  • of scholars. In ways that defy rational explanation, the picture of Lewis and Clark struggling up the Missouri
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Lewis & Clark among the Indians 8. The Clatsop Winter
  • , and hearty food marked that holiday fling. Although it would be too much to claim that the Missouri River
  • sailors, a man like York was not going to draw the kind of attention paid on the Upper Missouri. Few trade
  • with alarming speed. Once lavish in their gifts to Indians along the Missouri, the explorers were reduced
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