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Search : missouri

Your search returned 1319 results from all items Search Only Journals

April 29, 1806 - Clark, William
  • 29, 1806, Voorhis No. 3 Missouri Historical Society
  • April 29, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
May 1, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • do not recollect having seen the plover do.    this bird which I shall henceforth stile the Missouri
  • May 1, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • 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
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
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
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Names 52:3 (September 2004):163–237 Copyright 2004 by The American Name Society 163
  • -shush-sher . Hidatsa /awáathi aruš aš a/, lit. '[Missouri] river forks', i.e. the Milk River (JL CE 3
  • as the Hidatsa Indians name for the Missouri River (JL CE 4:246); etymology not known. Ameat Creek . L & C's
  • to westward to Ohio, Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma. The tribal name is spelled 〈Delewar, Delaway, Deleeaway
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • William Bright
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
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
The Missing Journals of Meriwether Lewis
  • the extreme navigable point of the Missouri River (a scheme later rejected) and with that boat "I shal send
  • the Missouri and took astronomical observations—both time-consuming tasks that included record-keeping
  • to ensure the preservation of a complete record. As they moved up the Missouri around the Great Falls
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Gary E. Moulton
Weather, May 1806 - Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
  • and appearance of the air in the plains of the Missouri
  • Weather, May 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
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
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
October 22, 1805 - Clark, William
  • Missouri Historical Society
  • October 22, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
November 1, 1805 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River, Great Falls of the
  • –November 2, 1805, Codex H, p. 4 Missouri Historical Society
  • (Missouri River, Great Falls
  • November 1, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
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
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • 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
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Great Plains Quarterly 13.2 (1993): 69–80
  • vision of a Passage had come to center on the Missouri and other western tributaries of the Mississippi
  • to the Pacific. Of the Missouri, for example, Father Marquette wrote: "I hope by means of it to make
  • . Nasatir, ed., Before Lewis and Clark: Documents Illustrating the History of the Missouri, 1785–1804, vol
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • John L. Allen
April 3, 1806 - Clark, William
  • . Plan of Chinookan House, April 3, 1806, Voorhis No. 2 Missouri Historical
  • April 3, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
Weather, April 1804 - Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
  • gooseberry, Ribes missouriense Nutt., Missouri gooseberry, however, is also commonly found in the thickets
  • April 30, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
July 17, 1806 - Clark, William
  • ) of the Missouri Fur Company were defeated by Blackfeet (Blackfeet Indians) on May 31, 1823, with Immell (Immell
  • July 17, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
The Journals of Lewis and Clark: Almost Home
  • entirely new to me. I was lucky that W. Raymond Wood, a professor from the University of Missouri
  • , was in Lincoln for a year during this time. Ray, an expert on the exploration and cartography of the Missouri
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Gary E. Moulton
J & MC Quarterly 80.4 (2003): 866–883
  • to United States, Carlos Martinez de Irujo, setting forth his plan to explore the course of the Missouri
  • , The Republican Watch-Tower. "You know we have been many years wishing to have the Missouri explored & whatever
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Donald Jackson