Filter by:

Date


Dates in both fields not required
Entering in only one field Searches
Year, Month, & Day Single day
Year & Month Whole month
Year Whole year
Month & Day 1803-#-# to 1806-#-#
Month 1803-#-1 to 1806-#-31
Day 1803-01-# to 1806-12-#

Category

Part of Website

State

Search : neared

Your search returned 1355 results from all items Search Only Journals

The Missing Journals of Meriwether Lewis
  • Lewis returned to his journal writing on November 11 but gave the journal to Clark on November 28 near Kaskaskia, as the two captains separated, Lewis going ahead by land to St.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Gary E. Moulton
Great Plains Quarterly 13.2 (1993): 69–80
  • La Harpe ascended the Red River into Oklahoma and then crossed the height-of-land to the Arkansas River, ultimately traveling as far west as present-day Tulsa, believing he would locate not only the source of the river but the Spanish settlements of New Mexico and California (viewed as only a short distance beyond). Native American informants near his farthest westward penetration of the Plains told him that he was still a great distance from the Spanish settlements and could tell him nothing of a route to the Pacific, and he returned to the Mississippi valley.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • John L. Allen
Western Historical Quarterly 33.1 (2002): 5–18
  • A little less than a month later, with the expedition near present day Great Falls, Montana, Lewis heard distinct cannon–like booms from the distant mountains.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
Great Plains Quarterly 4.1 (1984): 54–69.
  • William Dunbar (1749–1810) was a Scottish planter and man of science who settled near Natchez in 1792 and was surveyor of the district. He served as representative of the Spanish government in the establishment of the boundary between the United States and Spanish possessions.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Silvio A. Bedini
Great Plains Quarterly 17.3–4 (1997): 165–84.
  • The captains were convinced that the watershed portage they sought lay at or very near the source of the "true genuine Missouri." They had passed the south branch and the "River which scolds at all others," both of which their informants at Fort Mandan had described; now they were looking out for the great falls.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Barbara Belyea