Summary of Lewis & Clark's Expedition
When the fledgling United States was only 26 years old in 1803,
the Mississippi River formed its western boundary. Even though
the vast continent beyond the Mississippi was administered by
Spain, it was only sparsely inhabited by "Indians,"
French and English trappers, and illegal homesteaders. On the
Pacific coast a few Spanish missionaries lived among the Indians,
and ownership of the region was claimed and disputed by Spain,
Britain, and Russia.
Where others saw barren land and conflict, Thomas Jefferson, our
nation's third president, saw opportunity. In what many saw as
folly, but history later confirmed was brilliance, Jefferson convinced
Congress to purchase the Louisiana Territory for 3 cents an acre,
thereby doubling the size of the United States.
In
1803 Jefferson selected Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to lead
an army expedition of 30 men to explore this new land. His instructions
to Lewis stated: "The object of your
mission is to explore the Missouri river, & such principal stream
of it, as, by its course & communication with the waters of the
Pacific Ocean, may offer the most direct & practicable water communication
across this continent, for the purposes of commerce."
Even with the inconsistent spelling and stilted grammar of the
times, the instructions are still very clear.
Over the next two years the "Corps of Discovery" travelled
7,000 miles from St. Louis, up the Missouri River, over the Rocky
Mountains, down the Columbia River to Astoria, Oregon, and back
again. In this epic American exploration of unknown territory,
they lived off the land, made maps, acted as ambassadors to curious
and mostly friendly Native American tribes, and documented many
new species of plants and animals.
By the time of their return in 1806, traders and settlers were
already pushing westward into the new territorya process
which in many ways defined the United States for the next 100 years.
Even today, the phrase "Go west, young man," still rings
with adventure and opportunity.
[When you're in Fort Benton, MT, notice the carefully researched details
on this statue by Robert M. Scriver.]
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