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Search : deer

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August 31, 1804 - Clark, William
  • )) & on the Missourie (Missouri River) they are at War with 20 nations, and at piece with 8 only—    they recved their trade from the British except a few on the Missourie (Missouri River)    they furnish Beaver Martain Loues [loups, i.e., wolves] [orter [otter), Pekon Bear and Deer and have forty Traders at least among them. The names of the Different bands of this nation are— 1st    Che che ree or Bois ruley (Sioux Indians, Brulé or Bois Brule) [Brulé (Sioux Indians, Brulé or Bois Brule) ] (the present band) Inhabit the Souex (Big Sioux River (Rivière des Sioux)) Jacque (James (Jacque) River (S.
  • August 31, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • Jessaume then decided to do the work himself and "came to my house with a number of his Men, and seizing the moment that my Back was turned to him, tried to discharge a Pistol at my head loaded with Deer Shot but my interpreter having perceived his design hindered the Execution—the Indians immediately dragged him out of my house and would have killed him, had not I prevented them."
  • Fat turkeys, grouse, opossums, rabbits, and occasional deer furnished the basis of the meals turned out by soldiers assigned to do the camp cooking.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Part 2: Estimate of the Western Indians - Clark, William
  • N. of the big narrow (Columbia River, The Dalles of the (Great Narrows)) .    live by Hunting hunt deer &. Squân-nar-oos (Klickitat Indians)    do    do    below the Skaddats (Klickitat Indians) — 120 Skal-lât-tos (Klickitat Indians)    do    do    above    do — 100 Shan-wap-pom's (Klickitat Indians) reside on the heads of Catteract (Klickitat (Cataract) River) river & Tapteel river (Yakima (Tapteete) River) 400 67710 39 Cuts-sâh-nim (Yakima Indians) Nation reside on both Sides of the } 60 1,200 Columbia (Columbia River) Above the Sokulks (Wanapam Indians) & on the Northerly branches of the tapteel river (Yakima (Tapteete) River) and also on the Wah-na-a-chee river (Wenatchee (Wah-na-a-chee) River) La-hân-na (Pend d'Oreille Indians) Nation reside on both Sides of the } 120 2,000 Columbia (Columbia River) above the enterance of Clarks river (Clark Fork (Clark's, East Fork Clark's, Flathead) River) Coos-pel-lar's (Kalispel Indians) Nation reside on a river which falls } 30 1600 into the Columbia (Columbia River) to the N. of Clarks river (Clark Fork (Clark's, East Fork Clark's, Flathead) River) Whe-le-po Nation reside on both Sides of Clarks (Clark Fork (Clark's, East Fork Clark's, Flathead) River) } 130 2,500 river (Clark Fork (Clark's, East Fork Clark's, Flathead) River) from the enterance of the Lastaw (Pend Oreille (Clark's, Flathead, Lastaro, Lastaw) River) to the Great falls of Clarks R (Clark Fork (Clark's, East Fork Clark's, Flathead) River) Hi-high-e-nim-mo (Sanpoil Indians) Nation from the enterance of the } 45 1300 Lastaw (Pend Oreille (Clark's, Flathead, Lastaro, Lastaw) River) into Clarks river (Clark Fork (Clark's, East Fork Clark's, Flathead) River) on both Sides of the Lestaw (Pend Oreille (Clark's, Flathead, Lastaro, Lastaw) River) as high as the forks Lar-ti-e-lo's Nation at the Falls of the Lastaw (Pend Oreille (Clark's, Flathead, Lastaro, Lastaw) River) river } 30 600 below the great Waytom Lake (Lake Pend Oreille) , on both Sides of the river Skeet-so-mish (Coeur d'Alene Indians) Nation resides on a Small river of the } 120 2,000 Same name which discharges itself into the Lastaw (Pend Oreille (Clark's, Flathead, Lastaro, Lastaw) River) below the falls around the Wayton Lake (Lake Pend Oreille) and on two islands within the Said Lake Mick-suck-seal-tom (Flathead Indians) Tribe of the Tushshepah (Flathead Indians) reside on } 25 300 Clark river (Clark Fork (Clark's, East Fork Clark's, Flathead) River) above the great falls of that river, in the rocky Mounts.
  • Winter 1805-1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
Journal of Historical Geography [Great Britain] 18:1 (1992) 27–40.
  • The herbage is parched and withered: the brooks and streams are dried up; the buffalo, the elk and the deer have wandered to distant parts, keeping within the verge of expiring verdure, and leaving behind them a vast uninhabited solitude, seamed by ravines, the beds of former torrents, but now serving only to tantalize and increase the thirst of the traveller.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • John L. Allen
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • Later the same day Clark bagged a deer while walking across a large island covered with ryegrass. The men needed a boost.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • Then up the sides of the gorge onto the plains again, with the usual fantastic numbers of prairie dogs, wolves, antelopes, deer, and buffalo. A slight rise in the ground gave them a stunning view of the Rockies, ridge after snow-covered ridge trending slightly north of northwest, "an august spectacle ... rendered more formidable by the recollection that we had them to pass."
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Names 52:3 (September 2004):163–237 Copyright 2004 by The American Name Society 163
  • It has been claimed that the name comes from Pawnee (Caddoan) paariiku' 'horn' or arikaraaru' 'buck deer', referring to a custom of wearing two bones in the hair, standing up like horns; however, this is not in fact the Pawnee name for the Arikara, and it is likely to be a folk etymology (NAPUS; D.
  • Also 〈E-lal-lar〉. Applied by L & C to Deer Island, Columbia Co., OR; from Chinookan /ilálX/ 'deer' (JL CE 6:470; 7:25 n.1).
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • William Bright
Montana [The Magazine of Western History] 21.3 (1971): 2–17.
  • Although the wind blew violently from the west and northwest, stinging the faces of the men and sometimes obscuring the far shores of the Missouri with clouds of dust and sand, the countryside was rich and beautiful, grass-cloaked and teeming with immense herds of buffalo, deer, elk, and antelope. It was a beautiful spring and if the winds continued to blow and ice formed on the cooking pots during the nights, the days were warm.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • John L. Allen
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • He started out in December 1797 with nine men, "fine, hearty, good humoured . . . fond of full feeding, willing to hunt for it, but more willing to enjoy it"—eight pounds of fresh deer, elk, or buffalo meat per man per day. Hoping to do some independent trading, the nine took along four or five heavily laden sleds pulled by thirty wolfish dogs.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 2. The Teton Confrontation
  • Their instruments were of two kinds: a tambourine-like instrument made by stretching a skin over a willow hoop, and various rattles made by tying deer and antelope hooves on a long stick. Clark noted that the rattles made a "gingling noise."
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • According to Zodak Cramer's The Navigator, potential feasts abounded: turkeys, partridges, bear, and deer in the forests, ducks, pike, sturgeon, and, notably, catfish weighing up to a hundred pounds each along the river.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 3. The Arikara Interlude
  • Hoes or digging sticks were made from the shoulder blades of buffalo or deer. These scapular hoes were used to break ground and keep weeds from overgrowing the plots.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 6. Across the Divide
  • All fears were quickly allayed when the Shoshoni announced his news, explaining that Drouillard had killed a deer and all were invited to feast on it. As hungry Indians ate the uncooked meat, Lewis took note that the fear of possible ambush had reduced the caravan to no more than twenty-eight men and three women.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda