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Fort Clatsop trails offer a scenic trek with historical insights into Lewis and Clark's journey.
When the Corps of Discovery arrived at Fort Clatsop, they were desperate for a way to preserve their food. Men were sent to the beach to extract salt from seawater.
A replica of the fort and popular tourist attraction where the Lewis and Clark expedition spent the soggy winter of 1805-1806 was destroyed by fire.
In the shadow of the Missouri River Basin Lewis and Clark Visitors Center in Nebraska City, an important building project is underway.
When the Lewis & Clark Expedition arrived at Fort Clatsop, men were sent to the beach to extract salt from seawater to preserve food. That trek has been recreated.
The Lewis and Clark Center at Fort Leavenworth is a state-of-the-art building, boasting three floors full of custom stained-glass windows and military artifacts from many different countries and ...
Watch a brief expose on the history of Lewis and Clark's "Corps of Discovery"! From 1804-1806, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark led the "Corps of Discovery" on a journey to the Pacific Ocean to ...
Lewis had served under Clark in several military battles, and respected him so much that he wanted Clark to be commissioned as his co-commander on the expedition.
The youngest member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, officially called “The Corps of Discovery,” was a teenager. At the time that George Shannon signed up for the expedition, he was 15- or ...
Returning home from the Pacific Ocean and a wet winter at Fort Clatsop in Oregon, Lewis and Clark’s Corps of Discovery was delighted to enter the thick grasslands of eastern Montana. Instead of ...
Brad Winn, site superintendent since 2001, has helped the Lewis and Clark State Historic Site attract 100,000 visitors each year.