Arts / L&C Artists / Karl Bodmer

Karl Bodmer

Swiss artist Karl Bodmer, was employed by Prince Maximillian von Wied (1809-1893) to accompany him on a journey to the upper Missouri River. By virtue of the timing of the 1832 trip, his drawings—and the paintings and engravings derived from them—have also become associated with the Lewis and Clark Expedition.

 

Pages with Bodmer’s Artwork

    The White Cliffs

    by

    Under cloudy skies on the morning of 31 May 1805, the expedition “proceeded at an early hour,” and roped their flotilla of six cottonwood dugout canoes and two big pirogues into one of the most famous riverscapes on the Missouri.

    June 6, 1806

    Still no guides

    Clark travels to Broken Arm’s village to repeat a diplomatic speech and ask for guides. He is given two peace pipes—one for him and the other for the Shoshones. Lewis describes the western tanager.

    April 14, 1805

    Bear Den Creek

    Bear Den Creek, ND Passing sage-covered hills, the expedition makes fourteen miles up the Missouri River. They notice prairie dogs, elk, buffalo and two empty Assiniboine camps.

    The Barge

    Barge, keelboat, or just 'the boat'?

    by

    Meriwether Lewis listed a “Keeled Boat” in his pre-expedition shopping list, but after he finally got it, he and the other journalists of the Corps of Discovery simply called it “the boat” (190 times) or, less often, “the barge” (32 times).

    November 27, 1804

    Mandan deceptions

    Lewis returns to Fort Mandan with two Hidatsa chiefs, and the captains learn that the Mandans have been telling lies to the Hidatsas. Seven Canada-based traders arrive at the Knife River Villages.

    August 14, 1806

    Among old friends

    The expedition arrives at the Knife River Villages—one of which is the home of the Charbonneau family. The captains meet with various chiefs, and Clark invites them to travel to Washington City.

    Assessing the Legacy of Lewis and Clark

    by

    The author proposes a few metaphors for the Lewis and Clark story, not in any definitive way, but merely to help us all think about the legacy of the expedition.

    September 24, 1804

    Buffalo Medicine

    Indians scattered about a large river bottom

    At present Pierre, South Dakota, the captains smoke with Buffalo Medicine, and a promise is made to return Pvt. Colter’s stolen horse and to meet with the captains tomorrow.

    Chief Blackbird

    Late Omaha chief

    by

    The two captains and ten of the enlisted men climbed the hill to visit the grave of one of the most notorious and controversial leaders of the Omaha Nation, whose name was Washinga Sahba—Blackbird.

    January 11, 1805

    War medicine dance

    Posecopsahe (Black Cat) of Ruptáre and The Coal of Mitutanka visit Fort Mandan and spend the night. At Mitutanka village, several soldiers witness a war medicine dance—perhaps the Mandan Wolf Ceremony.

    August 31, 1804

    Yankton speeches

    The council with the Yankton Sioux continues with many of them giving speeches while Clark and Sgt. Ordway take notes. Trader Pierre Dorion is assigned a mission to make peace with the region’s Nations.

    Illustrating the Great Fall

    At the Falls of the Missouri

    by

    After Lewis’s preliminary sketch, later artists and photographers contributed to the visual documentation of the “sublimely grand” waterfall including Barralet, Gustavus Sohon, A. E. Mathews, and F. Jay Haynes.

    October 12, 1804

    Trading with the Arikara

    At an Arikara village, the morning is spent parleying and trading. At 1 pm, the expedition heads up the Missouri River and encamps near present Shaw Creek Recreation Area in South Dakota.

    January 13, 1805

    Major buffalo hunt

    At Fort Mandan, Clark estimates that half the Mandan population has formed a large hunting party. Charbonneau returns from a trip and tells Clark why Hidatsa Chief Le Borgne has kept his distance.

    Indian Presentation Flags

    What kind of flag did they give out?

    by

    Several vexillologists have speculated that Lewis and Clark might have carried some “Indian presentation flags” with seventeen stripes, plus the Great Seal in the canton with seventeen stars either surrounding the eagle or inside the Glory.

    March 17, 1804

    Questions about Indian war tactics

    Wood River Camp, IL Spring-like weather is recorded as the captains work in St. Louis and Cahokia. During this time, Clark records questions about war tactics to ask the Indians they will soon meet.

    January 20, 1805

    Mandan gratitude ritual

    Sgt. Gass witnesses some Mandans offering food to a sacred buffalo skull, and Clark explains yesterday’s jealousy between the two interpreters’ wives. The gunsmithing skills of Pvt. Shields is described..

    April 2, 1804

    Northward-bound traders

    At winter camp across from the mouth of the Missouri, Clark says the men are “a cleaning to Day.” A boat bound for Prairie du Chien and owned by Mississippi River trader Nicholas Jarrot stops for the night.

    February 16, 1805

    Scorched earth

    Fort Mandan, ND Lewis and his men continue their pursuit of a Sioux war party and come to an old Mandan village where the hunter’s cache of meat that has been pillaged and two lodges set afire.

    August 30, 1804

    Yankton council and dance

    At a council with the Yankton Sioux, Lewis delivers a speech, gifts given, and a peace pipe passed. Clark learns about the Akicita Society, and Sgt. Ordway finds their musical instruments interesting.

