Meriwether Lewis
Meriwether
Lewis was born on the family plantation in Virginia. He had
an older sister, Jane, and later a little brother, Reuben, would be
born into the family.
His father fought in the Revolutionary War and died when Meriwether was
only five years old.
As a young boy Meriwether enjoyed hunting in the woods, and
sometimes he would go out alone at night in all kinds of weather to
explore.
His mother remarried and Captain John Marks became his
stepfather. The family left the plantation in the care of a relative
and moved to Georgia. When he was 13 years old he returned to Virginia
for schooling and to learn how to manage the 2,000 acre plantation his
father had willed to him.
When he was 18 his stepfather died and his mother moved back
to Virginia. Meriwether had come of age and could now manage the
plantation himself.
Later he enlisted in the Virginia Volunteer Corps and served well. He
was promoted to lieutenant and then to captain.
He had a friend and neighbor who had been watching Meriwether
grow up. This friend became President of the United States. His name
was Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson liked the qualities he saw in
Meriwether and asked him to come to Washington to become his personal
secretary. He paid him $500 a year and gave him room and board in the
White House. What an opportunity for young Meriwether!
Jefferson had a plan to send an expedition to explore the land
from the Mississippi River westward to the Pacific Ocean. He asked
Congress for $2,500 to fund
the project. A year earlier in 1803 the United States had bought over
800,000 square miles of land from France for $15,000,000. Lewis and
Clark would cross this land on their expedition.
The President groomed Meriwether for the job by letting him study with
great teachers. He studied botany ,
fossils , astronomy, and mathematics.
Will Clark, his long-time friend, had been chosen to accompany
him. Lewis insisted the two of them would each be referred to as
captains of the expedition.
Meriwether prepared three boats; a large 55 foot keelboat and two
smaller ones. They had to carry a lot of supplies and ammunition; six
tons, 12,000 pounds in all. He prepared the gunpowder in lead
containers. When the gunpowder was used up from a container they could
melt it down to make bullets for their guns.
Included in the supplies were trinkets, beads, and mirrors which would
be gifts to the Indians.
Two important people who joined them at the Mandan Indian
villages were Touissant Charbonneau ( too SAN SHAR buh no) and his
Shoshone wife Sacagawea (SAK uh juh WEE uh). He had bought her as a
slave from the Blackfoot Indians who had kidnapped her from her people.
Sacagawea was the interpreter
for the group, and when the Indians saw her with her tiny baby, they
felt they had nothing to fear from these strangers. The baby was only
two months old when her journey with them began.
The members of the expedition suffered many hardships as they
navigated the Missouri River, crossed the Stony (Rockie) Mountains, and
followed the Columbia River to the west coast of the country to their
first view of the Pacific Ocean. The trip had taken them a year and a
half. During that time Meriwether had kept a detailed journal of
events, drawn maps, collected plant specimens, and managed to pass
peacefully through the Indian territory.
Now they had to retrace their steps back over the mountains and return.
When they got back home each man who had accompanied them was paid in
cash, and a record was made of each man's name. The government would
give each one of them a gift of land.
Congress gave Meriwether 1,500 acres of land and made him
governor of all the Louisiana Territory. Will Clark was given 1,000
acres of land. They made him Indian Agent and gave him the title
Brigadier General .
The end of the story, however, is different for the two men. Three
years after their return Meriwether Lewis died tragically from gunshot
wounds. Will Clark married, had a family, became governor of the
Missouri Territory, and lived to be sixty-eight years old.
Biography at
gardenofpraise.com