Historical Documents

Lewis Phase II: Research and Documentation

report

Lewis Phase II: Research and Documentation

Lewis and Clark Trust

Edit 20 April 2020, 26 April 2020, 29 April, 2020 11 Feb 2021, 2 July 2021, 12 January 2022, 28 April 2022

1

Lewis and Clark Bureaucrat’s

Company Commanders to Bureaucratic Administrators

Lewis the Governor of the Upper Louisiana Territory Clark the Brigadier General of the Missouri Militia and Superintendent of Indian Affairs

Planning, exploration and most of the reporting phase Lewis and Clark expedition was over. The realities of governing the complex Upper Louisiana Territory settled-in on the newly appointed Governor and the Brigadier General. Editing and printing of the Lewis and Clark Journals by Lewis and returning Sheheke and his family to their home at the Mandan Villages by Clark were the primary responsibilities outlined President Jefferson and Secretary of War Dearborn. The fact that the men had little or even no personal time during the last two years and four months seemed to be of little or no concern by the President or Secretary. . The time between March 1807 and October1809 has been examined by noted Lewis and Clark writers and scholars, even dissecting the time period like the birds arid animals examined and described during the expedition. This includes Lewis’ courtships with several young women. Writer John Bakeles even suggested that Lewis would not have made a good husband. (1)

In August 1807 Lewis returned to his mother’s home in Virginia, following his report to Jefferson and the initial work in Philadelphia to publish the Journals. Lewis then traveled to Richmond in September to observe the Burr Treason Trial, unfortunately a written report of his observations has never been found, if one was written. He reviewed land investment for the Lewis family along with plans for their education. A document of more than 10,500 words describing Lewis’ Observations and Reflections relating to the American Indian People and the fur trade in the Upper Louisiana Territory is attributed in part to this period. The Observations and Reflections document shows that Lewis a was developing a framework for governing the Upper Louisiana Territory and establishing a solid economic foundation. (2)

Clark was back in St. Louis in April 1807, with Sheheke, his wife, Yellow Corn and son, White Painted House, plus the funds and Land Warrants awarded by Congress to make final payment to the Expedition Members. Failure of the first attempt to return Sheheke to his home only added to the diplomatic concerns for the Jefferson Administration. The failure only increased the burden on Lewis and Clark. (3) (4)

Late 1807 or early 1808, Lewis departed Ivy, Virginia for St. Louis via the Great Valley Road, the Boone Trace and Wilderness Road. His traveling companions were John Pernier, his free mulatto servant, and Reuben Lewis, his younger brother. While it is not certain, Captain Tom, Reuben’s slave may have been in the west bound traveling party. The Old Kentucky Road from Bean Station, TN and over Clinch Mountain had been improved to accommodate wheeled vehicles like the carriage Lewis was taking to St. Louis. (5) The route through Bean Station was slightly longer but crossed fewer mountains and streams. Following the historic trail through Cumberland Gap the foursome followed the Boone Trace and Wilderness Road to Lexington, KY.

Lewis was honored at a public dinner at Mr. Wilsons Inn, present-day Phoenix Park (N. Limestone and E. Main Street) Lexington, KY. (6) Lewis and his party traveled to Louisville and like other travelers in that era, traveled by boat to St. Louis. Reuben Lewis took the carriage over the old French Military Road from Lusk Ferry, present-day Golconda, IL, arriving in St. Louis on 26 February 1808. This is the same route York and Joseph Charless used in 1808. Removing the carriage would lighten the load for the boat upriver travel on the Mississippi River. (7) Lewis arrived in St. Louis on 8 March 1808 with the boat and immediately went to work.

