The Journals
of Lewis and Clark: Dates July 21, 1804 - July 26, 1804
The following
excerpts are taken from entries of the Journals of Lewis
and Clark. Dates: July 21, 1804 - July 26, 1804
July
21, 1804 - July 26, 1804
Saturday, July 21. We had a breeze from the southeast,
by the aid of which we passed, at about ten miles, a
willow island on the south, near high lands covered
with timber, at the bank, and formed of limestone with
cemented shells: on the opposite side is a bad sandbar,
and the land near it is cut through at high water, by
small channels forming a number of islands. The wind
lulled at seven o'clock, and we reached, in the rain,
the mouth of the great river Platte, at the distance
of fourteen miles. The highlands which had accompanied
us on the south, for the last eight or ten miles, stopped
at about three quarters of a mile from the entrance
of the Platte. Captains Lewis and Clarke ascended the
river in a pirogue, for about one mile, and found the
current very rapid; rolling over sands, and divided
into a number of channels; none of which are deeper
than five or six feet.
One of our Frenchmen,
who spent two winters on it, says that it spreads much
more at some distance from the mouth; that its depth
is generally not more than five or six feet; that there
are many small islands scattered through it, and that
from its rapidity and the quantity of its sand, it cannot
be navigated by boats or pirogues, though the Indians
pass it in small flat canoes made of hides. That the
Saline or Salt river, which in some seasons is too brackish
to be drank, falls into it from the south about thirty
miles up, and a little above it Elkhorn river from the
north, running nearly parallel with the Missouri. The
river is, in fact, much more rapid than the Missouri,
the bed of which it fills with moving sands, and drives
the current on the northern shore, on which it is constantly
encroaching. At its junction the Platte is about six
hundred yards wide, and the same number of miles from
the Mississippi. With much difficulty we worked round
the sandbars near the mouth, and came to above the point,
having made fifteen miles. A number of wolves were seen
and heard around us in the evening.
July 22. The next morning we set sail, and having found
at the distance of ten miles from the Platte, a high
and shaded situation on the north, we encamped there,
intending to make the requisite observations, and to
send for the neighboring tribes, for the purpose of
making known the recent change in the government, and
the wish of the United States to cultivate their friendship.
Our camp is by observation in latitude 41° 3' 11". Immediately
behind it is a plain about five miles wide, one half
covered with wood, the other dry and elevated. The low
grounds on the south near the junction of the two rivers,
are rich, but subject to be overflowed. Farther up,
the banks are higher, and opposite our camp the first
hills approach the river, and are covered with timber,
such as oak, walnut, and elm. The intermediate country
is watered by the Papillon, or Butterfly creek, of about
eighteen yards wide, and three miles from the Platte;
on the north are high open plains and prairies, and
at nine miles from the Platte, the Musquitoe creek,
and two or three small willow islands. We stayed here
several days, during which we dried our provisions,
made new oars, and prepared our despatches and maps
of the country we had passed, for the president of the
United States, to whom we intend to send them by a pirogue
from this place.
The hunters have
found game scarce in this neighborhood; they have seen
deer, turkies, and grouse; we have also an abundance
of ripe grapes; and one of our men caught a white catfish,
the eyes of which were small, and its tail resembling
that of a dolphin. The present season is that in which
the Indians go out into the prairies to hunt the buffalo;
but as we discovered some hunter's tracks, and observed
the plains on fire in the direction of their villages,
we hoped that they might have returned to gather the
green indian corn, and therefore dispatched two men
to the Ottoes or Pawnee villages with a present of tobacco,
and an invitation to the chiefs to visit us.
|