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Your search returned 4347 results from all items Search Only Journals

  • August 19, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • July 15, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
  • July 28, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
  • July 27, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • August 24, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • April 2, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
Exploring the Explorers: Great Plains Peoples and the the Lewis and Clark Expedition Great Plains Quarterly 13.2 (1993): 81–90
  • As William Clark put it in one journal entry, Indian neighbors were "verry Curious in examining our works.”
  • When expedition journal keepers encountered native women, the accounts they wrote revealed some things while concealing others. Journal entries made it plain that women were defined in terms of sexual identity, reproductive history, and domestic labor.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • JAMES P. RONDA
  • November 23, 1803
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • Winter 1804-1805
  • Journals
  • Unknown
  • June 17-19, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
  • July 25, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
  • July 30, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 85:2 (1961): 163–77.
  • But, as an inducement perhaps to make the entries, we are told that the price of this "genuine work" is to be fixed at a future day; that the map will most probably be published the latter end of October next; the first volume of the work about the first of January, 1808; and that the two remaining volumes will follow in succession as early as they possibly can be prepared for publication; or (as it stated in the proposals) at as early periods as the avocations of the author will permit.
  • There were thousands of pages of journal entries, kept by both Lewis and Clark, and the two explorers seem to have believed that these could somehow be transmuted into a printed book without further effort on their part.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • DONALD JACKSON
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • Clark tucks into the middle of his diary entry for August 10 an exact copy of the description of a "singular cherry," with which the wounded Lewis, lying on his stomach, closed his entry of August 12.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
  • June 14, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • October 16, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
Western Historical Quarterly 35 (Spring 2004): 53–72. Copyright © 2004, Western History Association.)
  • André where MacKay was commandant. The journal entry on 10 January 1804 reveals that the historic meeting between Lewis and Clark and MacKay was kept secret.
  • By handing over the genuine map to Lewis and Clark updated with an additional five years of river information, MacKay would demonstrate his allegiance to the new American government. The journal entries preceding 10 January were brief, and Clark does not mention when he sent Private Field to locate MacKay.
  • Due to the winter weather, the afternoon hour when MacKay arrived, and the fact they needed much time to discuss the intricacies of a river map written in French, MacKay stayed overnight and possibly longer. Clark's journal entries for the next two days were short; he continued to complain of being ill due to the severe "Ducking" on 9 January, and indicated that Lewis may have left the camp late on 12 January.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Thomas C. Danisi and W. Raymond Wood
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • A line of remarks followed most weather entries. The data are reproduced by the month in Moulton's edition of the journals, and are collected in a single entry and printed as an appendix in Biddle, III, 846–89.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
  • July 26, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
Great Plains Quarterly 17.3–4 (1997): 165–84.
  • The stages of drawing another map of his route to the Rockies ten years earlier are noted in Fidler's journal entries for March 1802. In July of that year, he sent both maps with a covering letter to the Hudson's Bay Company's board of directors: The enclosed is a Map of my Journey from Buckingham House to the Rocky Mountain in the Years 1792 a 3; in Six sheets.
  • In the following discussion, a few phrases from these entries are quoted without further acknowledgment. Bernard De Voto, The Course of Empire (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1952), 422–553 (quoted passages, 553, 482).
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Barbara Belyea
Oregon Historical Quarterly 105:3 (2004): 390–421.
  • He "halted at the mouth of a large river on the Lard [south] Side, This river throws out emence quanty of 〈quick〉 Sand and is verry Shallow . . . much resembling the river Plat[te].” In his second entry for the day, he repeated that he: arrived at the enterance of a river which appeared to Scatter over a Sand bar, the bottom of which I could See quite across and did not appear to be 4 Inches deep in any part; I attempted to wade this Stream and to my astonishment found the bottom a quick Sand, and impassable. . . .
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Jim E. O'Connor
J & MC Quarterly 80.4 (2003): 866–883
  • There is a kind of daily log, apparently similar to the daily notes from which the daily entries in the journals were written after the party started up the Missouri, but apparently also much abbreviated.
  • No one who has read either the Journals or Biddle's History could make the statement, for almost every daily entry shows how the boats were in fact propelled, and that was never once by horses; indeed there were no horses for such a purpose.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Bernard DeVoto
  • Winter 1804-1805
  • Journals
  • Vaughan
Heritage of the Great Plains 37: no. 1 (Spring/Summer 2004)
  • The first week of September, 1804, as the weather grew cooler, the expedition entered the short grass country of the drier High Plains traveled beyond the parameters of this study. Clark's journal entries on the return trip were often shorter, and contained briefer descriptions of the now familiar Plains summer weather.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Karen Jean De Bres
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • At sundown the boats were reloaded. The next day Lewis's journal entries ceased and were not resumed until November 11, when the wayfarers were at Fort Massac—a gap of fifty-four days and 694 miles.
