Lewis & Clark Expedition
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historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM2LPR_small-prairie-camp_-.html
Small Prairie Camp. "...we found two deer...". In June 1806, the Lewis and Clark Expedition members were in good spirits as they began their journey home over the Lolo Trail. Although the men were well fed, rested an had 66 horses to ride and carry their ge…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM2LS0_lewis-clark-1804_-.html
Lewis & Clark 1804. . 1804 Lewis and Clark Expedition to northwest obtained men and supplies here .
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historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM2MD3_lewis-and-clark-expedition_-.html
Lewis and Clark Expedition. . Meriwether Lewis and William Clark originally planned to camp west of the Mississippi River during the winter of 1803-04. Carlos Dehault Delassus, the Spanish commandant at St. Louis, however, had not received formal notificati…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM2MKS_lewis-and-clark-in-illinois_-.html
Lewis and Clark in Illinois. . On December 7, 1803, William Clark and several recruits landed at Cahokia, a town of about 700 residents. Meriwether Lewis was on the road to St. Louis to meet with the Spanish Governor. Two local men, Nicholas Jarrot and John…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM2MXZ_the-lewis-and-clark-expedition_-.html
The Lewis and Clark Expedition. Fort Belle Fontaine. Members of the Lewis and Clark Expedition spent the last night of their 7,500 mile jouney at Fort Belle Fontaine. Located on the south bank of the Missouri River near Coldwater Creek, it had been built in…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM2MY9_fort-belle-fontaine_-.html
Fort Belle Fontaine was built in 1805 on a low plain near the confluence of the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. Belle Fontaine was the first U.S. military post located in the newly acquired Louisiana Territory and was originally called Cantonment Belle Fon…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM2N6T_the-village-of-hartford_-.html
The Village of Hartford. Lewis & Clark Expedition. The exact number of participants on the expedition is uncertain. Journals of participants indicate that it may have been as few as 26 and as many as 45. The following names were mentioned in accounts of the…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM2N8Y_missouri-yellowstone-confluence-area_-.html
Missouri-Yellowstone Confluence Area. Williams County. Thursday and Friday, April 25 and 26, 1805 . Rich wildlife heralded the expedition's arrival at the Yellowstone-Missouri confluence. Impatient, Lewis ascended the south bluff to view the "wide and fe…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM2N8Z_the-confluence_-.html
The Confluence. The Missouri and Yellowstone. . Captain Lewis . Thursday, April 25, 1805 . On the Missouri River, near the entrance of the Yellowstone River . . "...I ascended the hills from whence I had a most pleasing view of the country, particul…