The Journals
of Lewis and Clark: Dates August 8, 1804 - August 15,
1804
The following
excerpts are taken from entries of the Journals of Lewis
and Clark. Dates: August 8, 1804 - August 15, 1804
August
8, 1804
August 8. At two miles distance, this morning we came
to a part of the river, where there was concealed timber
difficult to pass. The wind was from the N.W. and we
proceeded in safety. At six miles, a river empties on
the northern side, called by the Sioux Indians, Eaneahwadepon,
or Stone river; and by the French, Petite Riviere des
Sioux, or Little Sioux river. At its confluence it is
eighty yards wide. Our interpreter, Mr. Durion, who
has been to the sources of it, and knows the adjoining
country, says that it rises within about nine miles
of the river Desmoines; that within fifteen leagues
of that river it passes through a large lake nearly
sixty miles in circumference, and divided into two parts
by rocks which approach each other very closely: its
width is various: it contains many islands, and is known
by the name of the Lac d'Esprit: it is near the Dogplains,
and within four days march of the Mahas. The country
watered by it, is open and undulating, and may be visited
in boats up the river for some distance. The Desmoines,
he adds, is about eighty yards wide where the Little
Sioux river approaches it: it is shoaly, and one of
its principal branches is called Cat river. Two miles
beyond this river is a long island which we called Pelican
island, from the numbers of that animal which were feeding
on it: one of these being killed, we poured into his
bag five gallons of water. An elk, too, was shot, and
we had again to remark that snakes are rare in this
part of the Missouri. A meridian altitude near the Little
Sioux river made the latitude 41° 42' 34". We encamped
on the north, having come sixteen miles.
August 9, 1804
August 9. A thick fog detained us until past
seven o'clock, after which we proceeded with a gentle
breeze from the southeast. After passing two sandbars
we reached, at seven and a half miles, a point of highland
on the left, near which the river has forced itself
a channel across a peninsula, leaving on the right a
circuit of twelve or eighteen miles, which is now recognised
by the ponds and islands it contains. At seventeen and
a half miles, we reached a point on the north, where
we encamped. The hills are at a great distance from
the river for the last several days; the land, on both
sides low, and covered with cottonwood and abundance
of grape vines. An elk was seen to-day, a turkey also
shot, and near our camp is a beaver den: the mosquitoes
have been more troublesome than ever for the two last
days.
August 10, 1804
August 10. At two and a half miles, we came to
a place, called Coupee a Jacques, where the river has
found a new bed, and abridged a circuit of several miles:
at twelve and a half miles, a cliff of yellow stone
on the left. This is the first highland near the river
above the Council-bluff. After passing a number of sandbars
we reached a willow island at the distance of twenty-two
and a half miles, which we were enabled to do with our
oars and a wind from the S.W. and encamped on the north
side.
August 11, 1804
August 11. After a violent wind from the N.W.
attended with rain, we sailed along the right of the
island. At nearly five miles, we halted on the south
side for the purpose of examining a spot where one of
the great chiefs of the Mahas named Blackbird, who died
about four years ago of the smallpox, was buried. A
hill of yellow soft sandstone rises from the river in
bluffs of various heights, till it ends in a knoll about
three hundred feet above the water; on the top of this
a mound, of twelve feet diameter at the base and six
feet high, is raised over the body of the deceased king;
a pole of about eight feet high is fixed in the centre;
on which we placed a white flag, bordered with red,
blue, and white. The Blackbird seems to have been a
personage of great consideration; for ever since his
death he is supplied with provisions, from time to time,
by the superstitious regard of the Mahas. We descended
to the river and passed a small creek on the south,
called, by the Mahas, Waucandipeeche, (Great Spirit
is bad.) Near this creek and the adjoining hills the
Mahas had a village, and lost four hundred of their
nation by the dreadful malady which destroyed the Blackbird.
The meridian altitude made the latitude 42° 1' 3-8/10"
north. We encamped, at seventeen miles distance, on
the north side in a bend of the river. During our day's
course it has been crooked; we observed a number of
places in it where the old channel is filled up, or
gradually becoming covered with willow and cottonwood;
great numbers of herons are observed to-day, and the
mosquitoes annoy us very much.
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