Source:

• Bakeless, John, Lewis and Clark: Partners in Discovery, Dover Publications, Inc. NY, 1947, page 385. • Ambrose, Stephen, Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the West, Simon & Schuster, NY, 1996, page 431 & 434. • Jones, Landon, William Clark and Shaping of the West, Hill and Wang, NY, 2004, page,161. • Ambrose, Stephen, Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson and the Opening of the American West, Simon & Schuster, NY, 1996, page 441. • Marshall, Thomas, The Life and Papers of Frederick Bates, Washington University and Missouri Historical Society1926, V-1, Page 304 (St. Louis 26 Feb. 1808) and Lewis Family letters reveal that Lewis owned a carriage. • KY Gazette & General Advertiser, Vol. XXI, # 1164, February 6, 1808, page 3, UK Young Library, Reel S-8, # 16. • Holmberg, James, Dear Brother: Letters of William Clark to Jonathan Clark, Yale University Press, 2002, page 131.

Pictures: Scan of Toast, Pix of KY Historical Marker in Phoenix Park Copy of Lewis family letter to Eva Emery Dye re: Carriage

Governing in a Multi-Faceted Culture French, Spanish and United States Governments in St. Louis 1763-1804

In 1808 cultural changes were sweeping the country and St. Louis and it’s several cultures were part of the changing fabric of the young United States. The Spanish style of governing was still strong in the minds of the former French and Spanish citizens. General Wilkinson’s self-serving influence and Aaron Burr’s seditious followers had their own agenda. United States policy and the cultural differences with the American Indian Nations added a destabilizing factor, made even more difficult by the British efforts to influence the Tribal People. Lewis and Clark had inherited few effective agents to work for the new American government in the territory. Frederick Bates, Territorial Secretary, clearly had a personal philosophy for governing the territory and it certainly did not agree with President Jefferson or Governor Lewis. Bates. was more trouble than value to the territorial government. (1) (2)

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• Improved strength of Fort Bellevue, later Ft. Madison, near Iowa – Missouri border. (1) • Packages and shipped the 1807 Big Bone Lick bones to Thomas Jefferson. (2) • Assisted in establishing the Missouri Gazette by editor Joseph Charless. (3)

• • Clark crossed Missouri again, guided by Nathan Boone, son of Danie Boone, to build Ft. Osage, east of present-day Kansas City. (4) • Negotiated a Treaty with the Osage Indians. (5) • Lewis wrote and published the Territorial Laws. (6) • Completed work on the Observations and Reflections relating to the Indians and Fur Trade for Secretary Dearborn. (7) • Organized the St. Louis Missouri Fur Company. (8) • The eventual successfully return of Sheheke and his family to their home on the upper Missouri River with the contractual aid of the newly formed St. Louis Missouri Fur Company. (9) • Appointed Daniel Boone to serve as a Justice of the Peace for the Femme Osage District and supported the building of a shot tower at Herculaneum, MO. (10) • Authorize the building of roads or their improvement. (11) • Directed Agent Boilvin to arrest four Indians involved in a murder of settlers. (12) • Official Social Duties, personal finance affairs and helped organize Masonic Lodge #111. (13) • Clark was absent from St. Louis for 12 months in 1807-08 for the historically significant dig and report from Big Bone Lick, KY for President Jefferson and his marriage and honey moon. Clark’s return trip to St. Louis included transporting blacksmith tools and a grain mill for American Indian benefit. (14) . . .

The above list is a very considerable body of work in only 28 months for two young government appointed administrators. Their experience in making decisions without the “shadow” of bureaucrats in Washington during the during the expedition is clearly reflected in their success is governing in the Upper Louisiana Territory.

Unfortunately, Lewis had not written a single word for the editor of the Expedition Journals. The pressure had built to a crescendo when Bills of Exchange written by both Lewis and Clark are questioned and rejected by the new Madison Administration. The only solution was a trip to Washington to defend their actions.

Source:

• Jones, Landon, William Clark and the Shaping of the West, Hill & Wang, NY, 2004, page 173-174. • Ibid, page 163. • Holmberg, James, Dear Brother: Letters from William Clark to Jonathan Clark, Yale University Press, New Haven, 2002, page 136-note 15. • Greg, Kate, (Editor), Westward With Dragoons: The Journal of William Clark, The Ovid Bell Press, Fulton, MO, 1937, page 15 -16.

