To accurately identify the country Lewis is referring to in his journals, I would need the specific excerpt you have in mind. Please provide the relevant text, and I'd be happy to help analyze it!
To provide an accurate answer, I would need the specific excerpt from Lewis's journals that you're referring to. Please share that text, and I'd be happy to help identify the country he is mentioning.
The journals of Lewis and Clark had a lot of information about the Louisiana Purchase, an area that previously was pretty much unexplored. The journals gave the United States on a whole a better understanding of their newly acquired land.
The first entry of the Lewis and Clark Journals state that the expedition began on August 31, 1803 in Pittsburgh, PA.That's right, NOT St. Louis in 1804. If you don't believe me, please follow the related link to the Journals' first entry.
During their expedition, Lewis and Clark had to make it through rough winters and needed to seek help from the native American tribes that inhabited these winter grounds. There's a terrific book that chronicles Lewis and Clark's expedition from start to finish: The Journals of Lewis and Clark, edited by Bernard DeVoto published by Mariner Books. The Journals are a really fun read.
To accurately identify the country Lewis is referring to in his journals, I would need the specific excerpt you have in mind. Please provide the relevant text, and I'd be happy to help analyze it!
To provide an accurate answer, I would need the specific excerpt from Lewis's journals that you're referring to. Please share that text, and I'd be happy to help identify the country he is mentioning.
Meriwether Lewis was the one who found the Lewis and Clark expedition journals.
The Journals of Lewis and Clark - 1965 was released on: USA: 23 February 1965
The cast of The Journals of Lewis and Clark - 1965 includes: Lorne Greene as Himself - - Narrator
buttstock
There were two primary journals kept during the Lewis and Clark expedition, one by Meriwether Lewis and the other by William Clark. These journals recorded detailed accounts of the expedition's discoveries and encounters with Native American tribes, wildlife, and natural landmarks.
because they did so shut up
Lewis and Clark kept journals so that they could report their discoveries to President Jefferson. At the time, Jefferson had just bout the Louisiana Territory and he needed to know what was over there. He chose Lewis, who was his personal secretary to go on an expedition and Lewis chose Clark to accompany him and be his second in command. They basically just needed to write down everything that would have been useful for president Jefferson.
There would be a total of 31 people in the Lewis and Clark expedition, but Lewis and Clark were the only ones who were permitted to write in the journals. Being that the instructions of what to write in them were given to Lewis only, and eventually Clark would know them, the others did not have the authority to do so.
they kept very detailed journals
they wrote journals and drew pictures of the places they saw