The Journals
of Lewis and Clark: Dates April 13, 1805 - April 16,
1805
The following
excerpts are taken from entries of the Journals of Lewis
and Clark. Dates: April 13, 1805 - April 16, 1805
April 13,
1805
Saturday 13. We set out at sunrise, and at nine o'clock
having the wind in our favor went on rapidly past a
timbered low ground on the south, and a creek on the
north at the distance of nine miles, which we called
Onion creek, from the quantity of that plant which grows
in the plains near it: this creek is about sixteen yards
wide at a mile and a half above its mouth, it discharges
more water than is usual for creeks of that size in
this country, but the whole plain which it waters is
totally destitute of timber. The Missouri itself widens
very remarkably just above the junction with the Little
Missouri: immediately at the entrance of the latter,
it is not more than two hundred yards wide, and so shallow
that it may be passed in canoes with setting poles,
while a few miles above it is upwards of a mile in width:
ten miles beyond Onion creek we came to another, discharging
itself on the north in the centre of a deep bend: on
ascending it for about a mile and a half, we found it
to be the discharge of a pond or small lake, which seemed
to have been once the bed of the Missouri: near this
lake were the remains of forty-three temporary lodges
which seem to belong to the Assiniboines, who are now
on the river of the same name. A great number of swan
and geese were also in it, and from this circumstance
we named the creek Goose creek, and the lake by the
same name: these geese we observe do not build their
nests on the ground or in sandbars, but in the tops
of lofty cottonwood trees: we saw some elk and buffalo
to-day but at too great a distance to obtain any of
them, though a number of the carcasses of the latter
animal are strewed along the shores, having fallen through
the ice, and been swept along when the river broke up.
More bald eagles are seen on this part of the Missouri
than we have previously met with; the small or common
hawk, common in most parts of the United States, are
also found here: great quantities of geese are feeding
in the prairies, and one flock of white brant or goose
with black wings, and some gray brant with them pass
up river, and from their flight they seem to proceed
much farther to the northwest. We killed two antelopes
which were very lean, and caught last night two beaver:
the French hunters who had procured seven, thinking
the neighborhood of the Little Missouri a convenient
hunting ground for that animal, remained behind there:
in the evening we encamped in a beautiful plain on the
north thirty feet above the river, having made twenty-two
and a half miles.
April 14, 1805
Sunday 14. We set off early with pleasant and
fair weather: a dog joined us, which we suppose had
strayed from the Assiniboine camp on the lake. At two
and a half miles we passed timbered low grounds and
a small creek: in these low grounds are several uninhabited
lodges built with the boughs of the elm, and the remains
of two recent encampments, which from the hoops of small
kegs found in them we judged could belong to Assiniboines
only, as they are the only Missouri Indians who use
spirituous liquors: of these they are so passionately
fond that it forms their chief inducement to visit the
British on the Assiniboine, to whom they barter for
kegs of rum their dried and pounded meat, their grease,
and the skins of large and small wolves, and small foxes.
The dangerous exchange is transported to their camps
with their friends and relations, and soon exhausted
in brutal intoxication: so far from considering drunkenness
as disgraceful, the women and children are permitted
and invited to share in these excesses with their husbands
and fathers, who boast how often their skill and industry
as hunters has supplied them with the means of intoxication:
in this, as in their other habits and customs, they
resemble the Sioux from whom they are descended: the
trade with the Assiniboines and Knistenaux is encouraged
by the British, because it procures provision for their
engages on their return from Rainy lake to the English
river and the Athabasky country where they winter; these
men being obliged during that voyage to pass rapidly
through a country but scantily supplied with game. We
halted for dinner near a large village of burrowing
squirrels, who we observe generally select a southeasterly
exposure, though they are sometimes found in the plains.
At ten and a quarter miles we came to the lower point
of an island, which from the day of our arrival there
we called Sunday island: here the river washes the bases
of the hills on both sides and above the island, which
with its sandbar extends a mile and a half: two small
creeks fall in from the south; the uppermost of these,
which is the largest, we called Charbonneau's creek,
after our interpreter who once encamped on it several
weeks with a party of Indians. Beyond this no white
man had ever been except two Frenchmen, one of whom
Lapage is with us, and who having lost their way straggled
a few miles further, though to what point we could not
ascertain: about a mile and a half beyond this island
we encamped on a point of woodland on the north, having
made in all fourteen miles.
The Assiniboines have so recently left the river that
game is scarce and shy. One of the hunters shot at an
otter last evening; a buffalo too was killed, and an
elk, both so poor as to be almost unfit for use; two
white bear were also seen, and a muskrat swimming across
the river. The river continues wide and of about the
same rapidity as the ordinary current of the Ohio. The
low grounds are wide, the moister parts containing timber,
the upland extremely broken, without wood, and in some
places seem as if they had slipped down in masses of
several acres in surface. The mineral appearances of
salts, coal, and sulphur, with the burnt hill and pumice
stone continue, and a bituminous water about the color
of strong lye, with the taste of glauber salts and a
slight tincture of allum. Many geese were feeding in
the prairies, and a number of magpies who build their
nest much like those of the blackbird in trees, and
composed of small sticks, leaves and grass, open at
top: the egg is of a bluish brown color, freckled with
reddish brown spots. We also killed a large hooting
owl resembling that of the United States, except that
it was more booted and clad with feathers. On the hills
are many aromatic herbs, resembling in taste, smell
and appearance the sage, hysop, wormwood, southern wood,
juniper and dwarf cedar; a plant also about two or [188]three
feet high, similar to the camphor in smell and taste,
and another plant of the same size, with a long, narrow,
smooth, soft leaf, of an agreeable smell and flavor,
which is a favorite food of the antelope, whose necks
are often perfumed by rubbing against it.
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