    January 23, 1805

    Making sleds

    At Fort Mandan below the Knife River Villages, the enlisted men awake to four inches of fresh snow and go about their ‘common’ day. Sleds are made and traded for locally grown beans and corn.

    Pierre by Air

    Standoff

    by

    Lewis and Clark first met the Teton Sioux on 25 September 1804. One of Jefferson’s primary political objectives for the expedition was to create a peace treaty and trade agreement them, the most potent military and economic force on the lower Missouri.

    The Grand Tower

    Demons

    by

    In 1673 French explorers Père Marquette and Louis Joliet listened to local Indians’ warnings about this place and erected a cross atop the ninety-foot-high rock to disempower the demons said to be lurking in the treacherous whirlpool at its base.

    John Robinson

    (ca. 1780–unknown), Corporal

    This man is perhaps the most mysterious of the expedition’s mystery men. Journal entries indicate he may have left the expedition on 12 June 1804 riding back to St. Louis with Chouteau Fur Company traders.

    March 13, 1804

    Clear and cold

    Winter Camp at Wood River, IL The weather diary reports that today is cold and clear, but little else is recorded. Sgt. Ordway commands the soldiers at camp, and Clark and Lewis are working between Cahokia and St. Louis.

    January 25, 1805

    Assiniboine traders

    At Fort Mandan, the enlisted men continue making charcoal for the blacksmiths and trying to free the boats from the Missouri River ice. At the Knife River Villages, a band of Assiniboine traders arrives.

    Fur Trade after the Expedition

    by

    The Louisiana Purchase and the lure of its beaver population led to a veritable flood of traders and trappers moving toward the Upper Missouri and the Northern Rocky Mountains and the slow abandonment of the overland trade in the United States by Canadian and British interests.

    The Blackfeet Confederacy

    Short tempers and long knives

    by

    Next to grizzly bears and Mother Nature, the most feared enemy of American fur trappers traveling along the upper Missouri River were the Niitsítapi or Blackfeet, the “Original People” or “Prairie People.” Was that Lewis’s fault?

    April 20, 1805

    An Assiniboine grave

    Below present Williston, North Dakota, hard winds prevent the boats from making more than seven miles up the Missouri. Lewis walks on shore and observes a partially fallen Assiniboine scaffold grave.

    August 15, 1806

    Broken promises of peace

    At the Knife River Villages in present North Dakota, the captains hear of several broken promises of peace among the tribes with whom they had established peace agreements on the outward journey.

    November 30, 1804

    A military reprisal

    Responding to news of a deadly Sioux and Arikara attack on Mandan hunters about 25 miles from Fort Mandan, Clark leads a military force to Mitutanka to gather warriors and pursue the attackers.

    Lisa’s Fur Trade Forts

    And the deaths of Potts and Drouillard

    by

    Manuel Lisa’s men at Fort Raymond not only encouraged the Crows to come trade with them, but they set out parties to trap beaver on their own. It was the latter effort that led to hostilities with the Blackfeet that affected Potts, Drouillard, and Colter.

    May 5, 1805

    Wolves and grizzlies

    As the boats move 17 miles up the Missouri, they stop to repair the white pirogue’s rudder. Clark tells of difficulty with a “turrible looking” grizzly bear. Camp is near present Wolf Point, Montana.

    American Elk

    Wapati

    by

    One of the animals recorded by Lewis and Clark—and which became one of the staples of their mostly carnivorous diet—was the wapiti, or American elk (Cervus elaphus).

    August 10, 1804

    Blackbird Hill in view

    The boats sail 22½ miles up the Missouri River, and they encamp within view of Blackbird Hill. Lewis collects the earliest plant specimen that survives today, field horsetail.

    January 16, 1805

    Hidatsa-Mandan jealousy

    At Fort Mandan, the captains attempt to smooth over Hidatsa and Mandan jealousy. Lewis demonstrates the air gun and cannon, and the captains caution Seeing Snake not to war with the Shoshones.

    March 11, 1805

    Charbonneau's corruption

    Fort Mandan, ND The captains accuse Toussaint Charbonneau of acting in the interests of local >fur traders and give him an ultimatum.

    April 22, 1804

    Our Missouria Indian

    The captains are working in St. Louis with Pierre Chouteau‘s Osage delegation. An undated note says the captains have decided not to bring along a Missouria Indian that has been with them this past winter.

    August 19, 1806

    Jusseaume's leather lodge

    Due to high winds, they make only ten miles down the Missouri. At evening camp near present Huff, North Dakota, interpreter René Jusseaume offers Clark space in his leather lodge.

Notes

Notes
1 “Portrait of Karl Bodmer” New York Public Library Digital Collections. Accessed16 January 2023. digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/a38d0950-aab9-0139-152b-0242ac110002.

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  • The Lewis and Clark Expedition: Day by Day by Gary E. Moulton (University of Nebraska Press, 2018). The story in prose, 14 May 1804–23 September 1806.
  • The Lewis and Clark Journals: An American Epic of Discovery (abridged) by Gary E. Moulton (University of Nebraska Press, 2003). Selected journal excerpts, 14 May 1804–23 September 1806.
  • The Lewis and Clark Journals. by Gary E. Moulton (University of Nebraska Press, 1983–2001). The complete story in 13 volumes.