Lewis and Clark: Partners in DiscoveryThis is the first authoritative biography of the two great explorers charged by President Thomas Jefferson with exploring the lands beyond the headwaters of the Mississippi in 1803. In writing the work, Dr. Bakeless, noted American historian, drew on his own exhaustive field research as well as a wealth of original documents, including diaries kept by expedition members. These recorded not only the bold outlines of the trip with its Indian fights and other perils, but also such fascinating details as the number of buffaloes eaten, grizzly bears fought, the variety of plants and seeds collected, and the customs and lore of the Indian tribes. The expedition was planned with military precision down to the last grain of powder, but in the final analysis it was the courage and resourcefulness of the two leaders that kept the party together for three years. Their perseverance and “horse sense” in the face of incredible obstacles and hardships was largely responsible for the success of the undertaking, which in turn buttressed Jefferson’s vision of a United States stretching beyond the Continental Divide to the shores of the Pacific. Clear and well written, Dr. Bakeless’ book contains an immense amount of material unknown before its original publication, and the whole work is informed with the author’s fresh insights and keen perceptions. It will be welcomed by historians and students of American history but it will also be read with great enjoyment by anyone interested in the two remarkable men who led one of the most important and influential expeditions in the annals of exploration. |
From inside the book
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... PACIFIC, Captain James Cook. (22766-9) THE ROMANCE OF THE COLORADO RIVER, Frederick S. Dellenbaugh. (40439-0) THE MAKING OF A SAILOR, Frederick Pease Harlow. (25613-8) A HISTORY OF THE LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION, Meriwether Lewis and ...
... PACIFIC, Captain James Cook. (22766-9) THE ROMANCE OF THE COLORADO RIVER, Frederick S. Dellenbaugh. (40439-0) THE MAKING OF A SAILOR, Frederick Pease Harlow. (25613-8) A HISTORY OF THE LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION, Meriwether Lewis and ...
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... Pacific Northwest—both of whose nimble brains were covered by thatches of the most brilliant red, though the hot temper usually associated with it rarely appeared. No one knows when or how Meriwether Lewis and William Clark first became ...
... Pacific Northwest—both of whose nimble brains were covered by thatches of the most brilliant red, though the hot temper usually associated with it rarely appeared. No one knows when or how Meriwether Lewis and William Clark first became ...
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... Pacific, in 1805—1806. In spite of an influenza epidemic, Wayne also pushed a force still farther ahead to the scene of St. Clair's defeat, where he built Fort Recovery, “a work impervious to savage force.” A burial party under ...
... Pacific, in 1805—1806. In spite of an influenza epidemic, Wayne also pushed a force still farther ahead to the scene of St. Clair's defeat, where he built Fort Recovery, “a work impervious to savage force.” A burial party under ...
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... Pacific coast. It is likely enough that Theodosia may have visited Washington during the months she spent with her father in 1802; and it would be natural for the President's dashing young secretary to pay some attention to the Vice ...
... Pacific coast. It is likely enough that Theodosia may have visited Washington during the months she spent with her father in 1802; and it would be natural for the President's dashing young secretary to pay some attention to the Vice ...
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... Pacific to the Atlantic, “possibly with a single portage from the Western Ocean.” Not even Mr. Jefferson realized what a portage across the Rocky Mountains would be like, for no white man had yet seen the upper Missouri. The expedition ...
... Pacific to the Atlantic, “possibly with a single portage from the Western Ocean.” Not even Mr. Jefferson realized what a portage across the Rocky Mountains would be like, for no white man had yet seen the upper Missouri. The expedition ...
Contents
The Corps of Discovery starts | |
A winters tale Fort Mandan | |
Aboriginal amours | |
The next | |
Grizzly bears and rattlesnakes | |
At the Great Falls | |
The search for the Shoshones | |
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Common terms and phrases
5⅜ x 8½ Albemarle Albemarle County American Arikaras army Bates began Blackfeet boats British brother buffalo camp canoes Captain Lewis Charbonneau chief Clark Expedition Clatsop Columbia command Corps of Discovery council Creek Cruzat Drouilliard Dye MSS early expedition’s explorers fire fork Fort Clatsop Fort Mandan Frederick Bates friendly George Rogers Clark girl Governor grizzly Hist horses hunters Indians Jefferson John Journals journey killed knew land later letter Lewis and Clark Lewis’s Lieutenant Lolo Trail Louis Louisiana man’s Mandan village Maria’s River meat Meriwether Lewis miles Minnetarees Mississippi Missouri MoHS mountains Nez Percé officers Ordway overland Pacific party pirogue prairie President Pryor reached rifle Rockies Sacagawea Secretary sent Sergeant Gass Shannon She-he-ke shore Shoshone Sioux soldiers soon Spanish squaw Tabeau trading trail tribe Virginia warriors Washington Wayne white men’s William Clark wrote young