The Journals
of Lewis and Clark: Dates April 26, 1805 - April 30,
1805
The following
excerpts are taken from entries of the Journals of Lewis
and Clark. Dates: April 26, 1805 - April 30, 1805
April 26,
1805
Friday 26. We continued our voyage in the morning and
by twelve o'clock encamped at eight miles distance,
at the junction of the Missouri and Yellowstone rivers;
where we were soon joined by Captain Lewis.
On leaving us yesterday he pursued his route along the
foot of the hills, which he ascended at the distance
of eight miles; from these the wide plains watered by
the Missouri and the Yellowstone spread themselves before
the eye, occasionally varied with the wood of the banks,
enlivened by the irregular windings of the two rivers,
and animated by vast herds of buffalo, deer, elk, and
antelope. The confluence of the two rivers was concealed
by the wood, but the Yellowstone itself was only two
miles distant to the south. He therefore descended the
hills and encamped on the bank of the river, having
killed as he crossed the plain four buffaloes; the deer
alone are shy and retire to the woods, but the elk,
antelope, and buffalo suffered him to approach them
without alarm, and often followed him quietly for some
distance. This morning he sent a man up the river to
examine it, while he proceeded down to the junction:
the ground on the lower side of the Yellowstone near
its mouth, is flat, and for about a mile seems to be
subject to inundation, while that at the point or junction,
as well as on the opposite side of the Missouri, is
at the usual height of ten or eighteen feet above the
water, and therefore not overflown.
There is more timber
in the neighborhood of this place, and on the Missouri,
as far below as the Whiteearth river, than on any other
part of the Missouri on this side of the Chayenne: the
timber consists principally of cottonwood, with some
small elm, ash, and box alder. On the sandbars and along
the margin of the river grows the small-leafed willow;
in the low grounds adjoining are scattered rosebushes
three or four feet high, the redberry, serviceberry
and redwood. The higher plains are either immediately
on the river, in which case they are generally timbered,
and have an undergrowth like that of the low grounds,
with the addition of the broad-leafed willow, gooseberry,
chokecherry, purple currant, and honeysuckle; or they
are between the low grounds and the hills, and for the
most part without wood or any thing except large quantities
of wild hysop; this plant rises about two feet high,
and like the willow of the sandbars is a favorite food
of the buffalo, elk, deer, grouse, porcupine, hare,
and rabbit. This river which had been known to the French
as the Roche jaune, or as we have called it the Yellowstone,
rises according to Indian information in the Rocky mountains;
its sources are near those of the Missouri and the Platte,
and it may be navigated in canoes almost to its head.
It runs first through a mountainous country, but in
many parts fertile and well timbered; it then waters
a rich delightful land, broken into valleys and meadows,
and well supplied with wood and water till it reaches
near the Missouri open meadows and low grounds, sufficiently
timbered on its borders. In the upper country its course
is represented as very rapid, but during the two last
and largest portions, its current is much more gentle
than that of the Missouri, which it resembles also in
being turbid though with less sediment.
The man who was sent
up the river, reported in the evening that he had gone
about eight miles, that during that distance the river
winds on both sides of a plain four or five miles wide,
that the current was gentle and much obstructed by sandbars,
that at five miles he had met with a large timbered
island, three miles beyond which a creek falls in on
the S.E. above a high bluff, in which are several strata
of coal. The country as far as he could discern, resembled
that of the Missouri, and in the plain he met several
of the bighorn animals, but they were too shy to be
obtained. The bed of the Yellowstone, as we observed
it near the mouth, is composed of sand and mud, without
a stone of any kind. Just above the confluence we measured
the two rivers, and found the bed of the Missouri five
hundred and twenty yards wide, the water occupying only
three hundred and thirty, and the channel deep: while
the Yellowstone, including its sandbar, occupied eight
hundred and fifty-eight yards, with two hundred and
ninety-seven yards of water: the deepest part of the
channel is twelve feet, but the river is now falling
and seems to be nearly at its summer height.
April 27, 1805
April 27. We left the mouth of the Yellowstone.
From the point of junction a wood occupies the space
between the two rivers, which at the distance of a mile
comes within two hundred and fifty yards of each other.
There a beautiful low plain commences, and widening
as the rivers recede, extends along each of them for
several miles, rising about half a mile from the Missouri
into a plain twelve feet higher than itself. The low
plain is a few inches above high water mark, and where
it joins the higher plain there is a channel of sixty
or seventy yards in width, through which a part of the
Missouri when at its greatest height passes into the
Yellowstone. At two and a half miles above the junction
and between the high and low plain is a small lake,
two hundred yards wide, extending for a mile parallel
with the Missouri along the edge of the upper plain.
At the lower extremity of this lake, about four hundred
yards from the Missouri, and twice that distance from
the Yellowstone, is a situation highly eligible for
a trading establishment; it is in the high plain which
extends back three miles in width, and seven or eight
miles in length, along the Yellowstone, where it is
bordered by an extensive body of woodland, and along
the Missouri with less breadth, till three miles above
it is circumscribed by the hills within a space four
yards in width.
A sufficient quantity
of limestone for building may easily be procured near
the junction of the rivers; it does not lie in regular
strata's, but is in large irregular masses, of a light
color and apparently of an excellent quality. Game too
is very abundant, and as yet quite gentle; above all,
its elevation recommends it as preferable to the land
at the confluence of the rivers, which their variable
channels may render very insecure. The N.W. wind rose
so high at eleven o'clock, that we were obliged to stop
till about four in the afternoon, when we proceeded
till dusk. On the south a beautiful plain separates
the two rivers, till at about six miles there is a timbered
piece of low ground, and a little above it bluffs, where
the country rises gradually from the river; the situations
on the north more high and open. We encamped on that
side, the wind, the sand which it raised, and the rapidity
of the current having prevented our advancing more than
eight miles; during the latter part of the day the river
becomes wider and crowded with sandbars: although the
game is in such plenty we kill only what is necessary
for our subsistence. For several days past we have seen
great numbers of buffalo lying dead along the shore,
and some of them partly devoured by the wolves; they
have either sunk through the ice during the winter,
or been drowned in attempting to cross, or else, after
crossing to some high bluff, found themselves too much
exhausted either to ascend or swim back again, and perished
for want of food; in this situation we found several
small parties of them. There are geese too in abundance,
and more bald-eagles than we have hitherto observed;
the nests of these last being always accompanied by
those of two or three magpies, who are their inseparable
attendants.
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