The fate of the corps : what became of the Lewis and Clark explorers after the expedition /
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Author / Creator: | Morris, Larry E., 1951- author. |
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Imprint: | New Haven : Yale University Press, [2004] ©2004 |
Description: | 1 online resource (xviii, 284 pages) : illustrations, map |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11156853 |
Table of Contents:
- Chronology
- Prologue
- "We descended with great velocity" The triumphant return of the Lewis and Clark Expedition
- "All the red men are my children" Lewis and Sheheke's visit to Thomas Jefferson
- "They appeared in violent rage" Pryor and Shannon's battle with the Arikara
- "He saw the prairie behind him covered with Indians in full and rapid chase" The adventures of John Colter
- "This has not been done through malice" George Drouillard's murder trial
- "The gloomy and savage wilderness" The mysterious death of Meriwether Lewis
- "I give and recommend my soul" The deaths of George Gibson, Jean-Baptiste Lepage, and John Shields
- "A sincere and undisguised heart" George Shannon's early career
- "He must have fought in a circle on horseback" George Drouillard's death at the hands of the Blackfeet
- "Water as high as the trees" William Bratton and John Ordway and the Great Earthquake.
- "She was a good and the best woman in the Fort" Sacagawea's death
- "The crisis is fast approaching" The Corps and the War of 1812
- "We lost in all fourteen killed" John Collins and Toussaint Charbonneau among the mountain men
- "Taken with the cholera in Tennessee and died" The sad fate of York
- "Men on Lewis & Clark's trip" William Clark's accounting of Expedition members
- "Active to the last" The final decades of the Corps
- Appendix A. Members of the Lewis and Clark Expedition
- Appendix B. The death of Meriwether Lewis
- Appendix C. The Sacagawea controversy.