• Ambrose, Stephen, Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the West, Simon & Schuster, NY, 1996, page 447. • Danisi, Thomas & Jackson, John, Meriwether Lewis, Prometheus Books, NY, 2009, page 12. • Ambrose, Stephen, Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the West, Simon & Schuster, NY, 1996, page 431. • Ibid, page 444. • Jones, Landon, William Clark and the Shaping of the West, Hill and Wang, NY, 2004, page 172. • Ambrose, Stephen, Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the West, Simon & Schuster, NY, 1996, page 446. • Ibid, page 447. • Ibid, page 441 • Ibid, page 443. • Jones, Landon, William Clark and the Shaping of the West, Hill & Wang, NY, 2004, page 160 & 161.

Pictures: Herculaneam Shot Tower (2 pictures), Gateway Arch/W. Clark Indian Museum site South of the Arch, Lewis’ Masonic Apron

3 Rejected Territorial Expenditures

Lewis and Clark to Washington

Rejected Bills of Exchange (A written order binding one party to pay a fixed sum of money to another party, on demand) written for U. S. Government expenses left the financial responsibility for payment on Lewis or Clark. The Bills of Exchange were for amounts as small as $18.75 for English to Spanish translation of the Territorial Laws to $1575.95 for printing of the Territorial Laws. War Department accountant, William Simmons was controlling the Federal “purse” with a tight fist beyond reason, a fact Lewis had already experienced while settling expedition expense. Simmons was a War Department Accountant and had become an impediment to the effective operation of his office. (1) The lack of or even reduction in Federal funds flowing into St. Louis would leave the territorial financial “house of cards” in a very precarious situation. (2) (3)

After developing a coordinated strategy to settle their disputed Bills of Exchange, Lewis and Clark left St. Louis heading east by separate routes and at slightly different times. Lewis left by boat on 4 September 1809, with the intention of traveling to New Orleans, sailing to Baltimore then overland travel to Washington, DC. However, as he floated down the hot and humid Mississippi River, he had time to rethink his plans and started changing his mind. At the same time, he felt his old nemesis ague returning – malaria (ague) was caused by parasites transmitted through mosquitoes. Equally disturbing, there were reports from boats going up river of “the fever” further down river. Additionally, the increased hostilities with the British impressing American sailors and concerns for his documents, including the unpublished expedition journals, made Lewis change his travel plans. During the trip, Lewis had paused to update his Will, witnessed by Francois Trenchard, a prominent land owner between Lake Gayoso and the Mississippi River, and Lewis’ Servant, John Pernier. Writing a will or designating a Power-of-Attorney before a long and dangerous trip was not unusual in that day. The boat crew’s concern for Lewis’ health and safety became great. They advised Captain Gilbert Russell, Fort Pickering Commander, that Lewis had twice tried to get out of the boat and jump into the water. Both situations play into future evaluations of Lewis’ state of health. Medical professionals today confirm that a malarial attack brings on a confused state of mind and high temperature. There is no wonder that Lewis tried to cool-off in the river water. (4) Lewis’ health was similar-to countless individuals in the Ohio and Mississippi River Valley in the early 1800’s. Hundreds of settlers in the region were carriers of the malarial parasite Plasmodium, even Thomas Jefferson, who never visited the Ohio River valley, experienced the ague. (5)

When Lewis arrives at Ft. Pickering the fort was not new to him. The fort was the fifth built on the bluffs, all on the future site of Memphis, TN, and overlooking the Mississippi River. Ft. Assumption, built by the French, San Fernando by the Spanish, and Ft. Adams, the third fort was an American fort. Ft. Adams, the third fort was renamed Ft. Pickering for the Secretary of State Timothy Pickering and eventually moved three miles south to a location near the American Indian Mound. The location provided a better view of the river. (6) (7) In January 1798, Secretary of War James McHenry, directed that Capt. John Pierce be sent to command Ft. Pickering along with what he called “a select corps of incomparable rascals under Lewis, Marschaulk and Steele”. When Pierce died from the “fever” Lewis assumed command. (8)

Also in 1798, a friend and former commander of Lewis, William Clark, now a civilian, took a boat load of products down the Mississippi River to sell in New Orleans. Clark drew maps of the Mississippi River that included Ft. Adams, the future Ft. Pickering. It is not a stretch of the imagination to believe William Clark visited with Lewis at the fort, though we find no verifying source.

