a horse
of corse. they were practically the only ones left.
The only man known to have died during the Lewis and Clark Expedition was Sergeant Charles Floyd. Sergeant Floyd was born in Kentucky and was one of the first men to enlist in the expedition, on August 1, 1803. On August 20, 1804, he died from what is generally thought to have been a ruptured appendix. He is buried at Floyd's Bluff near Sioux City, Iowa.
Well Lewis suffered from a terrible case of the flu one winter, and Clark suffered from what he describes as a "rheumatism of the neck" which Lewis applied a hot stone wrapped in flannel to ease the pain. Sergeant Floyd would be the only one to die during the expedition from a burst appendix.
Toussaint Charbonneau died at Fort Mandan in 1843. It is not known how he died. Charbonneau was apart of the Lewis and Clark expedition.
Joseph Lewis Clark died on 2006-05-02.
don`t forget to studywhat they did or where they lived.
he died when he was exploring
On August 12, 1806, near the end of the expedition, Lewis was shot in the buttock by Pierre Cruzatte, a man that had only one eye. under his command, while both were hunting for elk. Pierre mistook Lewis for a elk. At first, Pierre blamed Blackfeet natives for the injury, but after the Corps found no sign of Indians, he admitted the accident. Clark bandaged and treated Lewis's wound,. and Robert Cullinane one of the members in the party went to find the blackfeet natives. But he found nothing. Robert was famous for being with Lewis closest friend
He died in 2012
Meriwether Lewis was born in 1774, and died in 1809, three years after he famously crossed the northwestern US with William Clark. While acting as territorial governor of Upper Louisiana, he died of gunshot wounds while traveling south of Natchez, Misissippi. While ruled a suicide, his death is still widely suspected to be a homicide.
Contrary to popular belief, the expedition DID NOT begin in St. Louis, Missouri. The first entry in the Lewis and Clark Expedition Journals state that the journey began in Pittsburgh, PA on August 30, 1804. Lewis, who had been assigned by Jefferson sailed down the Ohio River with supplies towards St. Louis. William Clark would offer to join Lewis on the expedition weeks later on October 13, 1803 at Camp Dubois (in present-day Indiana). They then named their team the "Corps of Discovery." From there, they sailed down the Ohio River towards St. Louis. Meriwether Lewis had spent the time prior to their departure in St. Louis gathering information from mountain men returning from the west. They then departed St. Louis in May 1804 heading up the Missouri River.