William Lighton presents a history of the Lewis and Clark expedition. It is a brief account and overview written in 1901.?
Lewis provided a quick list of “Aquatic birds,” or those, he explained, that obtained their subsistence from the water: great blue heron (“large blue and brown heron”), osprey (“fishing hawk”), belted kingfisher (“blue crested fisher”), ...
As author Paul Schullery reminds us in his outstanding book Lewis and Clark among the Grizzlies, “Lewis and Clark brought west with them their own idea of the bear”; they overstated the aggressiveness of grizzly bears and as such, ...
Through these tales of adventure, edited and annotated by American Book Award nominee Landon Jones, we meet Indian peoples and see the Great Plains, the Rocky Mountains, and western rivers the way Lewis and Clark first observed them -- ...
Volume 1 of the classic edition of Lewis and Clark's day-by-day journals that later became the basis for U.S. claims to Oregon and the West.
With an expert's eye, Verne Huser tells us what it was like to mount and carry out such an expedition. 52 photographs, 4 line drawings, map.
Provides a history of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, including excerpts from journals that Lewis and Clark kept during the journey, and describes how historical documents such as these can be restored and preserved.
Willard lost his rifle in a large Creek Called Boyer.75 [ floyd ] the Reasen this man Gives of His being with So Small a party is that He Has not Got Horses to Go in the Large praries after the Buflows but Stayes about the Town and ...
They started up the Missouri in May 1804. This volume ends in August, when the Corps of Discovery camped near the Vermillion River in present-day South Dakota.
Seaman, Meriwether Lewis's Newfoundland dog, describes Lewis and Clark's expedition, which he accompanied from St. Louis to the Pacific Ocean.