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            <title type="main">The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition Online</title>
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March 9, 1805</title>
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               <author xml:id="ml" n="Lewis, Meriwether">Meriwether Lewis</author>
               <author xml:id="wc" n="Clark, William">William Clark</author>
               
               
               <editor role="editor">Gary E. Moulton</editor>
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                  <resp>Assistant Editor</resp>
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               <title level="m" type="main">The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Volume 3</title>
               <title level="m" type="sub">August 25, 1804–April 6, 1805</title>
               <publisher>University of Nebraska Press</publisher>
               <pubPlace>Lincoln and London</pubPlace>
               <date>1987</date>
               <biblScope type="pages">310-311</biblScope>
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               <author xml:id="jo" n="Ordway, John">John Ordway</author>
               <author xml:id="cf" n="Floyd, Charles">Charles Floyd</author>
               
               
               <editor role="editor">Gary E. Moulton</editor>
               <title level="m" type="main">The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Volume 9</title>
               <title level="m" type="sub">The Journals of John Ordway and Charles Floyd</title>
               <publisher>University of Nebraska Press</publisher>
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            <note>The company backtracks to the site of Fort Mandan, between the first and second villages they came across. About 14 miles west of Washburn, ND. They remained here for the winter and set out again on 1805-04-07</note>
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            <date when="1805-03-09">March 9, 1805</date>
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               <speaker>Clark</speaker>
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on the 9th of March we were Visited by the Grand Chief of the <name type="native_nation" key="Hidatsa Indians">Minetarres</name>,<ref target="n09030901" n="1"/> to whome we gave a medal &amp; Some Cloths &amp; a flag. Sent a French Man &amp; a Indian with a letter to <name type="person" key="Tabeau, Pierre-Antoine">Mr. Tabboe</name> informing them the <name type="native_nation" key="Arikara Indians">Ricarras</name> of the desire the <name type="native_nation" key="Mandan Indians">Mandans</name> had to See them &amp;. &amp;.—
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               <speaker>Clark</speaker>
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                  <date>9th <hi rend="italic">of March Satturday</hi> 1805</date>
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a Cloudy Cold and windey morning    wind from the North—    walked up to See the Party that is makeing Perogues, about 5 miles above this, the wind hard and Cold    on my way up I met <name type="person" key="Le Borgne (One Eye)">The [<hi rend="italic">NB: The Borgne</hi>]</name> Main Chief of the <name type="native_nation" key="Hidatsa Indians">Manitarres</name> with four Indians <hi rend="italic">[NB: see note of 9 March after</hi>] on Thier way to [<hi rend="italic">NB: 10th March 1805</hi>] See us, I requested him to proceed on to the fort where he would find <name type="person" key="Lewis, Meriwether">Capt. Lewis</name>    I should be there my Self in corse of a fiew hours, Sent the interpeter back with him and proceeded on my Self to the Canoes    found them nearly finished, the timber verry bad,<ref target="n09030902" n="2"/> after visiting all the perogues where I found a number of Indans I wind to the upper <name type="native_nation" key="Mandan Indians">mandan</name> Village &amp; Smoked a pipe the greatest mark of friendship and attention with the Chief and returned    on my return found the <name type="native_nation" key="Hidatsa Indians">Manitarree</name> Chief about Setting out on his return to his village, having recieved of <name type="person" key="Lewis, Meriwether">Captain M. Lewis</name> a <hi rend="italic">medel</hi> Gorget<ref target="n09030903" n="3"/> armbans, a <hi rend="italic">Flag</hi> Shirt, Scarlet &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c. for which he was much pleased    Those Things were given in place of Sundery articles Sent to him which he Sais he did not receive    2 guns were fired for this Great man 
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               <speaker>Ordway</speaker>
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                  <hi rend="italic">Saturday 9th March 1805</hi>.    the wind high from the N. W.    cold. 
<name type="person" key="Clark, William">Capt. Clark</name> went up to the perogue party for to See the perogues.    a nomber of the Savages called the <name type="native_nation" key="Hidatsa Indians">Big Belleys</name>, chiefs came to the Fort to See the Commanding officers<ref target="n09030904" n="4"/>    <name type="person" key="Lewis, Meriwether">Capt. Lewis</name> Shewed them the air Gun quadron<ref target="n09030905" n="5"/> &amp; Spy Glass &amp;.C. which they thought was Great Medicines.



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               <name type="person" key="Le Borgne (One Eye)">Le Borgne</name>, or <name type="person" key="Le Borgne (One Eye)">One Eye</name>, was easily the most notorious chief—among whites—on the upper <name type="place" key="Missouri River">Missouri</name> at this period. He had a formidable, and largely bad, reputation. Traders' and travelers' accounts agree in describing him as ugly, brutal, lecherous, bad-tempered, and homicidal, while generally acknowledging his leadership ability and prowess in war. <name type="person" key="Henry, Alexander (younger)">Alexander Henry the Younger</name> seems one of the few to have given a positive evaluation of him. He was less than cordial to <name type="person" key="Lewis, Meriwether">Lewis</name> and <name type="person" key="Clark, William">Clark</name> but was far more favorable toward the British traders, being particularly helpful to <name type="person" key="Larocque, François-Antoine">Fran<seg n="u231">ç</seg>ois-Antoine Larocque</name>, when the rest of the tribe opposed the trader's proposed trip to the <name type="place" key="Yellowstone River">Yellowstone</name> in 1805. When he chose to accept someone as his guest, he protected that person with all the force of his character and reputation. The <name type="native_nation" key="Hidatsa Indians">Hidatsas</name> finally threw him out of power in 1813, after which he withdrew and established a separate village of only a few lodges. Some time later he was reportedly killed by another <name type="native_nation" key="Hidatsa Indians">Hidatsa</name> chief, <name type="person" key="Red Shield">Red Shield</name>. Wood &amp; Thiessen, 116 n. 28 and passim.; Thwaites (EWT), 5:161–62, 167, 6:140–41, 15:97; Coues (NLEH), 1:379—80 and passim.; Masson, 1:343–92; <name type="person" key="Chouteau, Pierre">Pierre Chouteau</name> to <name type="person" key="Eustis, William">William Eustis</name>, December 14, 1809, <name type="person" key="Biddle, Nicholas">Nicholas Biddle</name> Notes [ca. April 1810], Jackson (LLC), 2:482, 505, 539; Luttig, 73, 121–22.</note>
            <note xml:id="n09030902" n="2">Here is a short interlineation in red, "Qut" for question, probably by <name type="person" key="Biddle, Nicholas">Biddle</name>.</note>
            <note xml:id="n09030903" n="3">Originally a piece of armor to protect the throat, by the eighteenth century the gorget had become a purely ornamental plate hung around the neck to symbolize officer status. It was also used as merchandise in the Indian trade and as a gift to chiefs. Criswell, 43; Woodward, 25–26, 30–37.</note>
            <note xml:id="n09030904" n="4">Among them <name type="person" key="Le Borgne (One Eye)">Le Borgne</name>, or <name type="person" key="Le Borgne (One Eye)">One Eye</name>, principal chief of the <name type="native_nation" key="Hidatsa Indians">Hidatsas</name>.</note>
            <note xml:id="n09030905" n="5">The expedition's quadrant.</note>
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