Besides Meriwether Lewis and Capt. William Clark of course...
1.) Sergeant Charles Floyd (1782 - 1804)
2.) Sergeant Patrick Gass (1771 - 1870)
3.) Sergeant Nathanial Hale Pryor (1772-1831)
4.) Sergeant John Ordway (ca. 1775-ca. 1817)
5.) Corporal Richard Warfington (1777-?)
6.) Private John Boley (dates unknown)
7.) Private William E. Bratton (1778-1841)
8.) Private John Collins (?-1823)
9.) Private John Colter (ca. 1775-1813)
10.) Private Pierre Cruzatte (dates unknown)
11.) Private John Dame (1784-?)
12.) Private Joseph Fields (ca. 1772-1807)
13.) Private Reuben Fields (Joseph's brother) (ca. 1771-1823?)
14.) Private Robert Frazer (?-1837)
15.) Private George Gibson (?-1809)
16.) Private Silas Goodrich (dates unknown)
17.) Private Hugh Hall (ca. 1772-?)
18.) Private Thomas Proctor Howard (1779-?)
19.) Private Francois Labiche (dates unknown)
20.) Private Jean Baptiste LePage (1761-1809)
21.) Private Hugh McNeal (dates unknown)
22.) Private John Newman (ca. 1785-1838) (expelled from the expedition)
23.) Private Moses B. Reed (dates unknown) (expelled from the expedition)
24.) Private John Potts (1776-1808?)
25.) Private John Robertson (ca. 1780-?)
26.) Private George Shannon (1785-1836) (youngest member)
27.) Private John Shields (1769-1809)
28.) Private John B. Thompson (dates unknown)
29.) Private Howard Tunn (1770 - ?)
30.) Private Ebenezer Tuttle (1773-?)
31.) Private Peter M. Weiser (1781-?)
32.) Private William Werner (dates unknown)
33.) Private Isaac White (ca. 1774-?)
34.) Private Joseph Whitehouse (ca. 1775-?)
35.) Private Alexander Hamilton Willard (1778-1865)
36.) Private Richard Windsor (dates unknown)
37.) Engagé Alexander Carson (ca. 1775-1836)
38.) Engagé Charles Caugee (dates unknown)
39.) Engagé Joseph Collin (dates unknown)
40.) Engagé Jean Baptiste Deschamps (dates unknown)
41.) Engagé Charles Hebert (dates unknown)
42.) Engagé Jean Baptiste La Jeunesse (?-1806?)
43.) Engagé Etienne Malboeuf (ca. 1775-?)
44.) Engagé Peter Pinaut (ca. 1776-?)
45.) Engagé Paul Primeau (dates unknown)
46.) Engagé Franois Rivet (ca. 1757-1852)
47.) Engagé Peter Roi (dates unknown)
48.) Toussaint Charbonneau (Sacagawea's husband) (1767-1843)
49.) Sacagawea (c. 1788-1812)
50.) Jean-Baptiste Charbonneau (Sacagawea's son) (1805-1866)
51.) Interpreter George Drouillard (?-1810)
52.) York (Clark's slave) (c. 1770-March 1831?)
53.) "Seaman" or "Scannon", Lewis' large black Newfoundland dog
Lewis and Clark were joined by 31 other permanent members of the expedition.
Only after Clark joined Lewis on October 13, 1803 at Camp Dubois (in present-day Indiana)did they call their team the 'Corps of Discovery'
Before Meriwether Lewis met up with Clark, he began the expedition on August 30, 1803 in Pittsburgh PA. At this time, Lewis was 29 years old. Lt. William Clark joined Meriwether Lewis on the expedition on October 13, 1803 at Camp Dubois (in present-day Indiana). It was then named their team the "Corps of Discovery." At this time, William Clark was 33.
Meriwether Lewis was in charge and William Clark came as his assistant. But the Lewis And Clark Expedition is still know as The Lewis And Clark Expedition.
sacagawea,lewis,clark,thomas jefferson
Lewis and Clark were joined by 31 other permanent members of the expedition.
Actually, he joined the expediton when Lewis and Clark found them.(Toussaint and Sacagawea)
Sacajawea was living with the Shoshone tribe when she joined the Lewis and Clark expedition.
Sacagawea
Before Clark Set off with Lewis, He joined the Kentucky Militia, Then later joined the army.
They were called the "Corps of Discovery", but this was only after Clark joined Lewis at Camp Dubois (in present-day Indiana).
She was a Shone. Her brother was chief of the tribe.
Her name was Sacagawea.
Lewis was the main explorer who chose which path to take and Clark was the one to map the areas they traveled
When Lewis and Clark wintered at the present site of Bismarck, North Dakota, there they met Sacagawea and her husband Toussaint Charbonneau. She was 16 or 17 when she and Toussaint, who was a French trapper, joined the Lewis and Clark party on November 4, 1804.
She was a Shone. Her brother was chief of the tribe.
When Lewis and Clark wintered at the present site of Bismarck, North Dakota, there they met Sacagawea and her husband Toussaint Charbonneau. She was 16 or 17 when she and Toussaint, who was a French trapper, joined the Lewis and Clark party on November 4, 1804.