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 : entries

Your search returned 4347 results from all items Search Only Journals

July 21, 1805 - Ordway, John
  • This is a very confused day in the captains' journals and on the maps. See their entries of this day.
  • Journal Entries
  • July 21, 1805
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
November 11, 1805 - Ordway, John
  • Some of our party giged and Shot 16 Sammon Trout Perhaps Samuel Hill (Hill, Samuel) of Boston (Boston, Mass.) , skipper of the brig Lydia, who traded with the Indians of the lower Columbia (Columbia River) (see Clark's (Clark, William) entry for November 6, 1805).
  • Journal Entries
  • November 11, 1805
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
November 19, 1805 - Whitehouse, Joseph
  • A very different impression of the appearance of the local people from that of Lewis (Lewis, Meriwether) ; see the captain's entry for March 19, 1806. They were Chinooks (Chinook Indians) , of the Chinookan (Chinook Indians) language family.
  • Journal Entries
  • November 19, 1805
  • Journals
  • Whitehouse, Joseph
December 5, 1805 - Whitehouse, Joseph
  • .)) ; see Whitehouse's (Whitehouse, Joseph) entry of December 7. The party's Netul River (Lewis and Clark (Fort, Netul) River) , now Lewis and Clark River (Lewis and Clark (Fort, Netul) River) , Clatsop County (Clatsop County, Oreg.) , Oregon (Oregon) .
  • Journal Entries
  • December 5, 1805
  • Journals
  • Whitehouse, Joseph
December 13, 1805 - Whitehouse, Joseph
  • .— Skins of the Oregon bobcat, Lynx rufus fasciatus, and the mountain beaver, Aplodontia rufa. See Ordway's (Ordway, John) entry for this day.
  • Journal Entries
  • December 13, 1805
  • Journals
  • Whitehouse, Joseph
March 1, 1806 - Ordway, John
  • Youngs River (Youngs (Kilhow-a-nah-kle) River) , Clatsop County (Clatsop County, Oreg.) , Oregon (Oregon) ; see notes at Clark's (Clark, William) entry of November 30, 1805. The term is Chinookan, giławanax̣ł. The Chinookan ní'tul; it is Lewis and Clark River (Lewis and Clark (Fort, Netul) River) .
  • Journal Entries
  • March 1, 1806
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
March 2, 1806 - Whitehouse, Joseph
  • Either the white sturgeon, Acipenser transmontanus, or green sturgeon. See Clark (Clark, William) entries for November 19, 1805, and Lewis (Lewis, Meriwether) for February 25, 1806.
  • Journal Entries
  • March 2, 1806
  • Journals
  • Whitehouse, Joseph
April 26, 1806 - Ordway, John
  • The captains note that it was seven miles above the camp of October 19, 1805. See their entries for this date.
  • Journal Entries
  • April 26, 1806
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
May 31, 1806 - Gass, Patrick
  • They were also the two hunters who returned at the end of this entry. Goodrich (Goodrich, Silas) and Willard (Willard, Alexander) .
  • Journal Entries
  • May 31, 1806
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
June 3, 1806 - Ordway, John
  • The stubs of several pages of the notebook are apparent between this entry and the previous one. Colter (Colter, John) , Joseph Field (Field, Joseph) , and Willard (Willard, Alexander) , write the captains.
  • Journal Entries
  • June 3, 1806
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
September 12, 1806 - Gass, Patrick
  • Clark (Clark, William) describes the missions of these men in this day's entry.
  • Journal Entries
  • September 12, 1806
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
May 29, 1805 entry by Meriwether Lewis, part 1
  • May 29, 1805 entry by Meriwether Lewis, part 1
  • May 29, 1805 entry by Meriwether Lewis, part 1 Last night we were all allarmed by a large buffaloe Bull, which swam over from the opposite shore and coming along side of the white perogue, climbed over it to land, he then alarmed ran up the bank in full speed directly towards the fires, and was within 18 inches of the heads of some of the men who lay sleeping before the centinel could allarm him or make him change his course, still more alarmed, he now took his direction immediately towards our lodge, passing between 4 fires and within a few inches of the heads of one range of the men as they yet lay sleeping, when he came near the tent, my dog saved us by causing him to change his course a second time, which he did by turning a little to the right, and was quickly out of sight, leaving us by this time all in an uproar with our guns in or hands, enquiring of each other the case of the alarm, which after a few moments was explained by the centinel; we were happy to find no one hirt.
  • N.D.
  • Multimedia
  • Gary E. Moulton
December 25, 1805 entry by William Clark
  • December 25, 1805 entry by William Clark
  • December 25, 1805 entry by William Clark at day light this morning we we[re] awoke by the discharge of the fire arm of all our party & a Selute, Shoute and a Song which the whole party joined in under our windows, after which they retired to their rooms were Chearfull all the morning—    after brackfast we divided our Tobacco which amounted to 12 carrots one half of which we gave to the men of the party who used tobacco, and to those who doe not use it we make a present of a handkerchief, The Indians leave us in the evening all the party Snugly fixed in their huts—    I recved a presnt of Capt L. of a fleece hosrie Shirt Draws and Socks—, a pr. mockersons of Whitehouse a Small Indian basket of Gutherich, two Dozen white weazils tails of the Indian woman, & Some black root of the Indians before their departure...The day proved Showerey wet and disagreeable. we would have Spent this day the nativity of Christ in feasting, had we any thing either to raise our Sperits or even gratify our appetites, our Diner concisted of pore Elk, So much Spoiled that we eate it thro' mear necessity, Some Spoiled pounded fish and a fiew roots.
  • N.D.
  • Multimedia
  • Gary E. Moulton
May 13, 1804 - Clark, William
  • Latd. 38 d 55 19 6/10 North of equator Longtd. 89 57 45— West of Greenwich This is the first dated entry in Clark's (Clark, William) notebook journal Codex A. The Detachment Orders of May 26, 1804 (see below), indicate substantially the same arrangement of men in the boats, although one or two shifts may have taken place.
  • This latitude and longitude is at the bottom of a page in Codex A; the May 13 entry, apparently written later, had to be interlined with it. The position is probably that of the River Dubois camp (Camp Dubois (Camp Wood, River Dubois) (Ill.)) , but if so the Captains have placed it too far east.
  • Journal Entries
  • May 13, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
July 29, 1804 - Whitehouse, Joseph
  • .— We rowed 11 Miles this day & encamp'd on the South side of the River La Liberté (La Liberté) , who asserted his own liberty by deserting the expedition; see Appendix A, and Clark's (Clark, William) entry for this day. A nearly illegible word, but "Camp" is the most likely interpretation.
  • From the French blaireau, for the badger, Taxidea taxus, but the others indicate it was killed the next day. See Clark's (Clark, William) entry for July 30.
  • Journal Entries
  • July 29, 1804
  • Journals
  • Whitehouse, Joseph
September 4, 1804 - Ordway, John
  • See the discussion of their identification at Clark's (Clark, William) entry for this day. Hackberry, Celtis occidentalis L., not mentioned by Clark (Clark, William) . Niobrara River (Niobrara (Quicurre, Rapid) River) , Knox County (Knox County, Nebr.) , with a Ponca (Ponca Indians) village nearby; see Clark's (Clark, William) entry for September 5.
  • Journal Entries
  • September 4, 1804
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
October 15, 1804 - Ordway, John
  • Meaning the Cheyenne Indians (Cheyenne Indians) , which Ordway (Ordway, John) gave as "Shian (Cheyenne Indians) " in his next entry. See Clark's (Clark, William) entries for this day and the next.
  • Journal Entries
  • October 15, 1804
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
April 7, 1805 - Whitehouse, Joseph
  • .— Kakawita (Raven Man (Kakawita)) , or Raven Man (Raven Man (Kakawita)) , an Arikara (Arikara Indians) chief; see Clark's (Clark, William) entry for the date. For the names of members of the return party, see Lewis's (Lewis, Meriwether) entry for this day.
  • Journal Entries
  • April 7, 1805
  • Journals
  • Whitehouse, Joseph
June 2, 1806 - Gass, Patrick
  • For a detailed account of their journey, see Ordway's (Ordway, John) entries of May 28–June 2, 1806, where the question of their route is examined in the notes. Frazer (Frazer, Robert) ; see Ordway's (Ordway, John) entry of May 29. An example of how European goods penetrated to people who had never seen whites.
  • Journal Entries
  • June 2, 1806
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
June 18, 1806 - Ordway, John
  • See Lewis's (Lewis, Meriwether) entry of June 8, 1806, for a discussion of the term. Meaning the Model 1803 rifle. See Clark's (Clark, William) entry of May 10, 1804. From Lewis (Lewis, Meriwether) and Clark (Clark, William) it is apparent that the fish are steelhead trout.
  • Journal Entries
  • June 18, 1806
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
June 30, 1806 - Clark, William
  • He added this passage to the end of his weather entry of June 30, filling out some blank space in Codex M, p. 150. Since it is more appropriate to daily-entry material, it is placed here by date.
  • Journal Entries
  • June 30, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
July 19, 1806 - Clark, William
  • Side—    3 m East 3 miles to Some large trees in the Lard. bend passing Several Islands    river very much divided and crooked    Camped and killed 7 Elk and 4 Deer and a Antelope and wounded    4 ½ miles— The first draft courses and distances break after this day, since Clark's (Clark, William) party did not move again until July 24, when they resume. Preceding the entry for July 24, 1806, and upside down on the page facing the entry for July 19, appear the following columns of figures.
  • Journal Entries
  • July 19, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
May 14, 1804 - Clark, William
  • [commencement] of my Journal No 1. There are two entries for May 14, 1804, in the Field Notes. The first is at the end of document 12 and is considered the end of the Dubois Journal; the second begins document 13 at the beginning of the River Journal.
  • Journal Entries
  • May 14, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
June 12, 1804 - Ordway, John
  • .; see Clark's (Clark, William) entry for June 10. Meaning the Sioux Indians (Sioux Indians) , probably the Yankton Sioux (Sioux Indians, Yankton) .
  • Journal Entries
  • June 12, 1804
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
June 20, 1804 - Ordway, John
  • Clark (Clark, William) indicates that the party passed this stream on June 19; see his entry for this day for a discussion of this matter. Mentioned only by Ordway (Ordway, John) this day, it is probably wild crab, Pyrus ioensis (Wood) Bailey.
  • Journal Entries
  • June 20, 1804
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
July 30, 1804 - Gass, Patrick
  • Badger, Taxidea taxus; see Clark's (Clark, William) entry for this day. Gass's (Gass, Patrick) "prarow" is his attempt at the French term for the animal, blaireau.
  • Journal Entries
  • July 30, 1804
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
August 19, 1804 - Whitehouse, Joseph
  • in the Evening they left our Camp, being well pleased, One of our Serjeants named Floyd (Floyd, Charles) , was taken Ill of a Cholic this morning Perhaps Labiche (Labiche, François) ; see the fair copy entry of August 17.
  • Journal Entries
  • August 19, 1804
  • Journals
  • Whitehouse, Joseph
December 25, 1804 - Gass, Patrick
  • The wife of Rene Jusseaume (Jusseaume, René) and Toussaint Charbonneau's (Charbonneau, Toussaint) two wives, including Sacagawea (Sacagawea) ; see Clark's (Clark, William) entries of October 27 and November 4, 1804.
  • Journal Entries
  • December 25, 1804
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
January 1, 1805 - Gass, Patrick
  • See Clark's (Clark, William) and Ordway's (Ordway, John) entries for the day.
  • Journal Entries
  • January 1, 1805
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
April 7, 1805 - Gass, Patrick
  • Gass (Gass, Patrick) also did not add the unnamed Mandan (Mandan Indians) who started with them but dropped out on April 9. See the captains' entries for this day for names of the permanent party and a note on the composition of the return party.
  • Journal Entries
  • April 7, 1805
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
May 17, 1805 - Gass, Patrick
  • See Lewis's (Lewis, Meriwether) entry for confusion about the party's names for these creeks.
  • Journal Entries
  • May 17, 1805
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
June 11, 1805 - Clark, William
  • after night it became cold & the wind blew hard, the Indian woman (Sacagawea) verry Sick, I blead her which appeared to be of great Service to her    both rivers riseing fast Lewis (Lewis, Meriwether) may have added the words "and blacksmith's tools" and perhaps other words above in this entry.
  • Journal Entries
  • June 11, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
July 30, 1805 - Clark, William
  • Capt Lewis (Lewis, Meriwether) who walkd on Shore did not join me this evening For Clark's (Clark, William) courses, see a note at his entry of July 31, 1805. Although the Jefferson River (Jefferson River (North, Southwest Fork)) meanders extensively here through a wide floodplain, its bed is dominantly coarse gravel and cobbles.
  • Journal Entries
  • July 30, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
August 19, 1805 - Ordway, John
  • See Lewis's (Lewis, Meriwether) entry for this day.
  • Journal Entries
  • August 19, 1805
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
September 18, 1805 - Clark, William
  • Killed nothing in those emence mountains of stones falling timber & brush The entries in Clark's (Clark, William) Elkskin-bound Journal expand each day from simple courses and distances; this is particularly noticeable from this date, when the two captains separated.
  • Journal Entries
  • September 18, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
November 23, 1805 - Gass, Patrick
  • Probably the man known as Jack Ramsay (Ramsay, Jack) ; see Clark's (Clark, William) entry of December 31, 1805.
  • Journal Entries
  • November 23, 1805
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
December 5, 1805 - Gass, Patrick
  • on Lewis and Clark River (Lewis and Clark (Fort, Netul) River) , Clatsop County (Clatsop County, Oreg.) , Oregon (Oregon) , called Netul River (Lewis and Clark (Fort, Netul) River) by the party; see Gass's (Gass, Patrick) entry for December 7.
  • Journal Entries
  • December 5, 1805
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
December 13, 1805 - Clark, William
  • we Continue building our houses of the Streightest & [one word illegible] logs, Sent out 2 men to Split timber to Cover the Cabins, and I am glad to find the timber Splits butifully, and of any width— The French term loup cervier denotes the Canada lynx, Lynx canadensis. Burroughs, 92. In the second entry Clark (Clark, William) notes that the small animal mentioned first was about the "Size of a Cat," by which he probably means the Oregon bobcat.
  • Journal Entries
  • December 13, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
January 6, 1806 - Ordway, John
  • Others who may have been in the party were Jean Baptiste Charbonneau (Charbonneau, Jean Baptiste) , Colter (Colter, John) , Lepage (Lepage, Jean Baptiste) , Reubin Field (Field, Reubin) , Potts (Potts, John) , Labiche (Labiche, François) , Windsor (Windsor, Richard) , Shields (Shields, John) , and either Cruzatte (Cruzatte, Pierre) or Weiser (Weiser, Peter) . See Clark's (Clark, William) entry of this day.
  • Journal Entries
  • January 6, 1806
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
January 6, 1806 - Whitehouse, Joseph
  • .— Clark's (Clark, William) party apparently included Pryor (Pryor, Nathaniel Hale) , Cruzatte (Cruzatte, Pierre) or Weiser (Weiser, Peter) (probably the former), Frazer (Frazer, Robert) , Colter (Colter, John) , Werner (Werner, William) , Lepage (Lepage, Jean Baptiste) , Reubin Field (Field, Reubin) , Potts (Potts, John) , McNeal (McNeal, Hugh) , Labiche (Labiche, François) , Windsor (Windsor, Richard) , Shields (Shields, John) , Charbonneau (Charbonneau, Toussaint) , Sacagawea (Sacagawea) , and Jean Baptiste Charbonneau (Charbonneau, Jean Baptiste) . See Clark's (Clark, William) entries for January 6.
  • Journal Entries
  • January 6, 1806
  • Journals
  • Whitehouse, Joseph
April 22, 1806 - Gass, Patrick
  • In it were Colter (Colter, John) and Potts (Potts, John) ; Reubin Field (Field, Reubin) was in the same canoe with Gass (Gass, Patrick) . See journal entries of the captains and of Ordway (Ordway, John) for this day.
  • Journal Entries
  • April 22, 1806
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
April 19, 1806 - Clark, William
  • The description there for this day's entry is brief, but more follows on April 20.
  • Journal Entries
  • April 19, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
May 14, 1806 - Ordway, John
  • .— Collins (Collins, John) , Labiche (Labiche, François) , and Shannon (Shannon, George) , according to the captains, and as Ordway (Ordway, John) notes later in this entry.
  • Journal Entries
  • May 14, 1806
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
August 8, 1806 - Gass, Patrick
  • Dak.) , North Dakota (North Dakota) ; see Clark's (Clark, William) entry of August 4. In Williams County (Williams County, N. Dak.) , several miles southwest of Williston (Williston, N.
  • Journal Entries
  • August 8, 1806
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
May 26, 1805 entry by Meriwether Lewis
  • May 26, 1805 entry by Meriwether Lewis
  • May 26, 1805 entry by Meriwether Lewis In the after part of the day I also walked out and ascended the river hills which I found sufficiently fortiegueing.   
  • N.D.
  • Multimedia
  • Gary E. Moulton
July 15, 1804 - Clark, William
  • This is probably because Clark (Clark, William) was ashore much of the day. The second entry, S. 75 W., disagrees with the Codex A course, given as N 70° W.
  • This last sentence is written at right angles to the rest of the entry, over the rest, but appears to be part of the entry. Clark (Clark, William) ran out of space at the bottom of the page.
  • Journal Entries
  • July 15, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
August 11, 1804 - Clark, William
  • Clark (Clark, William) changes the designations from "crains" to "Herrons" between entries. It is the great blue heron, first mentioned in weather remarks for February 13, 1804.
  • This is probably the correct course for the day. Clark's (Clark, William) last entry in the Field Notes for August 11 probably belongs with his August 12 entry (as carried there) and the total should be 17.
  • Journal Entries
  • August 11, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
August 8, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • .— Here end the daily entries in Codex L: the remainder consists of weather diaries for June, July, and August (through the twelfth), 1806. Immediately following this entry is a notation by Clark (Clark, William) : "a Suplt. to Come in here."
  • Journal Entries
  • August 8, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
undated, ca. April 16, 1804 - Clark, William
  • [blank]   13.     68   14.     68   15.     68   16.     68   17.     68   18.     68   19.     68   20.     68   21.     68   22.     68   23.     68   24.     68   25.     68   26.     68   27.     68   28.     68   29.     68   30.     68   31.     68   32.     68   33.     90   34.     90   35.     90   36.     90   37.     68   38.     68   39.     68   40.     68   41.     68   42.     68   43.     68   44.     68   45.     68   46.     90   47.   100   48.   100   49.   100   50.   100     3605 No. 12.   100     3,705 These figures are written crossways at the bottom of the observe and the top of the reverse of document 11 and are inserted here because Clark (Clark, William) appears to have made corrections in his April 15 entry based on these calculations. I have deleted the subtotal at the end of side one.
  • Journal Entries
  • undated, ca. April 16, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
June 13, 1804 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • M. 10 54 38 38° 41' 45"   " 59 49 " 39 —   11 3 8 " 37 30   " 6 44 " 36 45   " 10 40 " 34 00   " 16 — " 31 45 This entry and the next are Lewis's (Lewis, Meriwether) observations from Codex O.
  • Journal Entries
  • June 13, 1804
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether