Posted on 05/22/2003 7:08:54 AM PDT by Valin
PHILADELPHIA - Stories of Lewis and Clark usually start out west, where the explorers paddled up the Missouri River in 1804 to explore the Louisiana Purchase and find an easy water route to the Pacific Ocean.
But it was 200 years ago that the tale really began - in Philadelphia.
A few years after drafting the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson was elected to membership in the American Philosophical Society, based in Philadelphia. Though he had never traveled more than 50 miles west of Virginia's Shenandoah Valley, Jefferson dreamed of a scientific exploration of the unmapped West.
So when he became president in 1801, Jefferson brought Meriwether Lewis to Washington and Monticello as his personal secretary.
Then, before sending Lewis west, Jefferson sent him to the intellectual, medical, scientific and trading center of the new United States - Philadelphia. Here, he spent a month in the spring of 1803 gaining specialized training and purchasing supplies for the expedition.
Lewis' education included instruction in navigation from Robert Patterson, botany from Benjamin Smith Barton, medicine from Benjamin Rush and anatomy from Caspar Wistar. He also spent time in Lancaster, Pa., learning astronomy and surveying with Andrew Ellicott.
Lewis left Pennsylvania prepared for what would become one of the most important events in the growth of the young country.
In honor of that endeavor, the photographs presented in this series seek to reflect how the rivers, lands and peoples encountered along the 3,700-mile route taken by Lewis and his partner, William Clark, have been affected in the ensuing 200 years.
(Excerpt) Read more at twincities.com ...
Lewis and Clark: Wildlife captivates explorers Lewis and Clark: Life in their wake
Lewis and Clark: Celebrating their legacy
Lewis and Clark: Charting the once-mysterious far West
Lewis and Clark: Indians looking back with pride
These can be found at link.
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