The Journals
of Lewis and Clark: Dates August 23, 1805 - August 25,
1805
The following
excerpts are taken from entries of the Journals of Lewis
and Clark. Dates: August 23, 1805 - August 25, 1805
August 23,
1805
Friday 23. Captain Clarke set off very early, but as
his route lay along the steep side of a mountain, over
irregular and broken masses of rocks, which wounded
the horses' feet, he was obliged to proceed slowly.
At the distance of four miles he reached the river,
but the rocks here became so steep, and projected so
far into the river, that there was no mode of passing,
except through the water. This he did for some distance,
though the river was very rapid, and so deep that they
were forced to swim their horses. After following the
edge of the water for about a mile under this steep
cliff, he reached a small meadow, below which the whole
current of the river beat against the right shore on
which he was, and which was formed of a solid rock perfectly
inaccessible to horses. Here too, the little track which
he had been pursuing terminated. He therefore resolved
to leave the horses and the greater part of the men
at this place, and examine the river still further,
in order to determine if there were any possibility
of descending it in canoes. Having killed nothing except
a single goose to-day, and the whole of our provision
being consumed last evening, it was by no means advisable
to remain any length of time where they were. He now
directed the men to fish and hunt at this place till
his return, and then with his guide and three men he
proceeded, clambering over immense rocks, and along
the side of lofty precipices which bordered the river,
when at about twelve miles distance he reached a small
meadow, the first he had seen on the river since he
left his party.
A little below this
meadow, a large creek twelve yards wide, and of some
depth, discharges itself from the north. Here were some
recent signs of an Indian encampment, and the tracks
of a number of horses, who must have come along a plain
Indian path, which he now saw following the course of
the creek. This stream his guide said led towards a
large river running to the north, and was frequented
by another nation for the purpose of catching fish.
He remained here two hours, and having taken some small
fish, made a dinner on them with the addition of a few
berries. From the place where he had left the party,
to the mouth of this creek, it presents one continued
rapid, in which are five shoals, neither of which could
be passed with loaded canoes; and the baggage must therefore
be transported for a considerable distance over the
steep mountains, where it would be impossible to employ
horses for the relief of the men. Even the empty canoes
must be let down the rapids by means of cords, and not
even in that way without great risk both to the canoes
as well as to the men. At one of these shoals, indeed
the rocks rise so perpendicularly from the water as
to leave no hope of a passage or even a portage without
great labor in removing rocks, and in some instances
cutting away the earth. To surmount these difficulties
would exhaust the strength of the party, and what is
equally discouraging would waste our time and consume
our provisions, of neither of which have we much to
spare. The season is now far advanced, and the Indians
tell us we shall shortly have snow: the salmon too have
so far declined that the natives themselves are hastening
from the country, and not an animal of any kind larger
than a pheasant or a squirrel, and of even these a few
only will then be seen in this part of the mountains:
after which we shall be obliged to rely on our own stock
of provisions, which will not support us more than ten
days.
These circumstances
combine to render a passage by water impracticable in
our present situation. To descend the course of the
river on horseback is the other alternative, and scarcely
a more inviting one. The river is so deep that there
are only a few places where it can be forded, and the
rocks approach so near the water as to render it impossible
to make a route along the waters' edge. In crossing
the mountains themselves we should have to encounter,
besides their steepness, one barren surface of broken
masses of rock, down which in certain seasons the torrents
sweep vast quantities of stone into the river. These
rocks are of a whitish brown, and towards the base of
a gray color, and so hard, that on striking them with
steel, they yield a fire like flint. This somber appearance
is in some places scarcely relieved by a single tree,
though near the river and on the creeks there is more
timber, among which are some tall pine: several of these
might be made into canoes, and by lashing two of them
together, one of tolerable size might be formed.
After dinner he continued his route, and at the distance
of half a mile passed another creek about five yards
wide. Here his guide informed him that by ascending
the creek for some distance he would have a better road,
and cut off a considerable bend of the river towards
the south. He therefore pursued a well-beaten Indian
track up this creek for about six miles, when leaving
the creek to the right he passed over a ridge, and after
walking a mile again met the river, where it flows through
a meadow of about eighty acres in extent. This they
passed and then ascended a high and steep point of a
mountain, from which the guide now pointed out where
the river broke through the mountains about twenty miles
distant. Near the base of the mountains a small river
falls in from the south: this view was terminated by
one of the loftiest mountains captain Clarke had ever
seen, which was perfectly covered with snow. Towards
this formidable barrier the river went directly on,
and there it was, as the guide observed, that the difficulties
and dangers of which he and Cameahwait had spoken commenced.
After reaching the
mountain, he said, the river continues its course towards
the north for many miles, between high perpendicular
rocks, which were scattered through its bed: it then
penetrated the mountain through a narrow gap, on each
side of which arose perpendicularly a rock as high as
the top of the mountain before them; that the river
then made a bend which concealed its future course from
view, and as it was alike impossible to descend the
river or clamber over that vast mountain, eternally
covered with snow, neither he nor any of his nation
had ever been lower than at a place where they could
see the gap made by the river on entering the mountain.
To that place he said he would conduct captain Clarke
if he desired it by the next evening. But he was in
need of no further evidence to convince him of the utter
impracticability of the route before him. He had already
witnessed the difficulties of part of the road, yet
after all these dangers his guide, whose intelligence
and fidelity he could not doubt, now assured him that
the difficulties were only commencing, and what he saw
before him too clearly convinced him of the Indian's
veracity. He therefore determined to abandon this route,
and returned to the upper part of the last creek we
had passed, and reaching it an hour after dark encamped
for the night: on this creek he had seen in the morning
an Indian road coming in from the north.
Disappointed in finding
a route by water, captain Clarke now questioned his
guide more particularly as to the direction of this
road which he seemed to understand perfectly. He drew
a map on the sand, and represented this road as well
as that we passed yesterday on Berry creek as both leading
towards two forks of the same great river, where resided
a nation called Tushepaws, who having no salmon on their
river, came by these roads to the fish weirs on Lewis's
river. He had himself been among these Tushepaws, and
having once accompanied them on a fishing party to another
river he had there seen Indians who had come across
the rocky mountains. After a great deal of conversation,
or rather signs, and a second and more particular map
from his guide, captain Clarke felt persuaded that his
guide knew of a road from the Shoshone village they
had left, to the great river to the north, without coming
so low down as this on a route impracticable for horses.
He was desirous of hastening his return, and therefore
set out early.
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