Atlas accompanying the original journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-1806 being facsimile reproductions of maps chiefly by William Clark, illustrating the route of the expedition, with some sites of camping places and Indian villages, besides much miscellaneous data. Now for the first time published, from the original manuscripts ..., together with a modern map of the route ... |
INTRODUCTION |
![]() | Atlas accompanying the original journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-1806 | ![]() |

INTRODUCTION
THE remarkable series of charts given in this volume
illustrate in detail almost the entire route of the Lewis
and Clark expedition, both on the outward and the
return journeys, with sites of camping-places and Indian villages,
and further enriched with much interesting comment on
the country and the natives. An account of their discovery
will be found in the Introduction to Vol. I of the present
series, pp. l–liii. Save for Nos. 1–3, which are copies of contemporary
French and Spanish manuscript maps, and doubtless
were carried upon the expedition, several traced from rude
Indian drawings, and No. 37, which bears Lewis's chirography,
all appear to have been the work of Clark, who was the recognized
draughtsman of the party. When we consider the
conditions under which these charts were drawn,—in the field,
with crude astronomical instruments, and information derivable
chiefly from daily observation and Indian reports,—their relative
accuracy and topographical comprehension are worthy of
our highest praise; they are eloquent witnesses of Clark's
undoubted engineering skill.
The charts fall readily into certain groups:
A preliminary series (Nos. 1–3) being tracings of contemporary
French and Spanish manuscripts. In this series we
may also include No. 4, showing the neighborhood of the first
winter's camp in Illinois, at River Dubois, opposite the mouth
of the Missouri.But one map (No. 5) appears to be extant, of the lower
Missouri—that for the stretch above St. Charles, across a
large portion of the present State of Missouri. Others are
missing either by accident or because this portion of the river
was well known to French and Spanish fur-traders, who even
vithus early made annual voyages as far as the present site of
Omaha.When the expedition entered the comparatively unknown
region peopled by the fierce Sioux and Arikara tribes,
a careful record of the river's course is shown in a series of
small but exceedingly accurate maps (Nos. 6–11). These lay
down the river channel continuously from a point near the
southern boundary of South Dakota as far up as the site of
Fort Mandan, some thirty-five miles above the present city
of Bismarck—thus giving almost the entire stretch of the
Missouri's course across the two Dakotas, with the islands,
bends, and Indian villages upon the banks as they were found
by the expedition a hundred years ago.This group consists of Nos. 11–13, prepared at Fort
Mandan on information received from French and British
traders, as well as from native reports. No. 11 shows the trail
from the Assiniboin region, over which the Northwest Company's
factors had come—to find, to their chagrin, that the
Americans had established themselves among the Mandans,
who were accounted the former's especial customers. Nos. 12
and 13 are conjectural maps of the country to the west, indicating
the overland trail to the Yellowstone and the chief
topographical features of the eastern slope of the Rocky
Mountains.No. 14 is one of the principal maps of the series. It
represents the course of the Missouri from Fort Mandan as
far as the Falls, and embraces the route of the summer's travel
in 1805—from the time the Mandans were left behind
(April 7) to the date when the portage was completed and
the river approached through the Gates of the Mountains
(July 15). This map was prepared by Clark with skilful care;
it embodies the results of a series of preliminary field sketches
(Nos. 15–25), draughted from day to day on rough sheets on
which the "Courses and Distances" for each day's travel were
also indicated. Using these eleven maps as a basis, Clark
gives us in No. 14 the natural features, the affluents, the character
viiof the banks, and the camping-places both going and
returning; all this data being presented upon a Mercator's projection
of squares of latitude and longitude. It is interesting
to note that not possessing sheets of paper of sufficient size to
produce so large a map, he pasted together those of ordinary
dimensions. This was done at such angles that the sinuous
course of the river is graphically represented. Nos. 26 and 26a
are sketches of the topography of the Falls of the Missouri,
and supplement those already published in volume three of
this work, which were found in the codices of the journals
proper.Four additional maps were needed to complete the water
route to the head-springs of Jefferson River, where the canoes
were finally abandoned. These (Nos. 27–29a) portray in like
careful manner: the Missouri through the Rocky Mountains,
the Three Forks of that river, and the course of the Jefferson
from its junction with Madison and Gallatin rivers through
Beaver Head Valley to its upper forks. This was the course
over which the expedition painfully struggled (July 16–Aug.
20, 1805) from the Great Falls, until it was no longer possible
to drag or pole the canoes through the shallowing stream.We now come to three large maps, of which the first
(No. 30) is probably the most important of the entire series:
for herein is portrayed the much-discussed and little-understood
route over the range of mountains lying between the head-springs
of the Missouri and the plains of the Kooskooskee
(Clearwater), where the friendly Flatheads (Chopunnish) preserved
the expedition from starvation. On sheets of paper
pasted together in the same ingenious fashion as before, Clark
has laid down the entire horseback tour from Shoshoni Cove
to the banks of the Lemhi; the crossing to the Bitterroot
Valley—not perfectly elucidated up to the present publication;
the passage down the Bitterroot; the rendezvous at Traveller's
Rest; and the mountainous trail to the west, along the ridge
north of the middle fork of the Kooskooskee, including the
courses of Hungry and Collins creeks (so difficult to identify);
viiiand finally, the emergence upon Weippe Prairie, the habitat
of the hospitable Flatheads.No. 31 shows the entire course of the Kooskooskee, its
junction with Lewis (Snake) River, and the latter's bed as far
as the Columbia, which is also given to the Umatilla, as well
as some portion of its course above the junction of the Lewis.
The point where the canoes were built is indicated, and the
descent of the three rivers from October 17–19 is charted in
much detail.The third of the three large maps (No. 32) portrays all the
lower stretch of the Columbia, from about the point where it
becomes the boundary between the present States of Oregon
and Washington, to its discharge into the Pacific, together
with a part of the coast line of the latter. This is interesting
not only for the detail and accuracy with which the river's
course is traced, but as being probably our first chart of that
great waterway above the tidal region.There follow several small sketch maps (Nos. 33–36), showing
details of the Columbia, evidently prepared only as preliminary
to the making of No. 32. They have, however, an
interest of their own, in marking certain camping-places and
giving some other particulars not reproduced on the larger
chart.Nos. 37–39 were those made at Fort Clatsop. No.
38 shows Clark's exploration of the coast when on his journey
(Jan. 6–10, 1806) in search of the spoils of the stranded
whale.The next group of maps (Nos. 40–44) are all of
Indian origin, and represent the information obtained on the
return journey from the natives of the Western slope, in relation
to tribal location, natural objects, and various mountain
trails. It was upon the data thus gathered that the explorers
based the bold conception of dividing the party, each section
seeking not only increased geographical knowledge, but a
more practicable passage than they had found on the outward
journey, between Missouri and Columbia waters.ixNo. 43 is especially interesting in this connection. It maps
several native trails over the great divide, and three available
routes from Traveller's Rest to the Missouri—the most
northerly of which was followed by Lewis, and the most southerly
by Clark.The last group is devoted to Clark's return route.
Of these, Nos. 45 and 46 refer to his crossing (July 4–9, 1806)
from the Bitterroot Valley to the Forks of the Jefferson, and
are somewhat contradictory and confused. A careful local
study, however, may elucidate the main features of the trail, as
well as throw light upon the outward journey between these
two points.Nos. 47 and 48 likewise indicate the journey from the Three
Forks to the Yellowstone, over what is now the famous Bozeman
Pass, and approximating the present route of the Northern
Pacific Railway.The remainder of the maps (Nos. 49–53) portray the basin
of the Yellowstone. Here is the only gap in the continuity of
the series. The first four maps are contiguous, and bring
us to the neighborhood of old Fort Sarpy, near the eastern
boundary of the present Crow Indian Reservation. One small
map (No. 53) of the Yellowstone, near its junction with the
Missouri, closes this series of original charts.No. 54 has been prepared especially for this volume, on
the basis of the maps above enumerated, and represents, on a
condensed scale, the route of the entire journey in relation to
modern conditions, from the mouth of the Missouri to the
Pacific and return. Necessarily compressed in order to present
a bird's-eye view of the whole, the details must be sought
through a close study of Clark's originals, in connection with
the text of the journals themselves.
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
X.
The points of the compass are roughly indicated by the
placing of the captions at the south side of the maps.
![]() | Atlas accompanying the original journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-1806 | ![]() |