  • Later, near Cahokia, December 7, Clark reported that a violent wind blew down one of the masts. (Quaife, entry for December 7.) This suggests the unusual second mast was another of Lewis's innovations.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • A hole in the top, equipped on the inside with a ladder, served both as entry and chimney. When warm weather arrived, the cave dwellers emerged to live in long plank houses like the ones the visitors used.
  • The existence of five canoes is made clear in Lewis's journal entry for April 20.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 7. Down the Columbia
  • He was welcomed warmly and invited into one of the houses. Clark's journal entry for the day contains a careful description of the house and details of its construction.
  • Despite language and time limitations, Clark's journal entries contain an amazing amount of information about the river peoples and their ways.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
  • Winter 1804-1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
  • April 6, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
Great Plains Quarterly 24:4 (2004): 263–82.
  • It refers to the Teton Sioux as "among the most warlike of Indians, swaggerers and bullies," and it notes that Lewis handled the Blackfeet encounter "with an expertness that no one could have surpassed." The journal entries of the expedition members cement this impression; Clark, for example, used words like "vilenous [sic], hostile, and treacherous" to describe the Teton Sioux, who "ill treated us."
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Kevin S. Blake
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • Another trade article in great demand was produced by a Chinook madam, wife of a chief, who showed up with six of her daughters and nieces "for the purpose of gratifying the passions of our men." Clark's diary entries for November 21 grew puritanical. The young women's countenances, he admitted grudgingly, were pretty—if one ignored their slanted foreheads.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
  • August 13, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
North Dakota Quarterly 71.2 (2004): 6–27.
  • Captain Clark was equally well informed, but his conversation was always pleasant, for he seemed to dislike giving offence unnecessarily." Such journal entries as this provide a window of insight on the Lewis and Clark expedition not available from the expedition's own journals.
  • Ordway, the most reliable of the expedition's journal keepers, managed to write an entry for November 22, 1804, without ever mentioning his ordeal—surely one of the most embarrassing moments of the journey for him.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Clay S. Jenkinson
  • Winter 1804-1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • The unkempt grounds were tidied up and surrounded by a rail fence, but little could be done about the approach to the entry hall; the outside steps and porch were still made of planks. Because the new secretary of state, James Madison, and his wife, Dolley, were temporarily without housing, Jefferson invited them to stay in the mansion until their own quarters were ready.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 9. The Way Home
  • Lewis and Clark never lacked a flair for the dramatic, no matter how understated their journal entries. Borrowing from native cartographic techniques, the captains began the grand council by drawing a map of the country with charcoal on a stretched hide.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • Cutright, Pioneering Naturalists, 160–62, and "Barks and Saltpeter"; II, entries for July 11–15, passim; Chuinard, 288–91; Will. II, 165–78, with map on 176.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Montana [The Magazine of Western History] 21.3 (1971): 2–17.
  • Louis: 1952). Cf. the captains' entries in their daily journals for December 1719 (RGT:OJ:I:238–239), January 5 (RGT:OJ:I:244–245), January 7 (RGT:OJ:I:245–246), January 16 (RGT:OJ:I:249), February 18 (RGT:OJ:I:263), and February 27 (RGT:OJ:I:266).
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • John L. Allen
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • The unkempt grounds were tidied up and surrounded by a rail fence, but little could be done about the approach to the entry hall; the outside steps and porch were still made of planks. Because the new secretary of state, James Madison, and his wife, Dolley, were temporarily without housing, Jefferson invited them to stay in the mansion until their own quarters were ready.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Names 52:3 (September 2004):163–237 Copyright 2004 by The American Name Society 163
  • Terms recorded by L & C in the Columbia River area were sometimes from varieties of Chinookan, sometimes from Chinook Jargon, as indicated in the entries below. Some notes are necessary regarding the orthographic systems and symbols used here.
  • Transcriptions by L & C are here printed in bold face at the beginning of an entry; elsewhere, 〈angle brackets〉 are used to set off these as well as non-systematic spellings used by other writers. (2) Where present-day English spellings are given, they are accompanied (whenever information is available) by "figured spellings" given in [ square brackets].
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • William Bright
The Men of the Lewis & Clark Expedition The Men of the Lewis & Clark Expedition
  • Ordway's descriptions of the most dangerous moments come the closest to expressing outright fear, just as his entries about Christmas and his longing to return home seem the most heartfelt.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Charles G. Clarke
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 1. The Voyage Begins
  • In a letter to Jefferson, Lewis reported that he had obtained Evans and Mackay's journal material dating from 1795 to 1797. Those entries, written in French, were being translated by the ever-useful John Hay.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
  • Winter 1804-1805
  • Journals
  • Unknown