I j. Lewis and Clark Expedition I

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Document #1 for Packets #5,6, 7, and 8 Lewis and Clark Expedition Wes 'JardRoute N ive A, rie ns, Forts j.j l (.«uth P,,(:ific OceiiUl o 6 590 1.0.00 1.5,00Miles 560 1.oho 1.doo 2.dooKilometers The Lewis and Ctark expedition left a camp near St. Louis in 1804. journeyed up the Missouri Rver. and crossed the Rocky Mountains. The explorers reached the Pacific coast in 1805. They returned to Sf. Louis in 1800 with valuable information about the new frontier.

/ ajul 1Lewis and Clark. Native Americans. Tillamook ndians PBS Page 1 of 1 Tillamook ndian At the time of Lewis and Clark, the land on the northwest Oregon coast was home to the Tillamook ndians. The Tillamooks lived in a series of towns starting at the mouth of the Necanicum River and continuing southward to Tillamook Bay. As it turned out, the Tillamook village ofnecost would be the southernmost point reached by the Corps of Discovery on the Oregon coast. The Tillamooks' primary encounter with the expedition came in January 1806. A large whale washed ashore on the beach near Necost, and the Tillamooks were quick to make use of the creature. They sliced off chunks of blubber, piled them in a wooden trough, and cooked out the oil, saving it for later. The blubber was kept for food. After the Corps heard about the whale, Clark led a party south from the expedition's winter residence at Fort Clatsop to trade for blubber. Thirty-five miles and two days later, when Clark reached the beach, he found that the Tillamooks had stripped the whale to the bones. The ndians bargained with him for the blubber, and in exchange for 300 pounds and some oil, the Tillamooks received some trade goods. http://www. pbs.org/lewisandclark/native/til.htrnl 2/26/2012

Lewis and Clark. Native Americans. Clatsop ndians PBS Page 1 of 1 C a 0 ndian n 1805, the northwest tip of what is now Oregon was inhabited by the Clatsop ndians. The tribe consisted of about four hundred people, and occupied three villages on the southern side of the Columbia river. Like their neighbors, the Chinooks, the Clatsops were a flourishing people, and enjoyed plentiful amounts offish and fur. They had few enemies, and fought few wars. On the Shores of the Nootka Coboway, chief of one of the villages, was the only Clastop leader to make recorded contact with the Corps of Discovery. On December 12, 1805, Coboway visited the expedition at Fort Clatsop, which was still under construction. He exchanged some goods, including a sea otter pelt, for fishhooks and a small bag of Shoshone tobacco. Over the rest of the winter, Coboway would be a frequent and welcome vistor to Fort Clatsop. The Clatsops also aided the Corps both in preparing for and dealing with the Northwest winter. They informed Lewis and Clark that there was a good amount of elk on the south side of the Columbia, information that influenced the Corps to build Fort Clatsop where they did. When the expedition's food supplies were running low, the Clatsops informed the Corps that a whale had washed ashore some miles to the south. Relations between the Clatsops and the expedition went well through the duration ofthe Americans' stay. The only negative incident between the two groups - the expedition's theft of a Clatsop canoe - was concealed from the Clatsops. At the expedition's departure from Fort Clatsop on March 22, 1806, Lewis wrote in his journal that Coboway "has been much more kind an[ d] hospitable to us than any other indian in this neighbourhood." Because of his friendship with the expedition, Coboway was left Fort Clatsop and all its furniture by Lewis and Clark. http://www.pbs.org/lewisandclark/native/cla.html 2126/2012

Lewis and Clark. Native Americans. Chinook ndians PBS Page 1 of2 Chinoo tan The Chinook ndians, relatives to the Clatsop tribe, lived in the Northwest along the banks of the Columbia River and the coast of the Pacific Ocean. The Chinooks were superb canoe builders and navigators, masterful traders, skillful fishermen and planters. They lived in large wooden plank houses and slept on reed mats over raised boards. Short in stature, the Chinooks also were Along the Columbia characterized by flat foreheads and pointed craniums. William Clark wrote of their attire: "all go litely dressed ware nothing below the waist in the coldest weather, a pice of fur around their bodies and a short robe composes the sum total of their dress, except a fiew hats, and beads about their necks arms and lets." n late 1805, as the Corps of Discovery began to make its way down the Columbia River after crossing the Rocky Mountains, they were told by the Nez Perce ndians that the Chinooks living down the river had a different culture and language than anything the Corps had encountered. The Nez Perce chiefs also warned the captains of a rumor that the Chinooks intended to kill the Americans when the expedition arrived. Clark, however, commented, "as we are at all times & places on our guard, [we] are under no greater apprehention than is common." The Chinooks were accustomed to European goods and white traders, so their first encounters with the expedition were peaceful. On October 26, 1805, two Chinook chiefs and several men came to the expedition's camp to offer gifts of deer meat and root bread cakes. The captains responded by presenting the chiefs with medals and the men with trinkets. Other Chinook villages along the banks of the river offered similar receptions to the Americans as they approached the Pacific Ocean and the mouth ofthe Columbia River. During these encounters, however, the Corps struggled with what Clark termed "the protection of our Stores from thieft." This became such a problem with the Chinooks in the area that the captains had to restrain some of the men from instigating fights with the ndians. As Clark noted, "it [is] necessary at this time to treat those people verry friendly & ingratiate our Selves with them, to insure us a kind & friendly reception on our return." The Chinooks on the Upper Columbia were a factor in the Corps' decision of where to spend the winter of 1806. Wary of their neighbors and mindful of the more plentiful game to the south, the Corps decided to spend the winter on the south side of the river, where the Clatsops lived, rather than on the north bank among the lower Chinookan bands. During their stay at Fort Clatsop, the Corps depended on the local ndians for food. But the Chinooks and the Clatsops charged what Lewis and Clark considered http://www.pbs.orgllewisandclarklnative/chi.html 2126/2012

Lewis and Clark. Native Americans. Chinook ndians PBS Page 2 of2 unreasonable prices, and the captains were unhappy with this practice, along with the thefts. Visits by the Chinooks to Fort Clatsop were limited, and the ndians were not allowed to stay in the fort overnight. Both captains' journals noted low opinions of the Chinookan customs and appearance. Lewis met with one of the Chinook chiefs, who blamed the trouble on a select few and reassured the captain that on the whole, his village wished for peace. After the meeting, Lewis wrote, " hope that the friendly interposition of this chief may prevent our being compelled to use some violence with these people; our men seem well disposed to kill a few of them." Tensions were eased only temporarily, however, when a couple of weeks later some Chinooks further up the river stole a saddle and a robe from the Corps. After Lewis ordered a search of the village, the stolen goods were found, and the Corps passed the falls of The Dalles and returned to Nez Perce country without having fired at a native. http://www.pbs.org/lewisandclark/native/chi.html 2/26/2012