In August 1798, Col. John F. Hamtramck, leading an advanced party of Gen. James Wilkinson’s Army, reached Ft. Adams and directed Lewis to prepare to move the fort to the elevated site near the Indian Mound. (Today the mound is in Chickasaw Heritage Park (Chikasaha Heritage Park). The mound is deacribed as a Woodland and Mississippian culture mound dating 400-700 AD and 1000-1500 AD and believed to be used as a pre-contact ceremonial center. The location allows a north and south view of the Mississippi River. Today the park is entered from Riverside Boulevard and Ornamental Metal Museum Drive. (9) (10) The fort where Lewis would arrive 15 September 1809, ill and in need of medical assistance, was the not new to him.

The Governor’s illness was very concerning to Captain Russell. Lewis was placed in Russell’s private quarters where he could be observed. Excessive use of alcohol and opium used for treatment of the malaria attack had placed a severe strain on Lewis’ health. (11)

On 18 September, Militia Major James Neeley, U. S. Agent to the Chickasaw Indians, arrived at Ft. Pickering. Major Neeley had been appointed to the position on 9 August 1809, after the position had been vacant for a year. (12) The exact reason Major Neeley traveled to the fort is uncertain; however, his responsibilities would include transporting treaty annuities and other supplies to the agency headquarters at Houlka. White people, “squatters”, intruding on Chickasaw lands and their removal would be a joint responsibility for the Major and Captain.

Neeley’s arrival provided an opportunity for a larger party to travel east with greater security. After securing cash and credit for two horses for the journey, Lewis, his servant John Pernier, Major Neeley, and “Captain Tom”, Reuben Lewis’ Negro servant, left Ft. Pickering for the Chickasaw Agency on 29 September. (13) While their route of travel was not defined, the logical route of their travel was along the Indian Trail listed as Trail 105 or 119 in Indian Trails of the Southeast by William E. Meyer. (14) (15) Today, US 78 and I-22 is the corridor of travel through the region. Additionally, either trail would balance with a historical accepted rate of 20 miles per day on horseback, when traveling with other horses in a “pack-train”. Lewis’ weakened condition from the illness and treatment made the 20 miles per day a real strain on his body and mind. [Raw numbers based on today’s roads: the 127 miles from Memphis, TN to Old Houlka, MS divided by 6 days of travel time -29 September through 4 October- equals 21.2 miles per day.] The party would have passed in the vicinity of Holly Springs, MS and Chuahla Shintok (Mound) GPS 34.73278 -89.333972 and the lngomar Shintok (Mound) GPS 34.39641, – 89.051971. The lngomar Mound is approximately 10 miles south of New Albany, MS and near today’s Tanglefoot Trail. Lesser-known Tribal sites are logical over-night stops where food, water and shelter could be found. (16)

Editorial Note: This is a good place to suggest that seven places in Northern Mississippi are helpful in understanding the relationship of Meriwether Lewis to

the culture and the geography of Northern Mississippi. The sites vividly interpret the culture and history vividly:

Natchez Trace Parkway Visitor Center 2680 Natchez Trace Parkway Tupelo, MS 38804 662-680-4027

Union County Heritage Museum 114 Cleveland Street New Albany, MS 386S2 662-538-0014 Pontotoc Town Square Museum and Post Office 59 South Main Street Pontotoc, MS 38836 800-275-8777

Chickasaw Heritage Center Chickasaw lnkana Foundation opening in 2025 https://inkana.org/

Holly Springs National Forest: https://www.fs.usda.gov/detaiI/ mississippi/ about-forest/clfsfricts/?cic!=steIprdb5209589

