• Home
  • How We Work
  • Where We Work
  • News Room
  • About Us
  • My Nature Page

The Nature Conservancy in Africa - Conservation in Africa

The Nature Conservancy in Asia Pacific - Conservation in Asia-Pacific

The Nature Conservancy in the Caribbean - Conservation in the Caribbean

The Nature Conservancy in Central America - Conservation in Central America

The Nature Conservancy in North America - Conservation in North America

The Nature Conservancy in the United States - Conservation in the United States

The Nature Conservancy in South America - Conservation in South America


Lewis and Clark

Home
The Journey
  Places
  People
  Species
The Anniversary
  Press
  Events & Trips
  Get Involved
 
How You Can Help
Donate Online
Renew Membership
Estate Planning
Gift Ideas
Volunteer
The Journey
The Corps of Discovery is born

Setting off: The Missouri River

Traveling the Mighty Missouri

Meeting the Sioux and Mandans

Breaking Winter Camp

Meeting Sacagawea's People

To the Pacific Ocean!

Back Home and Into History

The Corps of Discovery is Born

Heading West: 1801 - May 1804

The Mississippi River
The Mississippi River, south of St. Louis.
© Harold E. Malde

When President Thomas Jefferson took office in 1801, America was young. The spirit of rebellion still was alive. Jefferson worried that Americans west of the Appalachians — more closely tied to each through river trade than their brethren to the east — might secede from the union. Jefferson and others also wondered what opportunities for this growing nation lie west.

It was amid this turmoil that Jefferson asked Meriwether Lewis to undertake an exploration of the Missouri River in search of a Northwest passageway to the Pacific Ocean. The President also asked him to record the plants, animals, soils, minerals and people of this undocumented region.

Not long after Lewis began making preparations, the historic Louisiana Purchase was announced. It secured the prized New Orleans port and increased the mission’s importance: Lewis now would explore American lands.

In Clarksville, Ind., just across the river from Louisville, Ky., William Clark joined Lewis as his co-captain and together handpicked a group of men for the journey. This brave group would come to be known as the Corps of Discovery.

As Lewis traveled westward along the Ohio River, he made his first natural history report: A sighting of migrating squirrels swimming from north to south across the river. These migrations today are all but a memory, demonstrating partly why this mission’s many documents — from journal entries to detailed maps — are so valuable today. They provide a pristine record of the then-unchanged natural world.

In Their Own Words...

“The annexation of Louisiana … gave a new face to politics, and ranked in historical importance next to the Declaration of Independence and the adoption of the Constitution."

~ Henry Adams, historian
and philosopher

Together, these documents help us understand the changes European settlement brought to the American landscape and its many habitats — from what remains to what was lost. This understanding can provide a framework for the future, as The Nature Conservancy works to preserve the plants, animals and natural communities that represent the diversity of life on Earth.

Next: Setting Off: The Missouri River

Photo: Greater prairie chicken © Harvey Payne

Prairie Chicken

Species Profile:
Greater Prairie Chicken

More than a million greater prairie chickens once roamed central North America. Early settlers — who favored their meat — hunted prairie chickens by the wagonload. They now are imperiled in much of the United States.