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BLAZIN G A NEW FRONTIE R The Lewis and Clark Expedition

BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

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Page 1: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

BLAZINGA NEW

FRONTIERThe Lewis and Clark

Expedition

Page 2: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

“……..the object of your mission is to explore the Missouri River, and such principal streams of it, as, by its course and communication with the waters of the Pacific Ocean, whether the Columbia, Oregon, Colorado or any other river, may offer the most direct and practicable water communication across this continent for the purposes of commerce….”

Thomas Jefferson’s Grand Idea

Lewis and Clark’s Great

Adventure

Page 3: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

By the time Jefferson was ready to request

funds for the expedition, his

relationship with the opposition in Congress

was anything but friendly.

Secretary of the Treasury Albert

Gallatin urged that the request be made in

secret.

The message focused on the state of Indian trade and mentioned the proposed western

expedition near the end of the document.

Page 4: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Meriwether Lewis left Philadelphia for St. Louis in 1803.

Page 5: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition
Page 6: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Roster of the Men

Page 7: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Manifest of Supplies

What would you bring to trade with the Natives?

Page 8: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Presents for the Indians• 12 dozen pocket mirrors • 4,600 sewing needles • 144 small scissors • 10 pounds of sewing thread • silk ribbons • ivory combs • handkerchiefs • yards of bright-colored cloth • 130 rolls of tobacco • tomahawks that doubled as pipes • 288 knives • 8 brass kettles • vermilion face paint • 33 pounds of tiny beads

Page 9: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Pipe TomahawkPipe tomahawks are artifacts unique to North America--created by Europeans as trade objects but often exchanged as diplomatic gifts.

They are powerful symbols of the choice Europeans and Indians faced whenever they met: one end was the pipe of peace, the other an axe of war.

Lewis's expedition packing list notes that fifty pipe tomahawks were to be taken on the expedition.

Page 10: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Jefferson Peace Medal

• Lewis was frustrated by the egalitarian nature of Indian society: "the authority of the Chief being nothing more than mere admonition . . . in fact every man is a chief." He set out to change that by "making chiefs." He passed out medals, certificates, and uniforms to give power to chosen men.

In their speeches, Lewis and Clark called the Indians "children." To explorers, the term expressed the relationship of ruler and subject.

In their speeches, the Indians called Lewis and Clark "father,“... To them, it expressed kinship and their assumption that an adoptive father undertook an obligation to show generosity and loyalty to his new family.

Page 11: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

"We shall delineate with correctness the great arteries of this great country: those who come after

us will . . . fill up the canvas we begin."

--Thomas Jefferson, 1805

Page 12: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Trail Map

Page 13: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

“We were now about to penetrate a country at least two thousand miles in width, on which the foot of civilized man had never trodden,” Lewis wrote…

April 7, 1805

Page 14: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

All the captains would

describe in their journals

178 plants and 122

animals that previously

had not been recorded for

science.

Page 15: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Pistol and Compass used on

the expedition

Page 16: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Who else was in the party?• There were 33 members considered

part of the “permanent party”• There were a handful of members of

the “return party”

• Here are some of their stories:

Page 17: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Seaman

• In preparing for the expedition, Lewis visited President Jefferson’s scientific friends in Philadelphia for instructions in natural sciences, astronomical navigation and field medicine. It is believed that it was during this period that Lewis, for “20$” purchased Seaman, his “dogg of the newfoundland breed” to accompany him to the Pacific.

Page 18: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Moses Reed

• I hated the life along the trail and I thought Lewis and Clark were crazy. When we got a ways up the Missouri River, I left camp late one night to try to get back to civilization (told them I forgot a knife). But the captains sent George Drouillard back to track me down. He found me and brought me back to camp, where I was dishonorably discharged. I was sent back to St. Louis in disgrace on the keelboat in 1805, and never heard from again.

Page 19: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Charles Floyd

• Was the only person to die on the expedition • July 31, 1804- “I am very sick and have been

for sometime but have recovered my health again.”

• August 20- asked Clark “I am going away. I want you to write me a letter.”

• We are guessing he died from a ruptured appendix. (doctors didn’t even know what this was yet!)

Page 20: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Sacagawea Lewis and Clark agreed to hire Toussaint Charbonneau

(a French trapper) as an interpreter when they

discovered his wife spoke the Shoshone language, as

they knew they would need the help of the Shoshone

tribes at the headwaters of the Missouri. His wife,

Sacagawea, gave birth to a baby while on the

expedition in 1805. She was instrumental in

communicating with the Native Americans and

helping to find a new route through the Rocky

Mountains.

Page 21: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

Honoring Sacagawea

There are many statues, a state park, a lake, a

river, and even a coin honoring

Sacagawea.

Page 22: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

How would you feel?

• Imagine you are Sacagawea, you leave everything you know to help Lewis & Clark.

• You have a baby along the way (you and the baby are often sick)

• How do you think you would FEEL about travelling with Lewis & Clark?

Page 23: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

1798 Map used by Lewis and Clark

Page 24: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

AUGUST 12, 1805AUGUST 12, 1805

Lewis ascends the final ridge toward the Continental Divide and

“the most distant fountain of waters of the Mighty Missouri in search of which we have spent so

many toilsome days”

-he expects to see a vast plain to the west with a large river flowing

to the Pacific: the Northwest Passage that had been the goal of

the explorers since the time of Columbus.

Instead, all he sees are more mountains… the Rocky Mountains

Page 25: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

“This Mtn. is covered with Snow...and is of a Conical form but rugid.”—Capt. William Clark

November 3, 1805

• Mt. Hood in the distance…

• Proof they are at last approaching the ocean

Page 26: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

“Ocean in view! O! the joy.”—Capt. William Clark

November 7, 1805

Page 27: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

They are actually at the end of Gray’s Bay, still 20 miles from sea.Clark estimates they have traveled 4162 miles from the mouth of the Missouri to the Pacific. He estimate, based on dead reckoning, will

turn out to be within 40 miles of the actual distance.

NOVEMBER NOVEMBER 7, 18057, 1805

Clark writes his most famous journal entry:

“Ocean in view! O! the joy,”

Page 28: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition

NOVEMBER 24, 1805NOVEMBER 24, 1805

To make the crucial decision of where to spend the winter, the captains decide to put the matter to a vote.

Significantly, in addition to the others, Clark’s slave, York, is allowed to vote – nearly 60 years before slaves in the U.S. would be emancipated…

Sacajawea, the Indian woman, votes too – more than a century before either women or Indians are granted the full rights of citizenship.

Page 29: BLAZING A NEW FRONTIER The Lewis and Clark Expedition