The Journals
of Lewis and Clark: Dates August 20, 1805 - August 22,
1805
The following
excerpts are taken from entries of the Journals of Lewis
and Clark. Dates: August 20, 1805 - August 22, 1805
August 20,
1805
Tuesday, August 20. He encamped for the night on a small
stream, and the next morning, he set out at six o'clock.
In passing through a continuation of the hilly broken
country, he met several parties of Indians. On coming
near the camp, which had been removed since we left
them two miles higher up the river, Cameahwait requested
that the party should halt. This was complied with:
a number of Indians came out from the camp, and with
great ceremony several pipes were smoked. This being
over captain Clarke was conducted to a large leathern
lodge prepared for his party in the middle of the encampment,
the Indians having only shelters of willow bushes. A
few dried berries, and one salmon, the only food the
whole village could contribute, were then presented
to him; after which he proceeded to repeat in council,
what had been already told them, the purposes of his
visit; urged them to take their horses over and assist
in transporting our baggage, and expressed a wish to
obtain a guide to examine the river. This was explained
and enforced to the whole village by Cameahwait, and
an old man was pointed out who was said to know more
of their geography to the north than any other person,
and whom captain Clarke engaged to accompany him. After
explaining his views he distributed a few presents,
the council was ended, and nearly half the village set
out to hunt the antelope, but returned without success.
Captain Clarke in the meantime made particular inquiries
as to the situation of the country, and the possibility
of soon reaching a navigable water. The chief began
by drawing on the ground a delineation of the rivers,
from which it appeared that his information was very
limited. The river on which the camp is he divided into
two branches just above us, which, as he indicated by
the opening of the mountains, were in view: he next
made it discharge itself into a larger river ten miles
below, coming from the southwest: the joint stream continued
one day's march to the northwest, and then inclined
to the westward for two day's march farther. At that
place he placed several heaps of sand on each side,
which, as he explained them, represented, vast mountains
of rock always covered with snow, in passing through
which the river was so completely hemmed in by the high
rocks, that there was no possibility of traveling along
the shore; that the bed of the river was obstructed
by sharp-pointed rocks, and such its rapidity, that
as far as the eye could reach it presented a perfect
column of foam. The mountains he said were equally inaccessible,
as neither man nor horse could cross them; that such
being the state of the country neither he nor any of
his nation had ever attempted to go beyond the mountains.
Cameahwait said also
that he had been informed by the Chopunnish, or pierced-nose
Indians, who reside on this river west of the mountains,
that it ran a great way towards the setting sun, and
at length lost itself in a great lake of water which
was ill-tasted, and where the white men lived. An Indian
belonging to a band of Shoshones who live to the southwest,
and who happened to be at camp, was then brought in,
and inquiries made of him as to the situation of the
country in that direction: this he described in terms
scarcely less terrible than those in which Cameahwait
had represented the west. He said that his relations
lived at the distance of twenty days' march from this
place, on a course a little to the west of south and
not far from the whites, with whom they traded for horses,
mules, cloth, metal, beads, and the shells here worn
as ornaments, and which are those of a species of pearl
oyster. In order to reach his country we should be obliged
during the first seven days to climb over steep rocky
mountains where there was no game, and we should find
nothing but roots for subsistence. Even for these however
we should be obliged to contend with a fierce warlike
people, whom he called the Broken-moccasin, or moccasin
with holes, who lived like bears in holes, and fed on
roots and the flesh of such horses as they could steal
or plunder from those who passed through the mountains.
So rough indeed was
the passage, that the feet of the horses would be wounded
in such a manner that many of them would be unable to
proceed. The next part of the route was for ten days
through a dry parched desert of sand, inhabited by no
animal which would supply us with subsistence, and as
the sun had now scorched up the grass and dried up the
small pools of water which are sometimes scattered through
this desert in the spring, both ourselves and our horses
would perish for want of food and water. About the middle
of this plain a large river passes from southeast to
northwest, which, though navigable, afforded neither
timber nor salmon. Three or four days' march beyond
this plain his relations lived, in a country tolerably
fertile and partially covered with timber, on another
large river running in the same direction as the former;
that this last discharges itself into a third large
river, on which resided many numerous nations, with
whom his own were at war, but whether this last emptied
itself into the great or stinking lake, as they called
the ocean, he did not know: that from his country to
[394]the stinking lake was a great distance, and that
the route to it, taken by such of his relations as had
visited it, was up the river on which they lived, and
over to that on which the white people lived, and which
they knew discharged itself into the ocean. This route
he advised us to take, but added, that we had better
defer the journey till spring, when he would himself
conduct us.
This account persuaded
us that the streams of which he spoke were southern
branches of the Columbia, heading with the Rio des Apostolos,
and Rio Colorado, and that the route which he mentioned
was to the gulf of California: captain Clarke therefore
told him that this road was too much towards the south
for our purpose, and then requested to know if there
was no route on the left of the river where we now are,
by which we might intercept it below the mountains;
but he knew of none except that through the barren plains,
which he said joined the mountains on that side, and
through which it was impossible to pass at this season,
even if we were fortunate enough to escape the Broken-moccasin
Indians. Captain Clarke recompensed the Indian by a
present of a knife, with which he seemed much gratified,
and now inquired of Cameahwait by what route the Pierced-nose
Indians, who he said lived west of the mountains, crossed
over to the Missouri: this he said was towards the north,
but that the road was a very bad one; that during the
passage he had been told they suffered excessively from
hunger, being obliged to subsist for many days on berries
alone, there being no game in that part of the mountains,
which were broken and rocky, and so thickly covered
with timber that they could scarcely pass. Surrounded
by difficulties as all the other routes are, this seems
to be the most practicable of all the passages by land,
since, if the Indians can pass the mountains with their
women and children, no difficulties which they could
encounter could be formidable to us; and if the Indians
below the mountains are so numerous as they are represented
to be, they must have some means of subsistence equally
within our power.
They tell us indeed
that the nations to the westward subsist principally
on fish and roots, and that their only game were a few
elk, deer, and antelope, there being no buffalo west
of the mountain. The first inquiry however was to ascertain
the truth of their information relative to the difficulty
of descending the river: for this purpose captain Clarke
set out at three o'clock in the afternoon, accompanied
by the guide and all his men, except one whom he left
with orders to purchase a horse and join him as soon
as possible. At the distance of four miles he crossed
the river, and eight miles from the camp halted for
the night at a small stream. The road which he followed
was a beaten path through a wide rich meadow, in which
were several old lodges. On the route he met a number
of men, women, and children, as well as horses, and
one of the men who appeared to possess some consideration
turned back with him, and observing a woman with three
salmon obtained them from her, and presented them to
the party. Captain Clarke shot a mountain cock or cock
of the plains, a dark brown bird larger than the dunghill
fowl, with a long and pointed tail, and a fleshy protuberance
about the base of the upper chop, something like that
of the turkey, though without the snout. In the morning,
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