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Search : missouri

Your search returned 1319 results from all items Search Only Journals

June 1, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • be at a loss to procure from Traveller's rest (Travelers' Rest (Idaho)) to the waters of the Missouri
  • (Missouri River) .—    I met with a singular plant today in blume of which I preserved a specemine; it grows
  • June 1, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
March 11, 1806 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • of the Indians in whose possession I have Seen their plumage.    those are the Same with those of the Missouri
  • (Missouri River) , and are the most butifull of all the family of the Eagle of America it's colours
  • March 11, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
June 6, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River, Great Falls of the
  • had requested should accompany us to the falls of the Missouri (Missouri River, Great Falls
  • June 6, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
June 6, 1806 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River, Great Falls of the
  • requested to accompany us to the falls of Missouri (Missouri River, Great Falls of the) , were not yet
  • June 6, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
September 26, 1804 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • along the Missouri River (Missouri River) . Barkley, 159. Their first mention of the bighorn sheep
  • September 26, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
April 20, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • sometimes visit the Missouri (Missouri River) .    indeed a considerable proportion of their wearing apparel
  • April 20, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
July 8, 1806 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • to the Missouri (Missouri River) plains are Scattered in those Vallys and hill Sides. The road which we have
  • July 8, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
May 6, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • to the Missouri (Missouri River) through those channels; by reference to the diary of the weather &c
  • May 6, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
May 4, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • considerable injury. The country on both sides of the Missouri (Missouri River) continues to be open level
  • May 4, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
August 6, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • days as we came up the Missouri (Missouri River) and subsisted 9 days of that time on grapes only
  • August 6, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
July 22, 1804 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • with the distance estimated from point to point, the chart of the Missouri (Missouri River) has been formed which
  • July 22, 1804
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
July 4, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • , Southeast Fork of Columbia, West Fork Lewis's) River) & who visit the plains of the Missouri (Missouri
  • July 4, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
September 14, 1804 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • of the Missouri (Missouri River) . It is probably the same phenomenon as the Ionia Volcano of Nebraska (Nebraska
  • September 14, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
June 20, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River, Three Forks of the
  • the headwaters of the Missouri forks (Missouri River, Three Forks of the) . The Nez Perces (Nez Perce Indians
  • June 20, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
November 3, 1805 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • (Shoshone Indians) of the Missouri (Missouri River) , to Speake to this Squar, they Could not understand
  • November 3, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
May 28, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River, Three Forks of the
  • above the three forks of the Missouri (Missouri River, Three Forks of the) and saw them on the hights
  • May 28, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
August 17, 1805 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River, Great Falls of the
  • , that the River abounded in emence falls, one perticularly much higher than the falls of the Missouri (Missouri
  • August 17, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
August 17, 1805 - Ordway, John
  • Missouri River
  • .    they drank at the head Spring of the Missourie (Missouri River) & went only about a mile and drank
  • August 17, 1805
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
July 30, 1804 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • .)) and neighboring bluffs typifies the central Missouri River (Missouri River) vegetation and the topography
  • July 30, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
December 5, 1803 - Clark, William
  • Missouri
  • City (Crystal City, Mo.) , Jefferson County (Jefferson County, Mo.) , Missouri (Missouri) . Anglo
  • December 5, 1803
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
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
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Karen Jean De Bres
July 6, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • (Dearborn River) and thence to the Missouri (Missouri River
  • July 6, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
February 17, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • will be sufficient to last us to our deposits of that article on the Missouri (Missouri River) .    we there directed
  • February 17, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
September 10, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • with the Eastern fork which heads near the missouri (Missouri River) , and return this evening.    this fork
  • September 10, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
ca. April 1804 - Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether; Unknown
  • Missouri River
  • boats taken as far as the Great Falls (Columbia River, Great Falls of the) of the Missouri River
  • (Missouri River) . It may have been drawn as an aid in determining how to store goods. The names
  • ca. April 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether; Unknown
May 3, 1805 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  •    as this Creek is 2000 miles up the Missouri (Missouri River) we Call it the 2000 mile Creek (Red Water (2,000
  • May 3, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
August 21, 1805 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • & to the Missouri (Missouri River) . The barb of the fish-spear. Criswell, 13. Apparently
  • August 21, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
March 13, 1806 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • part of the Missouri (Missouri River) , but are not So abundent in the Columbian (Columbia River
  • March 13, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
July 3, 1806 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • used earlier for large, tree-sized willow species, which on the Missouri River (Missouri River
  • July 3, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
May 7, 1806 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • of horsebeef and roots, and who are as anxious as we are to return to the fat plains of the Missouri (Missouri
  • May 7, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
June 26, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River, Great Falls of the
  • with a view to accompany me to the falls of the Missouri (Missouri River, Great Falls of the) .    we were now
  • June 26, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
June 10, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • in the morning up the South fork (Gallatin (South, Southeast Fork) River) or Missouri (Missouri River) leaving
  • June 10, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
June 2, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • . At our encampment of this evening on the Lard. side of the Missouri (Missouri River) . Observed time
  • June 2, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
August 24, 1804 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • the flooding Missouri River (Missouri River) poured water onto molten rock in subterranean caverns. By 1900
  • August 24, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
March 25, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • . The broad-leaved willow of the Missouri River (Missouri River) , however, was either peach-leaved willow
  • March 25, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
February 28, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • the inhabitant of the great Plains of Columbia (Great Columbian Plain) , as they are of those of the Missouri
  • (Missouri River) East of these mountains.    they weigh from 7 to eleven pounds.    the measure of one
  • February 28, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
August 25, 1804 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • woods except in the Missourie (Missouri River) Points and a few Scattering trees on the three Rivers
  • August 25, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
August 25, 1804 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • .    no woods except on the Missouris (Missouri River) Points if all the timber which
  • August 25, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
September 10, 1806 - Clark, William
  • Missouri
  • ) , or Holt County (Holt County, Mo.) , Missouri (Missouri) , above the Big Nemaha River (Big Nemaha River
  • September 10, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
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
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
October 17, 1805 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • and the Seed of the wild plant which is also peculiar to this river and the upper parts of the Missoury
  • (Missouri River) somewhat resembling the whins—. Capt. Lewis (Lewis, Meriwether) took
  • October 17, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
August 11, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Missouri River
  • known to the Indians of the Rocky mountains (Rocky Mountains) and those of the Missouri (Missouri River
  • ) from the circumstance of it's being that distance from the entrance of the Missouri (Missouri River
  • August 11, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
Part 2: Estimate of the Western Indians - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • ) occasionally.    Sometimes pass over to the Missouri (Missouri River
  • ) and occasionally cross over to the Missouri (Missouri River
  • Winter 1805-1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
July 27, 1806 - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • river (Bighorn (Ar-sar-ta) River) resembles the Missouri (Missouri River) in almost every perticular
  • and less muddy than the Missouri (Missouri River) below the mouth of this river
  • July 27, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
Part 2: Estimate of the Western Indians - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • of the Columbia (Columbia River) , and winter and fall on the Missouri (Missouri River
  • on the Missouri (Missouri River) and its waters
  • Winter 1805-1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
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.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
Fort Clatsop Part 1: Estimated Distances from Fort Mandan to the Pacific Coast - Clark, William
  • Missouri River
  • Little Missouri (E-mâh-tark',-Ah'-zhah) River
  • Missouri River, Great Falls of the
  • Winter 1805-1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
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
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • 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
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • 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.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender