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Your search returned 4347 results from all items Search Only Journals

  • October 8, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
  • April 12, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • April 13, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • July 26, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • July 19, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • August 5, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • August 25, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • October 24, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
  • November 24, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
  • Weather, January 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
  • March 30, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • April 29, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • May 6, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • May 29, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
  • May 27, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • Weather, May 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
  • July 1, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • July 22, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • August 2, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 5. Lewis and Clark as Plains Ethnographers
  • During the winter with the Mandans , journal entries noted creation myths, migration legends, burial practices, and sacred rituals.
  • That methodology can be best seen in their "Estimate of the Eastern Indians." More than random entries in their journals, the "Estimate" was the showpiece of their ethnography.
  • Most of the ethnographic data collected by the expedition was recorded in journal entries, the "Estimate of the Eastern Indians," and the now-lost vocabularies.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
  • May 11, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • June 9, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • July 31, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • August 17, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • August 15, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • October 19, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
  • January 8, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
  • February 15, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • April 14, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • July 27, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • September 3, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
Lewis & Clark among the Indians Afterword
  • Guided by Jefferson's precise instructions and their own curiosity, expedition ethnographers amassed a virtual library of information about the Indians. Journal entries, vocabularies, drawings, maps, artifacts, population estimates—all hold priceless knowledge about Indian ways from the great river to the western sea.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
August 31, 1804 - Clark, William
  • a bottle of whiskey and himself with the Chiefs Crossed the river and Camped on the opposit bank    Soon after a violent Wind from the N W. accompanied with rain An astronomical table appears here at the top of document 49 of the Field Notes, after which the August 31 entry continues. Clark (Clark, William) used asterisks to preserve continuity.
  • Journal Entries
  • August 31, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
August 14, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Evidently the Shoshones (Shoshone Indians) gave Clark (Clark, William) the following geographical information through Sacagawea (Sacagawea) on August 20, 1805, indicating that Lewis's (Lewis, Meriwether) present entry was written some time after that date. The captains were separated from August 18 to 29.
  • Journal Entries
  • August 14, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • October 29, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
  • April 14, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • April 26, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • Weather, April 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
  • August 11, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • August 10, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • Postexpedition 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
Great Plains Quarterly 13.2 (1993): 69–80
  • Also important was the fact that the English, moving into the northern Plains from the Hudson Bay drainage, had begun to compete with the French in the area west of the Great Lakes and may have thus delayed French entry into the Plains region for several decades. But most meaningful, perhaps, was quite simply that the French had plenty to occupy their exploratory energies east of the Great Plains region.
  • Some of these travelers may have reached the eastern fringes of the Great Plains but the literature of their efforts is geographically inconclusive on that point. The first documented entry into the Plains by a French explorer began in 1718 when Benard La Harpe was dispatched to follow the Red River upstream, cross to the Arkansas, and attempt to locate the Passage from that river.
  • But the invented traditions of Garden and Passage remained paramount. Beginning with the first entries into the region of the Great Plains—the "New World encounters" of Spanish, English, and French discoverers—and continuing into the period of American exploration and beyond, this region has been viewed by different groups through lenses of different understanding.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • John L. Allen
Names 52:3 (September 2004):163–237 Copyright 2004 by The American Name Society 163
  • Missouri Historical Review 72 (April 1978): 262–270. Lewis and Clark, journal entries, 20–21 May 1804, in Gary E. Moulton, ed., The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1983–1999), 2: 240–244. Clark, journal entry, 23 September 1806, ibid., 8: 370–371. James P. Ronda, "St. Louis Welcomes and Toasts the Lewis and Clark Expedition: A Newly Discovered 1806 Newspaper Account," We Proceeded On 13 (February 1987): 19–20.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • William E. Foley
  • May 8, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • May 31, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • June 13, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • August 16, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • August 21, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • May 8, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • July 17, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William