Chickasaw Game Management Area https://mapcarta.com/21188582/Map

Mississippi Hills Heritage Area https:// mississippihiIls.org/history-culture/

Lewis, Neeley and party arrived at the Chickasaw Agency, Old Houlka, MS on 4 October 1809. In 1801, Agent, Samuel Mitchell had stated building the headquarters and center of commerce for the benefit of the Chickasaw People. The main house was 30 feet long with nine-foot-deep porches along the entire length of the front and rear with a central chimney having back-to back fire places, built in a style known as a “saddlebag”. Additionally, there was a corn house, potato house, meat house, loom house, kitchen. and wheelwright/carpenter shop. After hiring a blacksmith in 1807, a blacksmith shop was built. The location was on the Pontotoc Ridge, near the Natchez Trace. In-addition to serving the Chickasaw People the location provided services and accommodations for boatmen traveling north, the so-called “Kaintucks”. (17)

If Lewis told the Chickasaw Leaders about the Lewis and Clark Expedition, they would have recognized the Clark name. The Colbert brothers were successful leaders of the Chickasaw People and had led the attack on Ft. Jefferson built by George Rogers Clark in 1780 near the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. Lt. William Clark, as General Anthony Wayne’s diplomat to the Chickasaw People, delivering gifts of muskets, powder, lead, corn, salt, and whiskey to secure their alliance with the United States against the Indians in the Ohio Country. (19) William was successful in the mission and returned to

Gen. Wayne’s headquarters with Chickasaw Chief Underwood and seven (7) Warriors, “who appear determined and anxious for action”, Wayne reported to Secretary of War Knox. (20) (21) The Chickasaw relationship with the Jefferson Administration was strengthened in 1801 at the Treaty of Chickasaw Bluffs where Chief George Colbert was presented a Silver Jefferson Peace Medal. (22)

Insert picture of Mallory gloved hand with Jeff Peace Medal

After resting at the agency for two (2) days the party set out again on 6 October following the U. S, designated Natchez Trace, the more historic Chickasaw Trace . The party passed near the Pharr Mounds (Natchez Trace Parkway Mile marker 286.7) North of Tupelo (23) and crossed the Tennessee River on the morning of 9 October, where Chickasaw Chief George Colbert operated a Stand and Ferry. (24) That evening the party camped near present-day Collinwood, TN (Natchez Trace Parkway Mile Marker 355). The next morning two (2) horses had strayed and Neeley searched for the horses while Lewis promised to wait at the first house along the Trace inhabited by white people. (25)

Unfortunately, we have no record of Meriwether Lewis recording his impression of the parklike region or culturally rich area which he was traveling though. Archaeologically documented, the area of Northern Mississippi, Northwestern Alabama and Western Tennessee had supported human habitation since 6000 BC. The Chickasaw People, a European pronunciation of “Chickasah”, are recorded contacting with DeSota in 1540 and again with LaSalle in 1682. Significant trade with between the Chickasaw and Choctaw People, began in 1698 when they were visited by the Thomas Welch trading party. (26)

Source:

(1) Danisi·Thomas & Jackson, John, Meriwether Lewis, Promefheus Books, Amherst, NY, 2009, page 271. (2) Ibid, page 247. (3) Jones, Landon, William Clark and the Shaping of the West, Hill and Wang, New York, 2004, page 175. (4) Chuinard, E. G, M.D. Only One Man Died: The Medical Aspects of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Ye Galleon Press, Fairfield, Washington, 1999, page 176, (5) Peck, David, Oi D., Or Perish in the Attempt, Far Country Press, Helena, MT, 2002, page 295. (6) Cramer, Zadok, The Navigator.:.,,,,,.., 8th Edition, Pittsburgh, 1814, page 187, (7) Weeks, Charles A., Paths to a Middle Ground: The Diplomacy of Natchez, Boukfouka, and San Ferando de las Barrancas, 1791- 1795, University of Alabama Press, 2010, Page 51. (8) Roper, James E., Fort Adams and Fort Pickering, West Tennessee Historical Society, 1970, Vol. 24, page 13. (9) https://www.chickasaw.net/getattachment/Our-Nation/Heritage/Mounds-of-the-Chickasaw-Homelands/CN- Mound-Project_2021_Apr29.pdf.aspx?lang=en-US pages 25-29. (10) Peck, David, 0. D., Or Perish in the Attempt, Far Country Press, Helena, MT, 2002, page 291. (11) Atkinson, James R., Splendid Land Splendid People, The University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa, 2004, page 198, (12) Ambrose, Stephen E., Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson and the opening the American West, Simon & Schuster, NY, 1996, page, 462, (13) Meyer, William E., Indian Trails of the Southeast: Forty-second annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology, Facsimile Reprint, Gustavs Library, 2009, page 816 & 819. (14) https://www.chickasaw.net/Our-Nation/Heritage/Mounds-of-the-Chickasaw­ Homelands.aspx, page 21-23, page 39-43,

(15) Atkinson, James R., Splendid Land Splendid People, The University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa, 2004, page 184. (16) Bodley, Temple, George Rogers Clark: His Life and Public Service, Houghton Mifflin Co., Cambridge, 1926, page 170. (17) Buckley, Jay H., William Clark: Indian Diplomat, U. of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 2008, page 37. (18) Knopf, Richard, Wayne’s Western Campaign: The Wayne-Knox Correspondence, 1793-1794, The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol.78, # 3 (July 1954), page 298-341. (19) Clements, Paul, Chronicles of the Cumberland Settlements 1779-1796, The Foundation of William and Jennifer Frist, Self- published, 2012, page 405. (20) The Oklahoman, Oklahoma City, (News Paper) Jan, 16, 1995. (21) https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/1995/01/16/indian-peace-medal-given-to-chickasaws/62402913007/ (22) https://www.nps.gov/natr/index.htm (23) https://www.chickasaw.net/Our-Nation/Heritage/Mounds-of-the-Chickasaw­ Homelands.aspx. Page 59-61. (24) https://www.nps.gov/places/colbert-ferry-stand-site.htm. (25) Ambrose, Stephen E., Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson and the Opening of the American West, Simon & Schuster, NY, 1996, page 463. (26) Atkinson, James, R., Splendid Land Splendid People: The Chickasaw Indians to Removal, The University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa, 2004, pages 1-25.

PICTURES/DOWNLOADS: (1) NPS Story of Old Houlka, (2) Mallory Pix of land representing Old Houlka, (3) Pix of NPS interpretive Panels@ Grinders Stand, (5) Agency house drawing by Raymond Dohrety Picture of ford on Tallahatchie River with GPS http://npshistory.com/publications/natr/cli-meriwether-lewis.pdf

4 A Celebrated Hero’s Tragedy in the Wilderness “I fear o! I fear”

Hundreds of hours of research and scholarly writing has been devoted to the last days of Meriwether Lewis. Ambrose, Bakeless, Danisi, Fisher, Phelps, Guice, Jenkinson, Jones, Holmberg (1) and many other fine writers have analyzed and described the time between Lewis’ arrival at Ft. Pickering and Grinders Stand. Each writer is worthy of reading to see their point of view. Autumn fogs are common in the Ohio and Mississippi River Valley, like the fog of mystery that hangs over Meriwether Lewis’ death. By His Own Hand: The Mysterious Death of Meriwether Lewis, edited by John D. W. Guice with contributions by James J. Holmberg, John D. W. Guice, and Jay H. Buckley with an Introduction by Clay S. Jenkinson and a very thoughtful Forward by Elliott West, details the facts of Lewis’ death in 178 pages. The book provides the several descriptions of Lewis’ mysterious death for a nation of people that love mystery and intrigue. (2) In James Neelly’s letter to Thomas Jefferson dated 18 October 1809, Neelly described the situation he found, “……I came up some time after, & had him (Lewis) as decently Buried as I could in that place- if there is any thing wished by his friends to be done to his grave I will attend to their Instructions”. (3)

During Meriwether Lewis’ visit to Philadelphia in 1807, to arrange for publication of the expedition journals, he made friends with ornithologist Alexander Wilson who agreed to illustrate the expedition birds. In May 1811, Wilson traveled the Natchez Trace and stopped at the Grinders where he interviewed and recorded Mrs. Ginder’s statement of Lewis’ death. In the closing sentence of Wilson’s letter to a friend, Alexander Lawson, Wilson explained, “I gave Grinder money to put a post fence around it, (the grave) to shelter it from the hogs, and the wolves; and he gave me his written promise he would do it.” (4)

From the early effort to protect Lewis’ grave, successive Tennessee and Federal Agencies have protected the Meriwether Lewis Grave Site. The 1998 National Park Service Cultural Landscape Inventory for the Lewis Grave is an excellent demonstration of historic preservation. (5) The pictures in the report present a clear description of the site and stately beauty of a park like setting over the past 100 years or more. Lewis’ death is a heartbreaking end to a brilliant and accomplished young life. The beautiful and respectful park is a memorial to a successful public servant. Meriwether Lewis should be honored for his accomplishments, including his leadership during the first recorded exploration of the American West, instead of the societal cloud that hangs over Meriwether Lewis’ mysterious death.

The successful explorer, Territorial Governor, son, and friend did not receive the Honors of a Military Funeral until 2009. The Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation organized a memorial service through the thoughtful leadership of Dr. Bryant Boswell and Mr. Tony Turnbow. A formal military burial rite allowed the Lewis family and friends the opportunity to pay their respect to an American hero. While the memorial ceremony was nearly 200 years late, it should be the beginning of a grateful Nation respecting Lewis’ Leadership and his accomplishments that made the United States a truly continental Nation.

Sources:

• Ambrose, Undaunted Courage; Bakeless, Partners in Discovery; Danisi, Meriwether Lewis; Fisher, Suicide OR Murder; Phelps, The Tragic Death of Meriwether Lewis (William & Mary QuarterlyV-12. #13; Guice, By His Own Hand?; Jenkinson, The Character of Meriwether Lewis, Jones, William Clark and Shaping of the West; Holmberg, Dear Brother: Letters of William Clark to Jonathan Clark. • Guice, John, S. W., By His Own Hand? Oklahoma University Press, Norman 2006. • Jackson, Donald, Letters of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Second Edition University of Illinois Press, Urbana, 1978, page 468. • http://biographiesofthenation.pbworks.com/f/NormAnderson_IPY1_POST.pdf page 13. • http://npshistory.com/publications/natr/cli-meriwether-lewis.pdf

Pictures: Grinders Stand 2009, (2) Christmas Wreath 2019 (3) NPS Interpretive Panels

5 Protecting Lewis’ Possessions Inventory near Nashville and Washington, D C

Lewis had packed his possessions for traveling in two (2), small trunks, including the rejected Bills of Exchange and the expedition journals. After Lewis’ death and hasty burial, James Neeley and John Pernier took the trunks to the vicinity of Nashville. On 18 October James Neeley wrote Thomas Jefferson describing Lewis’ death. (1)

( Z )l ) )

Source:

(1) Jackson, Donald, Letters of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, University of Illinois Press, Urbana, 1978, Vol. 2, page 467.

(2) Ibid, pages 470-471. (3) Holmberg, James J., Dear Brother: Letters of William Clark to Jonathan Clark, publishes in association with the Filson Historical Society, Yale University Press, 2002, page 227. (4) Jackson, Donald, Letters of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, University of Illinois Press, Urbana, 1978, page 475. (5) Holmberg, James J., Dear Brother: Letters of William Clark to Jonathan Clark, published in association with The Filson Historical Society, Yale University Press, 2002, page 233. (6) Jackson, Donald, Letters of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, University of Illinois Press, Urbana, 1978, page 486 & 487.

Pictures: Lewis Watch, Trunks from Bryant, Trunk from Holmberg, Journals, Clothing, Tomahawk, ½ Pint Silver Tumbler