The Journals
of Lewis and Clark: Dates June 8, 1805 - June 10, 1805
The following
excerpts are taken from entries of the Journals of Lewis
and Clark. Dates: June 8, 1805 - June 10, 1805
June 8,
1805
Saturday 8. It continued to rain moderately all last
night, and the morning was cloudy till about ten o'clock,
when it cleared off, and became a fine day. They breakfasted
about sunrise and then proceeded down the river in the
same way as they had done yesterday, except that the
traveling was somewhat better, as they had not so often
to wade, though they passed some very dangerous bluffs.
The only timber to be found is in the low grounds which
are occasionally on the river, and these are the haunts
of innumerable birds, who, when the sun began to shine,
sang very delightfully. Among these birds they distinguished
the brown thrush, robin, turtledove, linnet, goldfinch,
the large and small blackbird, the wren, and some others.
As they came along, the whole of the party were of opinion
that this river was the true Missouri, but Captain Lewis
being fully persuaded that it was neither the main stream,
nor that which it would be advisable to ascend, gave
it the name of Maria's river. After traveling all day
they reached the camp at five o'clock in the afternoon,
and found captain Clarke and the party very anxious
for their safety, as they had staid two days longer
than had been expected, and as captain Clarke had returned
at the appointed time, it was feared that they had met
with some accident.
June 9, 1805
Sunday, 9th. We now consulted upon the course
to be pursued. On comparing our observations, we were
more than ever convinced of what we already suspected,
that Mr. Arrowsmith is incorrect in laying down in the
chain of Rocky mountains one remarkable mountain called
the Tooth, nearly as far south as 45°, and said to be
so marked from the discoveries of Mr. Fidler. We are
now within one hundred miles of the Rocky mountains
and in the latitude of 47° 24' 12" 8, and therefore
it is highly improbable that the Missouri should make
such a bend to the south before it reaches the Rocky
mountains, as to have suffered Mr. Fidler to come as
low as 45° along the eastern borders without touching
that river: yet the general course of Maria's river
from this place for fifty-nine miles, as far as Captain
Lewis ascended, was north 69° west, and the south branch,
or what we consider the Missouri, which captain Clarke
had examined as far as forty-five miles in a straight
line, ran in a course south 29° west, and as far as
it could be seen went considerably west of south, whence
we conclude that the Missouri itself enters the Rocky
mountains to the north of 45°. In writing to the president
from our winter quarters, we had already taken the liberty
of advancing the southern extremity of Mr. Fidler's
discoveries about a degree to the northward, and this
from Indian information as to the bearing of the point
at which the Missouri enters the mountain; but we think
actual observation will place it one degree still further
to the northward.
This information
of Mr. Fidler however, incorrect as it is, affords an
additional reason for not pursuing Maria's river; for
if he came as low even as 47° and saw only small streams
coming down from the mountains, it is to be presumed
that these rivulets do not penetrate the Rocky mountains
so far as to approach any navigable branch of the Columbia,
and they are most probably the remote waters of some
northern branch of the Missouri. In short, being already
in latitude 47° 24' we cannot reasonably hope by going
farther to the northward to find between this place
and the Saskashawan any stream which can, as the Indians
assure us the Missouri does, possess a navigable current
for some distance in the Rocky mountains: the Indians
had assured us also that the water of the Missouri was
nearly transparent at the falls; this is the case with
the southern branch; that the falls lay a little to
the south of sunset from them; this too is in favor
of the southern fork, for it bears considerably south
of this place which is only a few minutes to the northward
of fort Mandan; that the falls are below the Rocky mountains
and near the northern termination of one range of those
mountains: now there is a ridge of mountains which appear
behind the South mountains and terminates to the southwest
of us, at a sufficient distance from the unbroken chain
of the Rocky mountains to allow space for several falls,
indeed we fear for too many of them. If too the Indians
had ever passed any stream as large as this southern
fork on their way up the Missouri, they would have mentioned
it; so that their silence seems to prove that this branch
must be the Missouri. The body of water also which it
discharges must have been acquired from a considerable
distance in the mountains, for it could not have been
collected in the parched plains between the Yellowstone
and the Rocky mountains, since that country could not
supply nourishment for the dry channels which we passed
on the south, and the travels of Mr. Fidler forbid us
to believe that it could have been obtained from the
mountains towards the northwest.
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